- Mon Aug 16, 2021 10:50 pm
#89786
This whole passage is about the author rising to the defense of Wagner, telling us that while modern architecture may "emphasiz(e) practical and technical issues at the expense of aesthetic concerns" and that "cost-efficiency and utility have become the overriding concerns of the modern architect," that's not Wagner's fault, since he was very concerned with aesthetics. The first paragraph really lays out the main thesis of the passage, and the rest is in service of proving that position. That should be our prephrase for the Main Point - "Don't blame Wagner for these functional but ugly buildings."
Answer D is the closest match to that thesis.
Answer A is true - modern architecture has been criticized, as the first paragraph says - but the passage is not devoted to supporting that position. Put another way, the author isn't trying to convince us that modern architecture has been criticized. Instead, she is trying to prove that Wagner is not at fault for those failings. Otherwise, what is the purpose of anything the author wrote after the first two sentences? Surely the rest of the passage should be there to support the Main Point, right?
Beware of answers that are true but wrong. They will state something that IS correct about the passage but which does NOT answer the question asked. No matter how true that answer is, if it doesn't represent the big idea that the author wants to convey, it's not the Main Point!
Answer D is the closest match to that thesis.
Answer A is true - modern architecture has been criticized, as the first paragraph says - but the passage is not devoted to supporting that position. Put another way, the author isn't trying to convince us that modern architecture has been criticized. Instead, she is trying to prove that Wagner is not at fault for those failings. Otherwise, what is the purpose of anything the author wrote after the first two sentences? Surely the rest of the passage should be there to support the Main Point, right?
Beware of answers that are true but wrong. They will state something that IS correct about the passage but which does NOT answer the question asked. No matter how true that answer is, if it doesn't represent the big idea that the author wants to convey, it's not the Main Point!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam