It was once thought that pesticide TSX-400 was extremely harmful to the environment but that pesticides Envirochem and Zanar were environmentally harmless. βββββββ βββ βββββββ ββββββββββ βββ βββββ ββββ ββββ ββββββββ βββββββββ ββ ββββββ ββββββββ ββββββββββ βββ βββββ ββββ βββββ βββββββ βββββββββββββ ββββ ββββ ββββ ββββββββ ββ βββββ βββββββ βββ βββββββββ ββββ ββββββ ββββββββββ βββ βββββ ββββββ ββ ββββββ ββ βββββββ ββββββ ββ ββββββββββ
The author concludes that we should either ban the legal pesticides E and Z, or else we should legalize the banned pesticide T. Why? Because pesticides E and Z are both more environmentally harmful than pesticide T.
The author establishes that E and Z are more harmful than T, and then he jumps to the conclusion that either E and Z should be banned or T should be legalized. But he never explains when certain products ought to be banned or legalized.
The author seems to disagree with the fact that more dangerous products are legal, while a less dangerous one is banned. He must assume that a more harmful product (E/Z) shouldnβt be legal if a less harmful product (T) is illegal, or else that a less harmful product (T) shouldnβt be illegal while a more harmful product (E/Z) is legal. We need a principle that satisfies this assumption.
Which one of the following βββββββββββ ββ ββββββ ββββ βββββ ββ βββββββ βββ ββββββββββββββ
Two pesticides should βββ ββββ ββ βββββ ββ βββ ββ ββββββββββ ββββ βββββββ ββ βββ βββββββββββ ββββ βββ βββββ βββ
Two pesticides should ββββ ββ βββββ ββββ ββ βββββββ ββ βββββββ ββ βββ ββββββββββββ
Two pesticides should ββββ ββ βββββββ ββββ ββ ββββ βββ βββββββ ββ βββ ββββββββββββ
One pesticide should ββ βββββ βββ βββββββ βββββββ ββββ ββ βββ ββββββ ββ ββββ βββββββ ββ βββ βββββββββββ ββββ ββ βββ βββββββ
One pesticide should ββ βββββ βββ βββββββ βββββββ ββ βββ ββββββ ββ ββββββββ ββ βββ βββββββββββ βββ βββ ββββββ ββ βββββββ ββ βββ