- Mon Mar 11, 2024 12:02 pm
#105614
Hey Tooty,
In this question we're trying to strengthen the argument, so we need to look at the conclusion of that argument, which is that this discovery of sharpened wooden poles and flint cutting tools disproves the belief that the humanlike precursors of Homo sapiens did not hunt. The implication there is that these tools were used for hunting and because of that, we can disprove the belief.
The moment you see a cause and effect argument, you should recall all the ways we can easily weaken that relationship. For example, showing the effect occurred without the cause, showing there is an alternative cause for the effect, etc. In a strengthening question like this one, we want to find an answer choice that would eliminate one of these potential weaknesses in the argument.
Answer choice (A) does just that - the argument is implying that the precursors to Homo sapiens were using these tools to hunt, and therefore because of that, we can disprove the belief that this group did not hunt (that's the effect). If precursors to Homo sapiens were using these tools for self-defense or for another non-hunting reason, then the '"cause" which allows us to determine the "effect" is eliminated - we can no longer say for certain that these precursors were hunters because they might have only used these tools for self-defense, not hunting.
By focusing on the conclusion of the argument, we can immediately eliminate any answer choices that are not talking about the precursors of Homo sapiens, because that is not a population we're discussing here. That lets us know Answer Choice (E) is incorrect- whatever the earliest Homo sapiens did is irrelevant, we are focusing on the human like people that came before this group.