Hi. It’s a good question.
It’s better to consider specific concrete examples. Because generalizations will always have an exception would be wrong for some reason. However, you could say in general that you will have to make a number of basic assumptions. Every argument will have some basic assumptions for example, there are no force major circumstances, etc
The statements will usually be brief and therefore will lack detail and you will have to figure out if a certain statement is within scope or outside of scope. Usually, if there’s no mention of the budget in the argument and you cannot tie a budget or any other comment to the initial argument directly, you would deem it to be outside of the scope.
However, this is a very big part of critical reasoning and reading comprehension, judging what answered choices are within and which ones are outside of the scope. it takes weeks and months to build your ear and gut where your gut will tell you that a certain answer choice may be
...
It’s better to consider specific concrete examples. Because generalizations will always have an exception would be wrong for some reason. However, you could say in general that you will have to make a number of basic assumptions. Every argument will have some basic assumptions for example, there are no force major circumstances, etc
The statements will usually be brief and therefore will lack detail and you will have to figure out if a certain statement is within scope or outside of scope. Usually, if there’s no mention of the budget in the argument and you cannot tie a budget or any other comment to the initial argument directly, you would deem it to be outside of the scope.
However, this is a very big part of critical reasoning and reading comprehension, judging what answered choices are within and which ones are outside of the scope. it takes weeks and months to build your ear and gut where your gut will tell you that a certain answer choice may be
...
Statistics : Posted by bb • on 25 Oct 2023, 15:01 • Replies 2 • Views 33




