-  Mon Feb 20, 2023 5:17 pm
					 #99291
							   
										
										
					
					
							Thank you Jeff. Let me organize my thought process using the assumption negation technique. It actually makes me see the mistake. 
Choice A says the viewers would still be interested in watching TV if the opposing parties discuss the issue at length. Negation: viewers would not be interested in watching TV if the opposing parties' discussion is long. Then we have viewers want to watch TV with short discussion but not long ones. So people watch TV news for they want short, simple discussions : Simplified Views Watching TV. As opposed to the argument's conclusion: because the TV give short discussions, it makes the viewers think in simple terms: Watching TV
 Watching TV. As opposed to the argument's conclusion: because the TV give short discussions, it makes the viewers think in simple terms: Watching TV  Simplified Views. The negation of choice A reverses the causal arrow.
 Simplified Views. The negation of choice A reverses the causal arrow. 
Watching retrospectively I think A is wrong because the existence of a reversed casual relationship does not necessarily make the argument's conclusion unsound. This does make common sense: even if people choosing to watch TV for its simplied views, the simple discussion on TV can still make them think in more simplified terms. So both Simplified view Watching TV  and  Watching TV
 Watching TV  and  Watching TV  Simplified Views can be correct simultaneously. But this didn't click for me at the time, since reversed causal arrow has surely been the correct choice for any question I tried before. But the question before were weaken questions, not necessary assumption question,  necessary being the keyword.
 Simplified Views can be correct simultaneously. But this didn't click for me at the time, since reversed causal arrow has surely been the correct choice for any question I tried before. But the question before were weaken questions, not necessary assumption question,  necessary being the keyword.
					
										
					  															  								 Choice A says the viewers would still be interested in watching TV if the opposing parties discuss the issue at length. Negation: viewers would not be interested in watching TV if the opposing parties' discussion is long. Then we have viewers want to watch TV with short discussion but not long ones. So people watch TV news for they want short, simple discussions : Simplified Views
 Watching TV. As opposed to the argument's conclusion: because the TV give short discussions, it makes the viewers think in simple terms: Watching TV
 Watching TV. As opposed to the argument's conclusion: because the TV give short discussions, it makes the viewers think in simple terms: Watching TV  Simplified Views. The negation of choice A reverses the causal arrow.
 Simplified Views. The negation of choice A reverses the causal arrow. Watching retrospectively I think A is wrong because the existence of a reversed casual relationship does not necessarily make the argument's conclusion unsound. This does make common sense: even if people choosing to watch TV for its simplied views, the simple discussion on TV can still make them think in more simplified terms. So both Simplified view
 Watching TV  and  Watching TV
 Watching TV  and  Watching TV  Simplified Views can be correct simultaneously. But this didn't click for me at the time, since reversed causal arrow has surely been the correct choice for any question I tried before. But the question before were weaken questions, not necessary assumption question,  necessary being the keyword.
 Simplified Views can be correct simultaneously. But this didn't click for me at the time, since reversed causal arrow has surely been the correct choice for any question I tried before. But the question before were weaken questions, not necessary assumption question,  necessary being the keyword.


 That, because extra detail is given in a few instances, the conclusion cannot follow? I just don't understand how the negation of this assumption has much of an impact on the stimulus, save for a slight strengthening -- which is, of course, not what a correct Assumption answer choice should do.
 That, because extra detail is given in a few instances, the conclusion cannot follow? I just don't understand how the negation of this assumption has much of an impact on the stimulus, save for a slight strengthening -- which is, of course, not what a correct Assumption answer choice should do.