2 comments

  • Friday, Aug 04 2023

    @maco4538797 said:

    Always think of what type of evidence the author is using. For any type of evidence, there is some sort of inherent flaw within it. The evidence type used here is an analogy. An argument by analogy is inherently flawed because it assumes that two different scenarios are comparable. So, when you see an argument by analogy ask yourself "but are they really the same thing? "Can we really say that one's freedom is always worth risking one's life based on the analogy of living in an impenetrable box? It is bad practice to argue for a general principle using an extreme case. The flaw will always be about the way the author uses premises to reach their conclusion. Answer choice A takes issue with the conclusion itself - whereas we need an AC that takes issue with the relationship between the premises and the conclusion.

    Thank you so much!

    0
  • Saturday, Jul 15 2023

    Always think of what type of evidence the author is using. For any type of evidence, there is some sort of inherent flaw within it. The evidence type used here is an analogy. An argument by analogy is inherently flawed because it assumes that two different scenarios are comparable. So, when you see an argument by analogy ask yourself "but are they really the same thing? "Can we really say that one's freedom is always worth risking one's life based on the analogy of living in an impenetrable box? It is bad practice to argue for a general principle using an extreme case. The flaw will always be about the way the author uses premises to reach their conclusion. Answer choice A takes issue with the conclusion itself - whereas we need an AC that takes issue with the relationship between the premises and the conclusion.

    0

Confirm action

Are you sure?