- Mon Sep 02, 2013 11:00 pm
#28390
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True—SN. The correct answer choice is (B)
The stimulus outlines two hypothetical scenarios about how the prehistoric inhabitants of some archaeological site used the plants that lived on that site. The author speculates that if the plants were cultivated, then the people who occupied the site discovered agriculture before anyone else. But if the plants were wild, then the site’s occupants ate a wider variety of wild plants than did anyone else at the time. The conditional relationships in the second and third sentences, respectively, can be diagrammed as follows:
An alternative approach (one that you took) would be to combine the two conditional relationships in the stimulus, by using the contrapositive of either relationship. Thus:
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect, because there is no evidence that the archaeologists will be able to determine whether the plants were wild or cultivated. It is exceptionally difficult to justify this level of certainty.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If the plants were cultivated and people who occupied the site discovered agriculture before anyone else, then it is reasonable to conclude that no one else used these particular plants in the same way as the site’s inhabitants did. Alternatively, if the plants were wild and the people who occupied the site ate a wider variety of plants than anyone else, then they ate at least some plants that no one else did (at that time). Either way, whether the plants were wild or cultivated, we can conclude that the people who occupied the site used some plants in ways that no other people did at that time.
Answer choice (C): We cannot speculate what types of plants were found at the site if the people who occupied it had reached a more advanced stage in the use of wild plants than anyone else at the time. Indeed, the only way to reach the conclusion proposed here (i.e. that the plants were uncultivated), would be to use the contrapositive of the first conditional relationship. In other words, we would need to know that someone else discovered agriculture before the people who occupied the site did:
Clearly, this answer choice does not allow us to determine who discovered agriculture first. Consequently, we cannot prove that the plants found at the site were uncultivated.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice contains a Mistaken Reversal of the first conditional relationship:
Must Be True—SN. The correct answer choice is (B)
The stimulus outlines two hypothetical scenarios about how the prehistoric inhabitants of some archaeological site used the plants that lived on that site. The author speculates that if the plants were cultivated, then the people who occupied the site discovered agriculture before anyone else. But if the plants were wild, then the site’s occupants ate a wider variety of wild plants than did anyone else at the time. The conditional relationships in the second and third sentences, respectively, can be diagrammed as follows:
- Cultivated Discovered agriculture before anyone else
Cultivated Ate a wider variety of wild plants than anyone else
An alternative approach (one that you took) would be to combine the two conditional relationships in the stimulus, by using the contrapositive of either relationship. Thus:
- Discovered agriculture before anyone else Ate a wider variety of wild plants than anyone else
and also:
Ate a wider variety of wild plants than anyone else Discovered agriculture before anyone else
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect, because there is no evidence that the archaeologists will be able to determine whether the plants were wild or cultivated. It is exceptionally difficult to justify this level of certainty.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If the plants were cultivated and people who occupied the site discovered agriculture before anyone else, then it is reasonable to conclude that no one else used these particular plants in the same way as the site’s inhabitants did. Alternatively, if the plants were wild and the people who occupied the site ate a wider variety of plants than anyone else, then they ate at least some plants that no one else did (at that time). Either way, whether the plants were wild or cultivated, we can conclude that the people who occupied the site used some plants in ways that no other people did at that time.
Answer choice (C): We cannot speculate what types of plants were found at the site if the people who occupied it had reached a more advanced stage in the use of wild plants than anyone else at the time. Indeed, the only way to reach the conclusion proposed here (i.e. that the plants were uncultivated), would be to use the contrapositive of the first conditional relationship. In other words, we would need to know that someone else discovered agriculture before the people who occupied the site did:
- Discovered agriculture before anyone else Cultivated
Clearly, this answer choice does not allow us to determine who discovered agriculture first. Consequently, we cannot prove that the plants found at the site were uncultivated.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice contains a Mistaken Reversal of the first conditional relationship:
- Cultivated Discovered agriculture before anyone else
MR: Discovered agriculture before anyone else Cultivated