- Sun Jul 17, 2022 10:47 am
#96221
I think you found your way there, Mazen!
But let's take it a step further. Let's talk about some other animals altogether, animals that were never mentioned. I'm going to think about pigs now.
What if we look at the mortality patterns in the remains of pigs found at the Botai site and find that they are similar to horses, with a lot of adult males and fewer females? What would that tell us about the horse theory? I don't see what it would tell us, honestly. We might say to ourselves "okay, so something similar is happening with pigs, but they probably aren't riding pigs, so what else could be going on? Well I suppose it depends on a lot of things, like how pigs live in the wild and how they behave when they are being hunted. And were the skeletons whole, or were they in pieces? How heavy were pig carcasses; did it make sense to drag them back home after killing them?" And on and on.
And what if the patterns were similar to those of goats and dogs? That wouldn't tell us anything new about the horses, because we already know that the horse pattern differs from the pattern typical of some other animals. This finding would neither support nor weaken the hypothesis about horses.
In short, what happens with other animals doesn't matter. Horses are different. The most relevant data we could find would be data that is directly about the horses, data which would tell us more about whether they were hunted, raised as a food source, or raised to be ridden. Even if we could somehow find some relevant information by doing further comparisons to other animals, answer A is directly on point and would be much more relevant. And the question didn't just ask "what would be relevant"; it asked "what would be most relevant."
But let's take it a step further. Let's talk about some other animals altogether, animals that were never mentioned. I'm going to think about pigs now.
What if we look at the mortality patterns in the remains of pigs found at the Botai site and find that they are similar to horses, with a lot of adult males and fewer females? What would that tell us about the horse theory? I don't see what it would tell us, honestly. We might say to ourselves "okay, so something similar is happening with pigs, but they probably aren't riding pigs, so what else could be going on? Well I suppose it depends on a lot of things, like how pigs live in the wild and how they behave when they are being hunted. And were the skeletons whole, or were they in pieces? How heavy were pig carcasses; did it make sense to drag them back home after killing them?" And on and on.
And what if the patterns were similar to those of goats and dogs? That wouldn't tell us anything new about the horses, because we already know that the horse pattern differs from the pattern typical of some other animals. This finding would neither support nor weaken the hypothesis about horses.
In short, what happens with other animals doesn't matter. Horses are different. The most relevant data we could find would be data that is directly about the horses, data which would tell us more about whether they were hunted, raised as a food source, or raised to be ridden. Even if we could somehow find some relevant information by doing further comparisons to other animals, answer A is directly on point and would be much more relevant. And the question didn't just ask "what would be relevant"; it asked "what would be most relevant."
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