- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23631
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion—PR. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus discusses the question of who wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey. Since there is no overwhelming evidence for or against the traditional attribution to Homer, the author asserts that we should accept this "verdict of tradition."
The question stem asks for the most accurate description of the principle at work in the stimulus, which is roughly this: without overwhelming evidence in either direction, we should accept traditional theory.
Answer choice (A): The author does not argue that we should suspend judgment, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, expressing the author's assertion that we should defer to tradition in the absence of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
Answer choice (C): This choice lacks the component of deferring to tradition, so this cannot be the principle at work in the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): The author asserts that one should accept the authority of tradition, but has no requirement of "non-traditional evidence."
Answer choice (E): The author's point is not that we should defer to tradition based on conflicting hypothesis, but that we should do so in the absence of strong evidence to the contrary.
Justify the Conclusion—PR. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus discusses the question of who wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey. Since there is no overwhelming evidence for or against the traditional attribution to Homer, the author asserts that we should accept this "verdict of tradition."
The question stem asks for the most accurate description of the principle at work in the stimulus, which is roughly this: without overwhelming evidence in either direction, we should accept traditional theory.
Answer choice (A): The author does not argue that we should suspend judgment, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, expressing the author's assertion that we should defer to tradition in the absence of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
Answer choice (C): This choice lacks the component of deferring to tradition, so this cannot be the principle at work in the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): The author asserts that one should accept the authority of tradition, but has no requirement of "non-traditional evidence."
Answer choice (E): The author's point is not that we should defer to tradition based on conflicting hypothesis, but that we should do so in the absence of strong evidence to the contrary.