- Thu Dec 01, 2016 1:33 am
#31074
Hey there Rita, thanks for the question. This kind of question is something that students should be prephrasing before they even get to the questions, by thinking about the similarities and differences between the passages. What do they have in common, where do they diverge? Give that some thought before launching into even the first question and you will be better equipped to answer all of them.
So, what are these two passages both about, at their core? They are about negative evidence and the ways it can be used to disprove things. They come at it from very different angles, but that's a common theme in both. That supports answer C pretty powerfully.
Why not D? Because passage B really doesn't get into what constitutes "proper technique". Passage A does, somewhat, by talking about adjusting the auxiliary assumptions, but even that isn't really about teaching us what's proper. Since that idea isn't central to passage B, that's enough to reject it, because we need something central to both passages.
If you aren't convinced that answer C captures something central to both passages, try this approach: ask yourself which of the other answers is better than that one. We are told to pick the best answer, and that means sometimes (pretty often, in my experience and opinion) we have to pick an answer that is kind of terrible. That doesn't mean we should reject it, because they never told us to pick good answers, but rather the best answer (of the five choices we are given). So, which answer is better than C? Our authors think that none of them are, and I agree. That's a great reason to pick it, even if you don't like it much on its own merits.
I hope that helps clear up the strategy as well as the answer choice. Good luck!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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