- Tue Feb 19, 2019 7:34 pm
#62787
I'd say the problem with answer B, as compared to D, is that B is too specific, Deck. The use of "vocabulary" is intended to draw some sort of analogy, comparing canary songs to human language, but the comparison is very general - they are both things that are learned over time that shouldn't go away unless the brain degrades in some way. The similarity doesn't have to extend all the way down to the structure of words being similar to the structure of the songs - that's way more complex an idea than is supported by the passage!
In fact, your analysis looks a little like what we call the uniqueness principle of answers, which means that only one answer can be fully correct. Where one answer, if true, forces another answer to be just as true, then the one doing the forcing cannot be the correct answer. If it was, then both answers would be equally correct! If answer B encompasses answer D, as you said (and I'm not sure it really does - having a repertoire, or a collection, is not required by having similar structural elements) then answer B could not be correct unless answer D was ALSO correct, and they cannot both be correct. If that's how you saw it, that would be a good reason to reject answer B, not a reason to select it!
Adam M. Tyson
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