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 evelineliu
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#90198
Hi Bonnie,

In this question, "Just as" introduces an analogy. The analogy is about how physicists learn the shortcomings of a mechanics based on idealizations such as perfectly frictionless bodies (that are immune to outside influence), then government economists must also learn that there are shortcomings to a system based on idealizations that the home economy is immune to outside influence.

Hope that helps!
Eveline
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 sunshine123
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#96722
Howdy!

In my mind, the analogy used in this example is not particularly fundamental to the argument; that is, it does not really function as the premise that the conclusion derives from. It may have played such a role IF the author had said, "SINCE physicists learn so and so, SO TOO government economists should learn so and so." However, the argument does no such thing. It merely states, "just as physicists do so and so, governemnt's do too" sort of as a way of providing and example or something like that. That said, the premise that serves as a launchpad, as it were , for the argument's conclusion is the statement, "economies are always open systems."

Does that sound right? Thank you in advance.

Best,
Sunshine123
 Robert Carroll
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#97415
Sunshine123,

I think that's right. If the first part of the last sentence were removed, it wouldn't affect the logical structure of the argument.

Robert Carroll
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 teddykim100
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#98348
Bonnie, full disclosure: I am not a tutor, and I have not even taken an official test yet, so you may take everything I say as a grain of salt.

That being said, I think I can help a bit with your question.

When the author throws the physics mumbo jumbo at us, I think they do a good job of disguising it as support/another part of the premise. However, there is no real support offered for the conclusion here.

If I tell you that, "Just as cars need fuel to survive, you SHOULD eat broccoli because it gives you nutrients", is my support the "cars" portion, or the "it gives you nutrients" portion?

It would be the "nutrients" portion because that is what is actually giving us support to reach the conclusion "you should eat broccoli". Hopefully my analogy is a good enough one to show that the "cars" portion is just an ANALOGY, and not actual support.

Yes, in real life, we use analogies to support our claims all the time, but in a logical sense, this doesn't really serve our argument.

PS staff feel free to let me know if I am leading Bonnie on the wrong track here!!
 Robert Carroll
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#98576
teddykim100,

What you said seems good, good job!

Robert Carroll

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