What helps me remember the directions is telling myself: if we are doing something to the argument, it's UP. If we are using the argument to answer a question it's DOWN.

How are PRINCIPLE questions UP?

It seems to me it would be DOWN because we are using the argument to find the answer, and not adding anything to the argument. Or are we? Is it that the argument needs the "PRINCIPLE" explained to help it?

Am I thinking about LR support direction the wrong way?

HERE IS THE LIST:

Logical reasoning question stems grouped by support direction

UP:

Strengthen

Weaken

NA

SA

PSA

Principle

Resolve, Reconcile, explain

Resolve the paradox

DOWN:

Main point

Method of reasoning

Argument part

Flawed method of reasoning

Parallel method of reasoning

Parallel flawed method of reasoning

Point at issue

Must be true

Most strongly supported

Must be false

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2 comments

  • Tuesday, Mar 27 2018

    @nikitamunjal950

    Great, thanks. That helps.

    0
  • Monday, Mar 26 2018

    I think principle is "up" because we are given A->B and the AC supports/strengthens that by giving us A therefore B or an example of it; which in part strengthens the support for the argument provided in the stimulus. The "down" ones are those where we use the information in the stimulus to determine what is supported, like MSS. In principle, we are using the answer choice to support the stimulus, like SA. After all, principle questions are technically SA in reverse.

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