- Tue Jan 16, 2018 1:04 pm
#42952
I chose the right answer for this, which is D, but I do need a bit of clarity. In a Method-AP questions, we either know the following: 1. If its a premise, it could also be a sub-conclusion. 2. If it is a conclusion, it could either be a sub-conclusion or the main conclusion. 3. It could be something else as in an example, an analogy, or simply background information. Those parts are understandable. My concern is regarding the relation to the conclusion and sub-conclusion. Structurally, can you provide me with a generalized example of a stimulus that conforms to the following: first sentence premise, second sentence main conclusion, and third sentence sub-conclusion?
The reason why I ask that is because, in this stimulus, I saw the phrase, "This shows that...not impermeable," as its main-conclusion, but then was thrown off by, "Thus recent scientific," and made a judgement call to focalize that as my main conclusion. The problem with the last sentence was two-fold: first, I took the beginning of the phrase "thus recent" to possibly mean "because of, the conclusion reached earlier, scientific research may also...intellectual heritage." Second, the assertion "most of which also can...contemporary readers," threw me off as being a third-wheel --- an inconvenience-- to the main conclusion, and with the fact it introduced "only in language," which went against what I believed was the main conclusion. Thus, switching the last sentence to be the main conclusion. Moving forward, what could one do to make such process much more efficient?
Thanks
The reason why I ask that is because, in this stimulus, I saw the phrase, "This shows that...not impermeable," as its main-conclusion, but then was thrown off by, "Thus recent scientific," and made a judgement call to focalize that as my main conclusion. The problem with the last sentence was two-fold: first, I took the beginning of the phrase "thus recent" to possibly mean "because of, the conclusion reached earlier, scientific research may also...intellectual heritage." Second, the assertion "most of which also can...contemporary readers," threw me off as being a third-wheel --- an inconvenience-- to the main conclusion, and with the fact it introduced "only in language," which went against what I believed was the main conclusion. Thus, switching the last sentence to be the main conclusion. Moving forward, what could one do to make such process much more efficient?
Thanks