- Wed Jul 02, 2025 6:49 pm
#113402
Hi kristina,
You wrote:
Premise: "maximum total utility is assured only in a pure free market economy," (if MTU then PFME)
The concern that I have with your diagram "(if MTU then PFME)" is that you may misread that to mean:
"if maximum total utility, then pure free market economy"
Of course, that's not actually what the premise states, which is "if maximum total utility is assured, then a pure free market economy." This may not seem like a big difference, but it is an important distinction because it is possible to have maximum total utility without a pure free market economy. In fact, the very next clause of that premise clarifies this.
(Just to be clear, I'm not saying that you did misread that sentence, just that I can't really tell from your diagram.)
I'd diagram this conditional statement as follows, just for absolute clarity.
MTUA -> PFME
Now what the conclusion should have said if it were to correctly use the contrapositive would have been "If a country does not have a pure free market economy, then it cannot assure maximum total utility."
Of course, where the argument goes wrong is the wording of the conclusion, which does not match that contrapositive. Instead the conclusion shifts to the idea of trying to bring about a pure free market economy (which is not the same as having a pure free market economy) and shifts to "most likely to bring about maximum total utility" which is not the same as assuring maximum total utility.
Just because a pure free market economy is necessary to assure (i.e. guarantee) maximum total utility does not mean that a pure free market economy is the most likely way or easier way to achieve it. There may be other ways to achieve maximum total utility that are more likely (because they are easier, for example) even if those ways do not assure/guarantee maximum total utility. Answer D captures this flaw.
While this argument involves conditional reasoning, the flaw isn't really a Mistaken Reversal or a Mistaken Negation. It's just a change of terms/ideas in the conclusion that don't quite match the terms in the conditional premise.