- Mon Dec 27, 2021 10:00 pm
#92862
It might help to look at this question as a "soft" Must Be True question, BMM2021, also known as a Most Strongly Supported question. The question doesn't ask for an answer that the author would be certain to agree with, but rather to pick the one answer out of the five presented that the author would be most likely to agree with. That means the correct answer doesn't need to be absolutely proven by the text, but only supported more than the others.
There is at least some support that the author would say "sure, that's true" in response to answer C, as Robert laid out in his response. After all, the author argued in favor of using predators instead of pesticides in at least one case, right? But there is no support for any of the other answers, as each of them is either too broad or else relies on information that is not found within the passage. Since answer C is the only answer that has any support, it fits the criteria of the question: it is the one answer out of the choices given with which the author would be most likely to agree, if we base that analysis solely on the text of the passage.
Don't hold out for perfect, proven answers when the question asks for what is most likely or most strongly supported. It's okay to just pick the answer that you hate the least!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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