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Solution Argument 1:
Premises : "Most politicians are corrupt." "Hans is a politician."
Conclusion : "Hans is probably corrupt."
Hidden assumptions : Corruption is evenly distributed among politicians; there are no special factors that distinguish Hans from other politicians.
Type of argument : Inductive (statistical argument)
Strength : Medium – the conclusion follows with some probability, but not with certainty.
Possible improvements : Include more specific information about Hans; define the term "corrupt" more precisely.
Solution Argument 2:
Premises : "Either we lower taxes, or the economy will collapse." "We cannot afford for the economy to collapse."
Conclusion : "We must lower taxes."
Hidden assumptions : There are only these two options; tax cuts would actually prevent economic collapse.
Type of argument : Deductive (disjunctive syllogism)
Strength : Weak – the first premise presents a false dichotomy.
Possible improvements : Consider additional options; provide empirical evidence for the relationship between tax policy and economic performance.
Solution Argument 3:
Premises : "For the last three years, it has always rained on the first weekend in July."
Conclusion : "It will also rain this year on the first weekend in July."
Hidden assumptions : Past weather patterns continue into the future; three years is a sufficient sample.
Type of argument : Inductive (generalization from examples)
Strength : Weak – the sample is too small, and weather patterns are complex and variable.
Possible improvements : Include longer-term weather data; consider meteorological factors that influence weather.
Solution Argument 4:
Premises : "Studies have shown that people who meditate regularly experience less stress." "Maria wants to reduce her stress."
Conclusion : "Maria should meditate regularly."
Hidden assumptions : What works for most people will also work for Maria; meditation is the best or only method of stress reduction for Maria.
Type of argument : Practical argument (means-end argumentation)
Strength : Medium – the conclusion is plausible but not compelling.
Possible improvements : Consider other methods of stress reduction; include Maria's specific situation and preferences.
Solution Argument 5:
Premises : "If the sun shines, the snow will melt." "The snow is melting."
Conclusion : "The sun is shining."
Hidden assumptions : Sunshine is the only cause of melting snow.
Type of argument : Deductive (attempts to be Modus Ponens but commits the fallacy of affirming the consequent)
Strength : Weak – logically invalid, as there can be other causes for melting snow (e.g., warm temperatures without direct sunshine, rain, artificial heat sources).
Possible improvements : Reformulate into an abductive argument: "The snow is melting. One possible explanation is that the sun is shining. If no other factors are present, the sun is probably shining."