- Tue Sep 21, 2021 3:50 pm
#90595
Complete Question Explanation
Method. The correct answer choice is (C).
This stimulus has a complicated structure, and it's necessary to pay careful attention to breaking it down before moving onto the question itself. The author presents a claim of some researchers - that people tend to gesture less when articulating abstract instead of physical concepts. The author doesn't agree or disagree with that claim. Instead the author brings up the idea that the correlation (gesturing less when the concept is abstract, more when it's physical) isn't universal. On the surface, such an idea seems to weaken the researchers' claim, as it's much better for their claim if that correlation is universal. But the author thinks that the imperfection of that correlation is not sufficient reason to reject the claim. Even if the failure of that correlation to be perfect isn't great for the researchers, the author wants to emphasize that it's not entirely fatal to their claim. The author shows that by pointing out that people sometimes perceive supposedly abstract concepts as physical - for instance, "comprehension" is technically abstract, but people perceive it as analogous to the physical action of grasping. The point of that example is that an abstract concept may be perceived as physical, and thus may involve more gesturing than the researchers would expect for an abstract concept, but that's because of a misperception.
In short, counterexamples to the general tendency of people to gesture less when articulating abstract concepts aren't sufficient to prove the researchers' claim false.
The question type is Method of Reasoning. Our prephrase has to describe the abstract structure of the argument. The author presents a claim, shows that there exists some evidence that may weaken that claim, but provides an explanation of the facts that allows the claim to survive, so that the claim is not necessarily false just because there is some evidence against it.
Answer choice (A): The author does not think a correlation is universal at all. The author in fact points out that the correlation between gesturing less and more abstract concepts is not universal. This answer is describing something the author isn't doing, so it's incorrect.
Answer choice (B): There is no universal psychological generalization in the stimulus. As pointed out in the explanation for answer choice (A), the author does not think any generalization here is universal. Further, even the researchers in the first sentence are only said to claim that people "tend" to do something less in certain circumstances. That's not strong enough to be a universal generalization. So no one is appealing to any universal generalization in the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. It suffices to prove this answer correct by noting that everything it states occurs in the stimulus. The author cites a psychological fact in the second sentence, after the word "because" - the author points out there that some people perceive certain abstract concept words as expressing physical actions. That's the author's premise (the word "because" being a premise indicator), so the author is citing that fact to prove something else. The generalization (not a universal one, but still a generalization of a tendency) is the claim of the researchers in the first sentence. The author is trying to show that their generalization is not defeated just because of the lack of universal correlation between abstract concepts and less gesturing. The fact that the correlation is not universal is apparently disconfirming evidence for the researchers. Thus, everything in this answer is a correct description of the author's argument.
Answer choice (D): The author does not advocate any explanation for a phenomenon. The author's concern is showing that apparently bad evidence is not as fatal as it first appears. But the author isn't one of the researchers! We don't know what explanation the author has. We just know that the author is trying to show that the researchers' claim can survive. The first three words of this answer then simply do not describe anything happening in this stimulus.
Answer choice (E): The author's argument involves showing that apparently bad evidence is not fatal for a certain kind of generalization. It's unclear, first of all, whether that generalization is "widely accepted" - it's claimed by "some" researchers. Further, the author never discusses whether that claim needs more evidence. The author thinks the counterevidence is not sufficient to defeat the claim. Does the claim need anything more to be believed? None of that is addressed by the stimulus.
Method. The correct answer choice is (C).
This stimulus has a complicated structure, and it's necessary to pay careful attention to breaking it down before moving onto the question itself. The author presents a claim of some researchers - that people tend to gesture less when articulating abstract instead of physical concepts. The author doesn't agree or disagree with that claim. Instead the author brings up the idea that the correlation (gesturing less when the concept is abstract, more when it's physical) isn't universal. On the surface, such an idea seems to weaken the researchers' claim, as it's much better for their claim if that correlation is universal. But the author thinks that the imperfection of that correlation is not sufficient reason to reject the claim. Even if the failure of that correlation to be perfect isn't great for the researchers, the author wants to emphasize that it's not entirely fatal to their claim. The author shows that by pointing out that people sometimes perceive supposedly abstract concepts as physical - for instance, "comprehension" is technically abstract, but people perceive it as analogous to the physical action of grasping. The point of that example is that an abstract concept may be perceived as physical, and thus may involve more gesturing than the researchers would expect for an abstract concept, but that's because of a misperception.
In short, counterexamples to the general tendency of people to gesture less when articulating abstract concepts aren't sufficient to prove the researchers' claim false.
The question type is Method of Reasoning. Our prephrase has to describe the abstract structure of the argument. The author presents a claim, shows that there exists some evidence that may weaken that claim, but provides an explanation of the facts that allows the claim to survive, so that the claim is not necessarily false just because there is some evidence against it.
Answer choice (A): The author does not think a correlation is universal at all. The author in fact points out that the correlation between gesturing less and more abstract concepts is not universal. This answer is describing something the author isn't doing, so it's incorrect.
Answer choice (B): There is no universal psychological generalization in the stimulus. As pointed out in the explanation for answer choice (A), the author does not think any generalization here is universal. Further, even the researchers in the first sentence are only said to claim that people "tend" to do something less in certain circumstances. That's not strong enough to be a universal generalization. So no one is appealing to any universal generalization in the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. It suffices to prove this answer correct by noting that everything it states occurs in the stimulus. The author cites a psychological fact in the second sentence, after the word "because" - the author points out there that some people perceive certain abstract concept words as expressing physical actions. That's the author's premise (the word "because" being a premise indicator), so the author is citing that fact to prove something else. The generalization (not a universal one, but still a generalization of a tendency) is the claim of the researchers in the first sentence. The author is trying to show that their generalization is not defeated just because of the lack of universal correlation between abstract concepts and less gesturing. The fact that the correlation is not universal is apparently disconfirming evidence for the researchers. Thus, everything in this answer is a correct description of the author's argument.
Answer choice (D): The author does not advocate any explanation for a phenomenon. The author's concern is showing that apparently bad evidence is not as fatal as it first appears. But the author isn't one of the researchers! We don't know what explanation the author has. We just know that the author is trying to show that the researchers' claim can survive. The first three words of this answer then simply do not describe anything happening in this stimulus.
Answer choice (E): The author's argument involves showing that apparently bad evidence is not fatal for a certain kind of generalization. It's unclear, first of all, whether that generalization is "widely accepted" - it's claimed by "some" researchers. Further, the author never discusses whether that claim needs more evidence. The author thinks the counterevidence is not sufficient to defeat the claim. Does the claim need anything more to be believed? None of that is addressed by the stimulus.