- Tue Sep 10, 2019 1:11 pm
#68005
Hi bukkaabh,
The mistake you've made on this question is one I find many students making on Main Point questions in the Reading Comprehension section. The main point of a reading comprehension passage is not just the subject that the author discusses most frequently (or in the most paragraphs or lines). Rather, it's the idea or notion that the author wants to persuade the reader of. And, in this case, it's also the special contribution the author wants to make to the field or subject matter he or she is discussing.
Sometimes an author spends a lot of passage space discussing a subject for reasons that are not the main point: (1) to ensure the reader understands a complex subject, or (2) to convey to the reader the sense that the author is in command of a position that author wants to argue against, etc. Here, for example, a lot of "wind up" time in the passage is spent on the background of the multiverse theory, because it is a complex subject and the author seems to sense that the reader needs background and context to understand it.
The reason answer choice D is wrong is that the author has something other than answer choice D, something special in the field of multiverse theory that the author is trying to convey to the reader: namely, that people haven't been studying fine-tuning in the right way. They've been tweaking one element at a time in their experiments (see the beginning of paragraph 5). The author wants to change that, and get people studying fine tuning by "manipulating multiple constants at once," because different results arise--new hypothetical universes where complex structures and perhaps even intelligent life could arise. So the purpose of the passage is really to get people thinking about another, different, way of studying fine-tuning. And that is best articulated in answer choice A, which states the possibilities this new way of studying reveals: that "there may be more sets of physical laws that are compatible with life than commonly thought."
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
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