I was reading the Trainer and I came through a simple example "She does not consume too much caffeine because she only drinks one cup of coffee a day and one cup of coffee is not too much caffeine for a person to consume daily"
Coffee is the only substance she consumes that contains caffeine - this is something which fills the gap but is not necessary. I am, however, having trouble in understanding this cause its negation can really hurt the way premise supports the conclusion. Could anyone help in clarifying?
Comments
It's not a Necessary assumption because, while the negation does somewhat hurt the argument (so it would make for a valid answer for a weakening question) it doesn't destroy it. She could drink one cup of coffee AND a coke and still be under the "too much caffeine" limit.
A necessary assumption always destroys the argument when negated, rather than just weakening it.
@"Grey Warden" - the fact that a certain answer can be right or wrong depending on what the question stem is asking for, especially when applied to SA/NA/weaken and learning to discern the difference between the three requirements was one of the most useful "aha!" moments I've had studying for LR. For these question types I always write down NA or SA or W right next to the stem, just to remind myself what exactly it is that I'm looking for in the answer choices.
It could hurt the argument. Or, possibly not. So what if she consumes something else which contains caffeine? Without any other premises, we can fairly assume that daily, she uses a liquid dropper to drip 1/10 of a milliliter of tea on her tongue. Does that fulfill the negation? Yes, she has now consumed TWO caffeinated liquids. Does it hurt the argument? Probably not, unless you consider an additional 5-10 mg of caffeine a lot, even in spite of the fact that her coffee probably contains around 110+ mg - we're just making assumptions now, so I'll stop.
If the above is a tad confusing, try this one:
With the negation, she would have to consume at least one other caffeinated drink. Okay, so lets meet the minimum requirement. She now consumes two caffeinated drinks. To make this easier, lets throw in some arbitrary numbers.
Her coffee: About 130 mg of caffeine per cup.
Her second caffeinated drink (some rare tea that is incredibly low in caffeine, but does in fact contain caffeine): 5 mg per cup.
Now ask yourself, does adding 5 additional mg of caffeine to the currently consumed 130 mg really weaken the argument that she isn't consuming too much caffeine? I don't think so. If 130 mg isn't "too much" then surely an additional 5 wouldn't make it "too much."
@"Grey Warden" Here’s the relevant lesson for negation in the curriculum: https://7sage.com/lesson/how-to-negate-statements-in-english/ Before we negate this statement, it might help to translate it into a more logically understandable form. I like If-then.
If she consumes a substance that contains caffeine, then it’s coffee.
Why? Because “the only” is a group 1 indicator.
To negate this statement, we make it an intersecting statement (or a SOME statement) with the necessary condition negated.
She sometimes consumes substances that contain caffeine and they’re not coffee.
If that were true, then she might consume too much caffeine, hence ruining the argument.
When we say that negation of the answer choice does not destroy the 'argument', it seems to me that the focus is more on the destruction of the 'conclusion' of the argument from the negation of the answer choice.
In the example here, the conclusion was based on her drinking only one cup of coffee a day. When we apply the negation as @DumbHollywoodActor rightly pointed out it translates to 'She sometimes consumes substances that contain caffeine and they’re not coffee'
In such a case the conclusion may still follow as you guys have rightly said, however, the support relationship between the premise and the conclusion is weakened as in the premise 'not consuming more than a cup of coffee' is not so much indicative of the conclusion that 'she does not consume too much caffeine.'
I am now trying to understand the subtleties in how the negation of the necessary assumption destroys the relationship between the premise and conclusion and how it sometimes merely weakens without destroying in order to avoid falling for trap answer choices, hoping I will get there.