tommywallach Wrote:
(C) The argument does not assume that ONLY evidence from experiments can support beliefs. In fact, it states outright, as a fact, that many people believe in ESP because of experimental data. This is not an ASSUMPTION (which would be unstated/implicit), but a PREMISE (stated/explicit). Either way, the argument never says that evidence from experiments is the ONLY thing that can support beliefs. So two errors here: 1) The point is made explicitly, not implicitly 2) The argument never says it's the ONLY thing, just that it's ONE thing.
Hey Tommy, interesting one which I have different point of view.
So your definition of the argument includes "many people's beliefs", whereas I think that part is just background info.
The real ARGUMENT CORE of the journalist, I think, is "One falsified experiment data -> ESP belief is false"
One assumption for this core would be "only experiment data can support belief". If not then the argument falls apart i.e., cannot definitively say ESP belief is false, since there can be many other things one can provide as support, such as testimony, photograph, etc.
Reason (C) being wrong I think is the word "in general" since we don't know what journalist thinks about other matters outside of ESP.
Hope, I actually am providing a different perspective...
Thx