- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#64902
Complete Question Explanation
Main Point. The correct answer choice is (E)
Answer choice (A): The argument is not about whether language
acquisition can ever be explained, but about what influences exist on
language acquisition and to what degree.
Answer choice (B): The psychologist asserts this statement at the end of
the first sentence and if this were a Must Be True question, this would be
the correct answer. But, this is more than a Must Be True question and
the correct answer must meet the Main Point criterion. So, although this
answer choice is true according to the psychologist, it does not capture
the point of the argument as indicated by the last sentence and is therefore
incorrect.
Answer choice (C): The argument does not attempt to establish that
language acquisition is solely the product of innate mechanisms, but
that innate mechanisms have some influence, as does environment.
This answer choice tries to confuse test takers by going in the opposite
direction of the psychologist’s statement that “one cannot contribute such
acquisition solely to environmental influences.” This does not mean that
we can therefore attribute such acquisition solely to innate mechanisms.
Answer choice (D): “Parents and peers” would qualify as environmental
influences and the argument is not about determining if the environmental
influence is the most important factor, but about the relative roles played
by environment and innate mechanisms in language acquisition.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer, and this is the only answer
that addresses the relative roles of environment and innate mechanisms.
Note that the language of the answer choice could have indicated that
either plays a greater role because what ought to be studied is a question
that determines which is a greater influence.
Main Point. The correct answer choice is (E)
Answer choice (A): The argument is not about whether language
acquisition can ever be explained, but about what influences exist on
language acquisition and to what degree.
Answer choice (B): The psychologist asserts this statement at the end of
the first sentence and if this were a Must Be True question, this would be
the correct answer. But, this is more than a Must Be True question and
the correct answer must meet the Main Point criterion. So, although this
answer choice is true according to the psychologist, it does not capture
the point of the argument as indicated by the last sentence and is therefore
incorrect.
Answer choice (C): The argument does not attempt to establish that
language acquisition is solely the product of innate mechanisms, but
that innate mechanisms have some influence, as does environment.
This answer choice tries to confuse test takers by going in the opposite
direction of the psychologist’s statement that “one cannot contribute such
acquisition solely to environmental influences.” This does not mean that
we can therefore attribute such acquisition solely to innate mechanisms.
Answer choice (D): “Parents and peers” would qualify as environmental
influences and the argument is not about determining if the environmental
influence is the most important factor, but about the relative roles played
by environment and innate mechanisms in language acquisition.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer, and this is the only answer
that addresses the relative roles of environment and innate mechanisms.
Note that the language of the answer choice could have indicated that
either plays a greater role because what ought to be studied is a question
that determines which is a greater influence.