- Wed Apr 10, 2019 4:32 pm
#64028
Hi H. Lee,
Let me start out by saying that primary purpose questions are asking for an inference based on the main point; they are asking you to infer the answer to the question "Why did the author take the time and effort to write and publish this piece of writing?" In order to effectively answer that, one must first correctly identify the main point of the passage, and then infer why the author would believe that main point is important.
The main point here is the explanation for the origins of our universe and how the Big Bang came about that Carroll and Chen have put forward. So why did they do that, and why did the author think their work is important? Because it shows how the Big Bang theory makes sense in spite of potential objections. It gives a fuller, more complete, more believable version of the theory by explaining how the original state that would lead to a Big Bang could come about. So as a Prephrase to this question, I would use something like: "The passage's purpose is to explain how the Big Bang theory is not just plausible, but likely."
When choosing between answer choices (A) and (E), having a strong Prephrase is very useful. The passage is trying to explain how the previously-believed weakest link in the Big Bang theory, the original low entropy state, is actually a likely scenario, so it is in effect bolstering the body of evidence for the theory by filling in a logical gap. While this isn't the exact wording of (E), it comes close to the meaning; it explains why a theory (Big Bang) is reasonable. (A)'s meaning is quite different: the only "established principle," in contrast to a theory, mentioned in the passage is the 2nd law of thermodynamics. But there aren't any "novel consequences" drawn from it, and even if there were, that's clearly not the primary purpose of the passage.
Hope this clears things up!