- Tue Jul 11, 2017 6:52 pm
#37178
Thanks for your question, vedan22. First, let me say that I see two possible ways of reading answer choice C, the map answer. One reading, which I think is the one you are using, is that the maps in question were used by the premodern humans. If they made and used maps of their pathways, what would those maps tell us about why they used pathways? To say that they used them out of fear requires a bit of a stretch and some outside information. Do we use maps only because we fear getting lost? Even today I don't think that's the case. We also use maps to agree on meeting places, and to identify to others where they should go. Oh, you want to find good berries? Take a look at this map and I'll show you where I found some! While maps may be used in part out of fear of getting lost without them, fear of getting lost is not the only reason for using a map. Even if we read answer C as referring to maps used by the premodern humans, I don't think it helps us all that much.
Worse than that, though, is that such a reading would, in my opinion, be incorrect. The structure of the sentence - "maps showing pathways used by certain recent premodern human populations" - is such that the "used by" refers not to the maps but to the pathways. The pathways, not the maps, are the immediate antecedent here. If we were trying to say that the maps were used by the premodern humans, we probably say instead "maps used by certain premodern humans showing pathways" or something like that. The maps in this answer choice are of the pathways, but may not have been used by the premodern humans at all, but may have been drawn later by archaeologists or geographers. If that's so, then the maps tell us nothing at all about why those premodern folks used pathways, only where the pathways were and where they went.
In either case, since we are trying to strengthen the claim in the second to last paragraph that fear was the motivating factor for using paths, maps don't help. Perhaps they used maps out of fear, or perhaps they were just being helpful and efficient, or perhaps they weren't using maps at all. E is the better answer because it is evidence of fear of some sort - you don't do a ritual for protection unless you are afraid of something and want protection from it, right?
I hope that clears things up for you!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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