- Mon Dec 30, 2019 3:07 pm
#72911
Interesting analysis, dbrowning! As i see it, though, answer B is really just a "who cares?" answer choice. Who cares if the people in the painting looked like some actual people from history, whether living or dead, famous or not? Why would that make us doubt the conclusion that the artist who later became well known painted the painting when he was younger and just starting out? If the person in the painting looked like someone famous, we probably wouldn't be focused on the fact that he actually looks a lot like the self-portrait of the young artist who later rose to fame. So we have a canvas with people who look like Aristotle and Elvis and Churchill, and also this artist at a young age. The author thinks that young artist is the painter. What about the other people in the painting would raise some concerns about that? It would be a real stretch to say "the artist who painted it put the young, not-yet-famous other artist in it along with some famous faces" or "the young artist also looked a lot like someone else who was already famous at the time." (This is probably too much emphasis on fame, by the way, when the answer doesn't mention fame but only "real people from history." My grandma is a real person from history, but she wasn't famous.)
Answer D is not about proving that the young painter could not have done the job. That's too high a standard for a simple Weaken question. But, if D is true (and we have to assume it is for our analysis, because the question stem told us to), then doesn't that raise some doubts about the claim? It should! It suggests that it would be rare, and perhaps even shocking, for this to have occurred. That's why it weakens - because it suggests that this conclusion would rely on an unusual or shocking occurrence, and that raises at least some doubts about the it.
In my view, answer B raises no doubts at all. I would completely shrug it off. Don't try to rationalize why it could hurt the argument. Just ask yourself "does this make me worry about the conclusion?"
I'll also weigh in on the somewhat passionate earlier discussion about answer C by saying that it, too, gives me no pause. I read it and said to myself "so what, who cares?" Okay, fine, artists use live models. What does that have to do with whether the artist painted the painting that includes a person that looks a lot like him? It gives me no reason to question the conclusion. It's a nothing burger.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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