Premise 1: Any student (WHO WANTS TO PARTICIPATE) is elligible --> at least one arch course + interest in field
Premise 2: Many students = interest but NOT arch course.
Conclusion: Many students (WHO WANT TO PARTICIPATE) = inelligible.
Pay attention to the part I capitalized. The stimulus starts by talking about a specific group of students, but the second premise talks broadly of STUDENTS in general. But we don't know whether many students in general is the same as many students who want to participate. It can still be true that many students in general are inelligible but many students WHO WANT TO PARTICIPATE actually all meet the requirement and are elligible.
I hope this makes sense. This one is tricky to put into words.
@"Nomads Poem" said:
Premise 1: Any student (WHO WANTS TO PARTICIPATE) is elligible --> at least one arch course + interest in field
Premise 2: Many students = interest but NOT arch course.
Conclusion: Many students (WHO WANT TO PARTICIPATE) = inelligible.
Pay attention to the part I capitalized. The stimulus starts by talking about a specific group of students, but the second premise talks broadly of STUDENTS in general. But we don't know whether many students in general is the same as many students who want to participate. It can still be true that many students in general are inelligible but many students WHO WANT TO PARTICIPATE actually all meet the requirement and are elligible.
I hope this makes sense. This one is tricky to put into words.
Ahh I see. So the second premise could be talking about "many students" across the university, a potentially much larger group. Thanks!
Comments
Premise 1: Any student (WHO WANTS TO PARTICIPATE) is elligible --> at least one arch course + interest in field
Premise 2: Many students = interest but NOT arch course.
Conclusion: Many students (WHO WANT TO PARTICIPATE) = inelligible.
Pay attention to the part I capitalized. The stimulus starts by talking about a specific group of students, but the second premise talks broadly of STUDENTS in general. But we don't know whether many students in general is the same as many students who want to participate. It can still be true that many students in general are inelligible but many students WHO WANT TO PARTICIPATE actually all meet the requirement and are elligible.
I hope this makes sense. This one is tricky to put into words.
Ahh I see. So the second premise could be talking about "many students" across the university, a potentially much larger group. Thanks!