Hi, Asalmen,
Let's take a look. We need to find an assumption (unstated belief) necessary for the conclusion to be valid. In other words, what is something the author clearly thinks but is not telling us? Start by clearly identifying and explaining the conclusion. The author argues that:
- The fact that the earliest evidence of the use of fire is 400,000-years-old casts doubt on the belief that humans had to master fire to migrate to Europe.
What idea is central to this claim? What does the author seem to believe without saying explicitly? What would we also have to know for this argument to make any sense?
Consider some possibilities. For instance, the author must believe that it is possible for evidence of the use of controlled fire to persist longer than 400,000 years. If evidence of the use of fire could only last 400,000 years, then the evidence cited would offer no support for the idea that there wasn't fire before 400,000 years ago; in turn, this evidence would then
not cast doubt on the belief that humans had to master fire to migrate to Europe.
Note what happened there: we went through a brief thought-exercise, a version of the Assumption Negation Test™. We prephrased an assumption necessary for the argument to be valid. Then we considered what would happen if that assumption were negated. We saw that the conclusion made no sense without this essential assumption.
You can use the same process with the answer choices. Look at answer choice (A). Is it really essential that the humans who first mastered fire used it only for heat? Does the author have to believe this for her argument to make sense? What if these humans used the fire for cooking too? Could we still conclude that "the fact that the earliest evidence of the use of fire is 400,000-years-old casts doubt on the belief that humans had to master fire to migrate to Europe"?
Sure, why not? Maybe the humans used it for heat but also for cooking. They might have still not needed fire to move to Europe.
Now look at (E). Does this author have to believe that there were humans in Europe prior to 400,000 years ago for this argument to make sense? What happens if we logically negate this statement?
- There were not humans in Europe prior to 400,000 years ago.
What effect does this negated answer choice have on our claim that "the fact that the earliest evidence of the use of fire is 400,000-years-old casts doubt on the belief that humans had to master fire to migrate to Europe"?
In fact, it makes the claim nonsensical! If there weren't any humans in Europe prior to 400,000 years ago, of course there was no evidence of humans using fire in Europe before then. The evidence of fire would then have been contemporaneous with the arrival of humans to Europe, and, far from casting doubt on our belief, this evidence would in fact bolster the claim that control of fire was necessary for people to move to Europe. Given the idea that there weren't humans in Europe prior to 400,000 years ago, the conclusion totally falls apart.
Does this make sense? Thanks for the question!
Personally, I'm hoping that my knowledge of controlled use of fire will be enough to cover the cost of my next European vacation!