mattsherman Wrote:Logical reasoning is the evaluation of arguments, which is really the evaluation of the space between the evidence and the conclusion, not the truth of either claim on their own.
This confuses me. Although rare, isn't it possible for correct answers to Weaken questions to address the validity of a claim made within the premise thereby making the support for the conclusion unreliable?
I have this in my notes I took from MLSAT books. I recall getting tricked on one question while doing practice sets. I used to think that what Matt said was always the case until when I looked at the explanations, this is what it said. That's when I started to keep that in mind while doing Weakening questions, becoming more aware of claims within premises. I also recall learning that when stats/data/surveys are given, look for answers that attack the validity of them.
I know this is an old PT so not expecting people to notice this post but any clarification on above will be MUCH appreciated! I want this cleared up before I move on further with my weakening practice drills.
Thank you in advance!
Kate