Tips on properly identifying intermediate conclusions Forum
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Tips on properly identifying intermediate conclusions
Anyone have any tips on differentiating intermediate conclusions from overall conclusions on flaw in the arguemnet type questions on LR? Any tips are appareciated. Thanks!
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Re: Tips on properly identifying intermediate conclusions
It's not the easiest thing on the world. The trouble is that in most LR questions you only realize that you need to have ID's the subsidiary conclusion after reading the answer choices.
I suggest that you identify the conclusion and all of its parts. Analyze the premises leading up to the conclusion and see which one either A.) Lends the strongest hand to the conclusion or B.) comes up with a similar, or related conclusion to the conclusion.
Hope this helps
I suggest that you identify the conclusion and all of its parts. Analyze the premises leading up to the conclusion and see which one either A.) Lends the strongest hand to the conclusion or B.) comes up with a similar, or related conclusion to the conclusion.
Hope this helps
- kurama20
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Re: Tips on properly identifying intermediate conclusions
The best way to find an intermediate conclusion is to first find the main conclusion, which is the one that the entire argument supports. So everything else in the argument needs to support this statement for it to be the overall conclusion. After you determine what that is look for any other statements in the argument that have conclusion indicators in them (therefore, so, etc.). That will be the intermediate conclusion. To double check yourself make sure that the statement that you identified as being the Intermediate conclusion supports the overall conclusion. If it's vice versa then you know which is which as well. HTH
- JazzOne
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- Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2008 11:04 am
Re: Tips on properly identifying intermediate conclusions
+1kurama20 wrote:The best way to find an intermediate conclusion is to first find the main conclusion, which is the one that the entire argument supports. So everything else in the argument needs to support this statement for it to be the overall conclusion. After you determine what that is look for any other statements in the argument that have conclusion indicators in them (therefore, so, etc.). That will be the intermediate conclusion. To double check yourself make sure that the statement that you identified as being the Intermediate conclusion supports the overall conclusion. If it's vice versa then you know which is which as well. HTH
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Re: Tips on properly identifying intermediate conclusions
Solid advice. Thanks!
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