- Posts: 13
- Joined: Oct 18, 2024
- Mon Oct 28, 2024 9:05 pm
#110205
I've taken this practice test several months apart and selected (A) BOTH times. I still don't understand why answer choice (A) doesn't weaken the argument in the stimulus. Doesn't (A) open up the possibility that they preserved meat using a different material? And the lichen could've been used for something else? Clearly there's something not clicking with me on this question so I'll write out my thinking process below:
Conclusion: Neanderthals probably preserved meat by smoking it:
Premise 1: burnt lichen/grass found in many Neanderthal fireplaces
Premise 2: lichen/grass produces smoke but inferior to wood fire for producing heat/light
I think part of my confusion might have to do with not being super clear about which part of the stimulus I should be critical of and which part I should just accept. For example, I felt like the "preserving meat" idea came out of nowhere. Should I just accept that Neanderthals definitely preserved meat? Or should I be critical of the fact that the author assumed that the mere presence of burnt lichen gave them the green light to think that Neanderthals preserved meat? During my initial reading, my immediate reaction was to think "how did the author get from burnt lichen to preserving meat? There could've been so many other reasons for the presence of burnt lichen such as for aromatics or some type of ceremonial ritual. Why, out of all the ways you could use smokey lichen, did the author automatically assume that it was used to preserve meat?
I thought that answer choice (A) weakened the argument because it introduced the existence of another material that could've been used to handle meat instead of the lichen.
What am I missing here? Thanks for your time!
Conclusion: Neanderthals probably preserved meat by smoking it:
Premise 1: burnt lichen/grass found in many Neanderthal fireplaces
Premise 2: lichen/grass produces smoke but inferior to wood fire for producing heat/light
I think part of my confusion might have to do with not being super clear about which part of the stimulus I should be critical of and which part I should just accept. For example, I felt like the "preserving meat" idea came out of nowhere. Should I just accept that Neanderthals definitely preserved meat? Or should I be critical of the fact that the author assumed that the mere presence of burnt lichen gave them the green light to think that Neanderthals preserved meat? During my initial reading, my immediate reaction was to think "how did the author get from burnt lichen to preserving meat? There could've been so many other reasons for the presence of burnt lichen such as for aromatics or some type of ceremonial ritual. Why, out of all the ways you could use smokey lichen, did the author automatically assume that it was used to preserve meat?
I thought that answer choice (A) weakened the argument because it introduced the existence of another material that could've been used to handle meat instead of the lichen.
What am I missing here? Thanks for your time!