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What is the difference between a presumption and an assumption?

DaBears85DaBears85 Alum Member
in General 284 karma

I’ve been wondering about this for a while and google isn’t giving me an answer I like haha. Anyone have any thoughts?

Comments

  • LogicianLogician Alum Member Sage
    2464 karma

    In regards to the LSAT, they are both premises. Assumptions are defined as unstated premises, whereas presumptions are stated premises (which we take to be true).

    Hope this helps!

  • simple_jacksimple_jack Alum Member
    284 karma

    There are multiple definitions for each depending on which field of study you find yourself in. Philosophically speaking an assumption would be something made in the reasoning argument itself. A presumption is something you make before the argument I.e., a fundamental principle that exists in the authors worldview before he/she formulates the argument.

  • taschasptaschasp Alum Member Sage
    edited December 2019 796 karma

    I think the difference is actually a bit subtle, and has to do more with differing levels of certainty than anything else.

    Let's say I drop an apple. I "presume" that it will fall. Why? Because, well, gravity. And that's a pretty reasonable presumption. Now, let's say I give you an apple, I leave the room while you do some practice tests, and I come back and you haven't touched the apple. I'm shocked because I "assumed" you would have eaten it by then.

    In the first case, gravity is a very reasonable thing to presume; while assuming you would have eaten the apple I gave you, though totally plausible, was a bit more shaky.

    Now here's the caveat: generally, anytime you use "presume", you can also use assume. So I both presume and assume that an apple will fall. But it would be a bit weird to say that I presumed you would have eaten the apple, unless I really had reason to think so (like, if you told me that you really like apples and that you're hungry, or if there is statistical evidence that people usually eat apples within an hour when given one while doing practice tests).

    So presume means the same thing as assume, but just narrows it down a bit more to things that you have reason to believe are true. But really, in effect, they're pretty interchangeable. And for purposes of the LSAT, any distinction between the two words shouldn't matter.

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