var Answer_A = "Premise 1 is false." var Answer_B = "Premise 2 is false." var Answer_C = "The argument is invalid (i.e., the conclusion does not follow from the premises)." var Answer_D = "The argument is question-begging (i.e., one of the premises asserts what is not supposed to be arrived at until the conclusion)." var Feedback_A = "Wrong - whether premise 1 is true - i.e., whether homosexuality is wrong or not - is precisely what is in dispute here. So we are not entitled, in this context, to say that this claim is false, any more than proponent of the claim is entitled to say it is true. It is what is up for debate." var Feedback_B = "Wrong - premise 2 would say that anything that is wrong is wrong, which is obviously true." var Feedback_C = "Wrong - the conclusion would follow from the premises, if they could be established as true. (In fact, the conclusion would follow from just the first premise, since the first premise would say, in effect, that homosexuality is wrong, and that is exactly the conclusion to be proved." var Feedback_D = "Right - the first premise would state, in effect, exactly what the conclusion does. So, one of the argument’s premises would be the same as its conclusion, which would make the argument an example of begging the question." var Question = "Here, again, is the argument we are interested in: (Premise 1:) Homosexuality is unnatural. (Premise 2:) Anything unnatural is wrong. (Conclusion:) Therefore, homosexuality is wrong. If the word ‘unnatural’ is interpreted to mean wrong, then what is the problem with the argument?" var Question_number = "5"