- Tue Oct 11, 2011 12:27 am
#2084
The principle questions seem to be hard to master. The only technique we learned from the full-length course for this type of problem is that of abstraction. But I find abstracting the stimulus to be tricky in practice. Our way of abstracting could be quite different from the correct answer choice’s way of abstracting. It is easy to give different importance to different parts in the stimulus. For instance, in this problem, I abstracted the stimulus as “some information is helpful about learning something. However, the deeper we dig into a topic, the less useful it becomes.” As a result, I chose B since it is the closest to my abstraction. The correct answer A does not address how the deeper we go, the less useful it is. Instead, it states that we can infer little about the origin of our solar system. Could you please tell us what is the correct answer’s abstraction supposed to be so that the correct answer winds up being A? And also how in the future, we could arrive at an abstraction of the stimulus that is similar to that of the correct answer choice? Thank you in advance for replying.