- Wed Apr 27, 2016 4:28 pm
#23514
Hi Micah,
When something is "purported to explain" something else, it basically means, the first thing supposedly explains the second thing. So if I said "I think you need a jacket today", and then said, "the temperature's going to drop 20 degrees, and you'll get cold without it", then my second statement would be a position that "purports to explain" my claim that you should wear a jacket.
The argument starts with a claim (i.e.: live music is a richer experience), then the author gives us a position that provides a supposed explanation for that claim ("some say..."). Then the author attacks that position (the author attacks the explanation).
So answer choice E is a convoluted way of saying that the statement in question (that live music is richer), is the initial claim or statement -- about which the argument then presents a position that explains the claim, which the author then undermines/attacks.
C isn't accurate, because it's saying that the author is trying to explain the first statement. The author doesn't do that, the author only attacks someone else's explanation.
Hope this helps!
Beth