- Sun Jan 20, 2013 12:00 am
#73660
Complete Question Explanation
Main Point - CE The correct answer choice is (D).
A Main Point question asks us to identify the conclusion of the argument, which is the statement that the author seeks to prove with his premises. To prephrase, look for the one thing that the author said that got all the support and which gave none. Here, that claim is found in the first portion of the second sentence, where the author dismisses claims of plagiarism and says coincidence is the more likely cause of the similarities in the two novels. The last claim, after the final comma and starting with the word "since," is the author's premise in support of that conclusion.
Answer choice (A): This is the factual background of the argument and is neither a premise not a conclusion.
Answer choice (B): This is the position that the author seeks to show is less likely than another position, and so is not his conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This is a premise of the argument, not a conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. This accurately captures the position the author seeks to prove is true, expressed in the first part of the second sentence of the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): Here we have a trap answer! It captures the basic structure of the argument, but provides more than just the conclusion made by the author. Instead of just the conclusion, it presents the entire argument in a conditional form, in essence saying "if the premises are true, then the conclusion is true." Also, note that this answer never gets to the real conclusion, which is that a coincidence is the more likely cause of the similarities.
Main Point - CE The correct answer choice is (D).
A Main Point question asks us to identify the conclusion of the argument, which is the statement that the author seeks to prove with his premises. To prephrase, look for the one thing that the author said that got all the support and which gave none. Here, that claim is found in the first portion of the second sentence, where the author dismisses claims of plagiarism and says coincidence is the more likely cause of the similarities in the two novels. The last claim, after the final comma and starting with the word "since," is the author's premise in support of that conclusion.
Answer choice (A): This is the factual background of the argument and is neither a premise not a conclusion.
Answer choice (B): This is the position that the author seeks to show is less likely than another position, and so is not his conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This is a premise of the argument, not a conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. This accurately captures the position the author seeks to prove is true, expressed in the first part of the second sentence of the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): Here we have a trap answer! It captures the basic structure of the argument, but provides more than just the conclusion made by the author. Instead of just the conclusion, it presents the entire argument in a conditional form, in essence saying "if the premises are true, then the conclusion is true." Also, note that this answer never gets to the real conclusion, which is that a coincidence is the more likely cause of the similarities.