- Thu Nov 23, 2017 3:56 pm
#41841
So I realize I should be getting the first 10 correct and usually do, but this question tripped me up.
Is answer A not right because the stimulus is only referring to "this [particular] generalization" being regarded as scientific law despite the absence of verification and doesn't say that is the case with all scientific laws?
Why is D correct, though? How do we know that they tested the theory to the extent current science allows? The stimulus only says none of their tests falsified the theory and that they didn't test the theory under every feasible condition.
I'm concerned that this is supposed to be an easy question and I'm not seeing why D is right. B (opposite answer), C (stimulus doesn't claim this, it just the reverse and doesn't generalize from it), and E (not stated in stimulus) seem clearly wrong though. Thank you for the help ahead of time!!
Is answer A not right because the stimulus is only referring to "this [particular] generalization" being regarded as scientific law despite the absence of verification and doesn't say that is the case with all scientific laws?
Why is D correct, though? How do we know that they tested the theory to the extent current science allows? The stimulus only says none of their tests falsified the theory and that they didn't test the theory under every feasible condition.
I'm concerned that this is supposed to be an easy question and I'm not seeing why D is right. B (opposite answer), C (stimulus doesn't claim this, it just the reverse and doesn't generalize from it), and E (not stated in stimulus) seem clearly wrong though. Thank you for the help ahead of time!!