- Wed Sep 04, 2024 5:07 pm
#108797
Hi balikbayan,
It's important when answering a question like this that you prephrase before looking at the answers. It's also important that you have a broader understanding of the overall theme in the passage regarding the "rhetoric" versus how science was actually practiced.
The very first sentence of the passage introduces a contrast or "discrepancy" (line 4) between the way actual scientific experimentation was conducted in the seventeenth century and the rhetoric describing it. This contrast is one of the key ideas in the passage and so when you are identifying the rhetoric, it needs to be in opposition to the how the actual experiments were conducted. The reality, for Boyle and other scientists at the time, is that they used technicians to do a lot of the work (lines 23-31). The rhetoric, by contrast, was that the scientists were supposed to do the work themselves (lines 6-10).
In the specific lines (39-41) referenced in the question, "despite the clamor of seventeenth century rhetoric commending a hands on approach" (my emphasis), this rhetoric is contrasted with the traditional contempt for manual labor that the English upper class had. In other words, the rhetoric is the opposite of contempt for manual labor. This sentence only makes sense if the rhetoric is that the scientists should do the work themselves (i.e. the manual labor).
This is best captured in Answer D.
The problem with Answer E is that it doesn't address the idea that the scientists need to do the work themselves, which is the key idea of the rhetoric and why the rhetoric was different from reality. While Answer E may describe their view on the purpose of science, it doesn't require the scientists to do the research/experiments themselves.
Here's one last point. Notice that question 9 also addresses the scientific rhetoric and the correct Answer (E) also gets at the idea of the rhetoric meaning that the scientist should do the work himself. Even though this question is specifically referring "rhetoric" mentioned in line 6 rather than in lines 39-40 as question 15 does, the way that rhetoric is used doesn't change in the passage. In both places and in both questions, the idea is that the scientists should do the work themselves.