- Sat Jan 20, 2018 12:00 am
#73109
Complete Question Explanation
Main Point. The correct answer choice is (C).
A historian tells us about an historical fact and then shares the view of an economist who offered an explanation for that fact. This follows a very common pattern of "some people say something, but they are wrong, and here's why," with the exception that the historian doesn't directly state that the economist is wrong. Instead he says that some evidence is required before that explanation can be accepted. This is the main point of the argument, and our task is to find the answer that restates that conclusion.
Answer choice (A): This is a true statement, but only restates the historical fact and not the author's conclusion.
Answer choice (B): Like answer A, this is true according to the stimulus, but still just the background facts and not the conclusion of the argument.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. This answer correctly restates the conclusion that more evidence is required before we can accept the position of the economist mentioned in the passage.
Answer choice (D): At no point in the stimulus did the author claim that the economist was wrong. This would have been a good answer if the stimulus had followed the usual pattern of a "some people say something, but they are wrong" argument, but it did not. Instead, the structure was "some people say something, but more evidence is needed."
Answer choice (E): The historian does not claim that there was no change in values prior to the Industrial Revolution, but only that more evidence was needed before one could make a causal claim about such changes and growth in productivity.
Main Point. The correct answer choice is (C).
A historian tells us about an historical fact and then shares the view of an economist who offered an explanation for that fact. This follows a very common pattern of "some people say something, but they are wrong, and here's why," with the exception that the historian doesn't directly state that the economist is wrong. Instead he says that some evidence is required before that explanation can be accepted. This is the main point of the argument, and our task is to find the answer that restates that conclusion.
Answer choice (A): This is a true statement, but only restates the historical fact and not the author's conclusion.
Answer choice (B): Like answer A, this is true according to the stimulus, but still just the background facts and not the conclusion of the argument.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. This answer correctly restates the conclusion that more evidence is required before we can accept the position of the economist mentioned in the passage.
Answer choice (D): At no point in the stimulus did the author claim that the economist was wrong. This would have been a good answer if the stimulus had followed the usual pattern of a "some people say something, but they are wrong" argument, but it did not. Instead, the structure was "some people say something, but more evidence is needed."
Answer choice (E): The historian does not claim that there was no change in values prior to the Industrial Revolution, but only that more evidence was needed before one could make a causal claim about such changes and growth in productivity.