- Mon Sep 30, 2019 11:20 am
#68484
Hi Lane and Ali,
Lane, answer choice C is wrong here, because we only know that the viewpoint reported in lines 44-46 is the view of "some psychologists" (going back to line 13 of the passage), thus we don't know whether their viewpoint prevails (is dominant) in psychology more generally.
Ali, as is often the case with these "likely to believe" sorts of questions (asking you to draw an inference about the author's position from the passage), the more extreme the notion implied by the answer choice, the harder it is to prove it "follows from" what the passage states. You used the term "hindered" in your post, but answer choice A goes farther than that by saying that "it constitutes a denial of the possibility," which means lines 44-46 must support the notion that scientifically studying thinking processes is impossible. We can't be sure that the claim referenced in these lines necessarily entails such impossibility. That is a lot of weight for those lines to bear. It is easier to prove the notion that the "danger" implied by the phrase "perilously close" is the more simple (less extreme) notion of intellectual indefensibility (see Jonathan's explanation of why above).
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
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