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#61124
Please post your questions below!
 knutson.m
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#61867
Hi.

I am confused about why the answer is A and not C. I thought that the passage mentioned the drought as an opposing point to Wheeler's theory.
 Jay Donnell
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#61912
Hi Knutson!

This is a bit of tricky Must Be True—Concept Reference question, so I'm happy to help clear it up!

I first want to address that the correct response is actually B, not A, but I can see the tempting nature of answer choice C so I want to explain its inaccuracy.

The question asks for what evidence 'directly counters Wheeler's theory,' with his theory pointing to 'a final massacre by
marauding Indo-Aryan invaders.' In order to directly counter such a theory, we would have to be able to prove that the battle/massacre could not have taken place. Not only does the author present the claim that 'there is no archaeological
evidence of battles within the cities,' they also mention that excavations prove that the Indo-Aryans were not even there at the time of the alleged battle.

Answer choice B references the above counter-evidence, which directly argues against the battle/massacre being an accurate theory for the demise of the civilization.

The passage does go on to mention the drought, but in answering this question precisely, the fact that a drought was known to exist doesn't directly counter the theory regarding a massive battle. That's a tricky issue as the drought and other environmental factors (like an earthquake) are listed as possible reasons for the civilization to relocate, but they don't directly argue against the massacre theory as well as does the evidence listed in the correct response of B.

I hope that helps to clear it up!
 taylorharris24
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#63690
Hello,

I thought B was the only right answer, but was hesitant because it asks for evidence. I was unsure if a lack of evidence actually constitutes evidence. I guess in this case it does?
 Jay Donnell
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#63693
Hi taylorharris!

That is totally a reasonable concern to have, as that very issue is often involved in Flaw questions. However, I don't believe here that a lack of evidence is taken to somehow become evidence, but that the evidence mentioned was the fact that "new
excavations show that Indo-Aryans were not even in the region at the time the massacre was alleged to have taken place." In this case, it wasn't a lack of evidence per se, but new claims that show that the alleged battles could not have possibly happened as the alleged attackers were not in the region to do the attacking.

This situation is pretty nasty in that the author brings up both the lack of written evidence and the new excavations, but it was the latter that was referenced as evidence in the correct response.

Thanks for asking a super smart question, having this concern is a great sign you're keeping an eye on logical fallacies all across the exam. I hope this response helped to clear this question up further!
 Agent00729
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#86164
Hi! I was tempted to choose B but decided not to because it says that there are no findings that indicate battles, yet the passage only references the lack of written or archaeological evidence. Hypothetically, there could be other types of evidence not mentioned by the author (Maybe geological evidence?). Also, I thought that the fact that there does exist evidence to support the author's viewpoint doesn't negate the possibility that there could also exist other evidence in support of Wheeler. In short, I thought the answer choice was too broad by implying there was no evidence at all.
 Adam Tyson
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#86237
Thanks for the question, Agent00729! I think you may be confusing the question that was asked, which was what evidence was cited in the passage, for a question that was not asked: what would prove that the author is correct? Sure, there could be other evidence besides archaeological evidence, but the passage did cite the archaeological evidence as directly countering Wheeler's theory. Wheeler things there was a massacre, and the author responds by pointing out the lack of findings that would support such a theory (and the implication, at least, is that if there had been such a massacre then we would have found some evidence of it, like weapons dropped by the invaders or indications of damage that those weapons might have done, perhaps in the ways human bones at the site were cut or smashed).

We aren't looking to weigh the quality of the evidence in order to answer this question, but only to cite the evidence that the author used in an attempt to counter Wheeler. B is something the author used in that attempt, regardless of what you may think of the persuasive nature of that claim.

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