Lawyer: If you take something that you have good reason to think is someone else's property, that is stealing, and stealing is wrong. ████████ ██████ ███ ██ ████ ██████ ██ █████ ████ ███ ███████ ██ ███ ██████ ██████ ███ ██████ ██████ █████████ ██ ██ ███ ███ █████ ███ ██████ ██ ████ ███
The lawyer concludes that it was not wrong for Meyers to take the compost. She supports this by saying that if you take something that you have good reason to think is someone else’s property, then you are stealing, and stealing is wrong. But Meyers did not have good reason to think that the compost was someone else’s property.
This is the cookie-cutter flaw of confusing necessary and sufficient conditions. The lawyer treats “good reason” as necessary for “wrong,” but according to her premises “good reason” is merely sufficient. So negating “good reason” tell us nothing about “wrong.”
In other words, even though Meyers had no good reason to believe that the compost was someone else’s property, it might still have been wrong to take it. Having “good reason” is not necessary for making something stealing or for making something wrong.
The reasoning in the lawyer's ████████ ██ ██████ ██ ████ ███ ████████
confuses a factual █████ ████ █ █████ ████████
takes for granted ████ ██████ █████ ███ ████ █████ ███ ███████ ██ ██ ███ ████ ██████ ██ ███████ ████ ██ ███ ███████ ██████ ████████
takes a condition ████ ██ ██████ ██ ██████ ██ ████ ██ ██████ █████ ██ ████ ██ █████████ ██ █████ ███ ███ ██████ ██ ██ █████
fails to consider ███ ███████████ ████ ███ ███████ ███ ███████ ████████
concludes that something ██ █████████ ███████ ██████ ████████ ████ █████ ██ ██████ █████ ███ ███ ███████████ ██████ ██ █████ ████ ██ ██ ███████ ██████ ████████