- Tue Oct 15, 2024 2:53 pm
#109923
When you are asked for the main conclusion of an argument, cargopants, you should focus on something that author explicitly stated, rather than something implied or that you might infer from the facts. It helps if you just quote the test itself as your prephrase.
Answer A is incorrect because the author is not saying, or even implying, that there is no life on other planets. All they are saying is that we will never find that life. Answer A takes the argument on step further than the author went. Since they never said there is no life out there, this cannot be their conclusion.
Answer E is incorrect because, again, the author never said this. They probably believe it's true, but that isn't good enough to make it their conclusion. It's even possible that they don't agree with answer E - maybe they think we should keep spending that money just to keep hope alive, or to stimulate the economy, or because the technology has other useful applications that would not otherwise be developed? Whether they believe in what answer E says or not, though, is not the point. The point is that they didn't say it and didn't try to prove it. They only tried to prove that "The dream of finding extraterrestrial life is destined to remain a dream." In other words, we will not find it, as answer C nicely paraphrases.
Adam M. Tyson
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