- Mon Jul 26, 2021 4:16 pm
#89065
I thought about B, D, and E, also, but ultimately picked B (the right answer). Here was my logic -- curious if it's right, hope it's helpful.
The final sentence of A states that "Negative evidence is rarely conclusive," i.e. "The existence of a case that seems to contradict a theory is rarely conclusive."
The reason D doesn't work is because the failure to find Vulcan is a case of exactly the opposite -- where negative evidence (Vulcan's non-existence) contradicted and *helped disprove* a theory. The theorists ultimately rejected Newton's theory in favor of Einstein.
In contrast, in the case of B, the initial failure of Newton's laws' to predict Uranus's orbit is a case where there was negative evidence (the lack of the predicted orbit), but that didn't require theorists to throw out Newton's laws. Rather, there was another factor they hadn't taken into account. This situation is parallel to the situation described in the final sentence of A.
E caught my eye at first, but it's not a case of negative evidence at all. Rather, the second part of the answer (the successful prediction of Mercury's orbit) is positive evidence for the first part of the answer (Einstein's general theory of relativity).