- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#44577
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (A)
The important thing to notice here is that we are asked by the question to weaken this argument by attacking a specific premise, that the traditional attribution should carry special weight. And as we're given the reason why it does carry that special weight (presumed historical continuity), we should also know how to attack it: eliminate the presumption or value of historical continuity. So our correct answer choice will somehow do this.
Answer choice (A): Art dealers have always been shady and willing to bump up a painting's value by misattributing its provenance to more famous (and lucrative) origins. This seems to fit; if art dealers of the past were willing to lie to increase the sales price, then historical continuity isn't particularly valuable and could be questioned, as the very first sale could have been based on a lie. A Contender.
Answer choice (B): Claims that at the time of creation, witnesses exist to that creation. This would serve to bolster the importance of historical continuity, and serve to strengthen, not weaken, the value of traditional attribution. Immediate Loser.
Answer choice (C): It's difficult to tell who painted a painting just by looking at the work itself. If anything, this would make the historical continuity more important, by making present-day evaluations less reliable. Loser.
Answer choice (D): Difficult to parse on first glance, but is actually saying that attribution determines how highly critics think of attributes of a painting. The difference in a 3-year-old flinging paint against a wall versus a Jackson Pollock drip painting comes to mind. None of that matters to what we're being asked to do, which is to make traditional attribution less important. Irrelevant to the question, so also a Loser.
Answer choice (E): Again, difficult to parse, but ultimately irrelevant. This answer choice is dealing with attribution when assistants work on a painting alongside the recognized painter; we're concerned with the recognized painters, not giving assistants credit on painting they helped create. Loser.
So by process of elimination, (A) is the correct answer choice, as it is the only one that directly attacks the historical continuity that grants traditional attribution special weight.
Hope this clears things up!
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (A)
The important thing to notice here is that we are asked by the question to weaken this argument by attacking a specific premise, that the traditional attribution should carry special weight. And as we're given the reason why it does carry that special weight (presumed historical continuity), we should also know how to attack it: eliminate the presumption or value of historical continuity. So our correct answer choice will somehow do this.
Answer choice (A): Art dealers have always been shady and willing to bump up a painting's value by misattributing its provenance to more famous (and lucrative) origins. This seems to fit; if art dealers of the past were willing to lie to increase the sales price, then historical continuity isn't particularly valuable and could be questioned, as the very first sale could have been based on a lie. A Contender.
Answer choice (B): Claims that at the time of creation, witnesses exist to that creation. This would serve to bolster the importance of historical continuity, and serve to strengthen, not weaken, the value of traditional attribution. Immediate Loser.
Answer choice (C): It's difficult to tell who painted a painting just by looking at the work itself. If anything, this would make the historical continuity more important, by making present-day evaluations less reliable. Loser.
Answer choice (D): Difficult to parse on first glance, but is actually saying that attribution determines how highly critics think of attributes of a painting. The difference in a 3-year-old flinging paint against a wall versus a Jackson Pollock drip painting comes to mind. None of that matters to what we're being asked to do, which is to make traditional attribution less important. Irrelevant to the question, so also a Loser.
Answer choice (E): Again, difficult to parse, but ultimately irrelevant. This answer choice is dealing with attribution when assistants work on a painting alongside the recognized painter; we're concerned with the recognized painters, not giving assistants credit on painting they helped create. Loser.
So by process of elimination, (A) is the correct answer choice, as it is the only one that directly attacks the historical continuity that grants traditional attribution special weight.
Hope this clears things up!