- Mon Oct 20, 2014 11:00 pm
#33827
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus, the author discusses the original purpose of an object found in a Stone Age tomb in Ireland. The object is made of carved flint, and depicts “a stylized human head with an open mouth.” Based on the size of the object, which is too small to be a weapon, and the object’s depiction of an open mouth—symbolizing speaking—the author concludes that the object was most likely the head of a speaking staff, which was “a communal object passed around a small assembly to indicate who has the right to speak.”
We know from the question stem that this is a Weaken question. Our job is to find an answer choice that raises at least some doubt that the object was the head of a speaking staff. To develop a prephrase, we need to review the evidence. The author thinks the object was the head of a speaking staff because of its size and its depiction of an open mouth. There is no obvious gap in the use of that evidence to support the conclusion. The only other information we know about the object is that it was found in a Stone Age tomb in Ireland.
This is a difficult question, because we do not have a strong prephrase. Rather than try to creatively construct factual scenarios that could attack the conclusion, we should move on to the answer choices, being on the lookout for information that tells us why the evidence given by the author does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that the object was the head of a speaking staff.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect because we have no reason to think that the tomb should have included weapons if the object were the head of a speaking staff.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice because it tells us that a communal object, such as a speaking staff, would not normally be buried in a tomb, as this object was. Rather, it more typically would have been passed from one generation to the next. The discovery of the object in a tomb casts doubt on the conclusion that it was probably the head of a speaking staff.
Answer choice (C): Here, the answer choice attacks the origin of the object, not its original use. This answer choice is irrelevant to the conclusion, which did not address whether or not the object was carved in Stone Age Ireland, but rather what the object’s original purpose was.
Answer choice (D): As with answer choice (A), we have no reason to think that this information would have any impact on the conclusion. Nothing in the stimulus told us that political prominence —or lack thereof—has any relation to the identification of the object as the head of a speaking staff.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice is intended to confuse you by referring back to the belief of some archaeologists that the object was a weapon. This answer choice has no impact on the determination of whether the object was the head of a speaking staff, although, if it is such a head, this information would tell us that the speaking staff is thought to symbolize a warrior’s mace.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus, the author discusses the original purpose of an object found in a Stone Age tomb in Ireland. The object is made of carved flint, and depicts “a stylized human head with an open mouth.” Based on the size of the object, which is too small to be a weapon, and the object’s depiction of an open mouth—symbolizing speaking—the author concludes that the object was most likely the head of a speaking staff, which was “a communal object passed around a small assembly to indicate who has the right to speak.”
We know from the question stem that this is a Weaken question. Our job is to find an answer choice that raises at least some doubt that the object was the head of a speaking staff. To develop a prephrase, we need to review the evidence. The author thinks the object was the head of a speaking staff because of its size and its depiction of an open mouth. There is no obvious gap in the use of that evidence to support the conclusion. The only other information we know about the object is that it was found in a Stone Age tomb in Ireland.
This is a difficult question, because we do not have a strong prephrase. Rather than try to creatively construct factual scenarios that could attack the conclusion, we should move on to the answer choices, being on the lookout for information that tells us why the evidence given by the author does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that the object was the head of a speaking staff.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect because we have no reason to think that the tomb should have included weapons if the object were the head of a speaking staff.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice because it tells us that a communal object, such as a speaking staff, would not normally be buried in a tomb, as this object was. Rather, it more typically would have been passed from one generation to the next. The discovery of the object in a tomb casts doubt on the conclusion that it was probably the head of a speaking staff.
Answer choice (C): Here, the answer choice attacks the origin of the object, not its original use. This answer choice is irrelevant to the conclusion, which did not address whether or not the object was carved in Stone Age Ireland, but rather what the object’s original purpose was.
Answer choice (D): As with answer choice (A), we have no reason to think that this information would have any impact on the conclusion. Nothing in the stimulus told us that political prominence —or lack thereof—has any relation to the identification of the object as the head of a speaking staff.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice is intended to confuse you by referring back to the belief of some archaeologists that the object was a weapon. This answer choice has no impact on the determination of whether the object was the head of a speaking staff, although, if it is such a head, this information would tell us that the speaking staff is thought to symbolize a warrior’s mace.