It can really be either. When the disagreement is the conclusion or it is obviously contradictory premises it may be an easier question, but really any part of the argument can be the disagreement.
Agreed with above! They can really disagree about anything, and this is often times where they can trip you up with trap answer choices. They may only disagree on a small premise, but agree on the overall conclusion, and vice versa. In addition to this, they will also try to trip you up by getting you to assume that a person agrees or disagrees with an issue when they actually have no opinion on it at all or it is not stated. Be careful for both of these common trap answers when answering this question type!
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It can really be either. When the disagreement is the conclusion or it is obviously contradictory premises it may be an easier question, but really any part of the argument can be the disagreement.
Agreed with above! They can really disagree about anything, and this is often times where they can trip you up with trap answer choices. They may only disagree on a small premise, but agree on the overall conclusion, and vice versa. In addition to this, they will also try to trip you up by getting you to assume that a person agrees or disagrees with an issue when they actually have no opinion on it at all or it is not stated. Be careful for both of these common trap answers when answering this question type!