- Wed Sep 11, 2019 7:43 am
#68022
I also was skeptical of A because it forces us to make a judgement about the article through the description provided by an opposing argument. It just seems rather odd to me that we're reading other peoples' interpretations of writing.
lanereuden wrote:Two things,That was my thinking as well. To me, B is saying the letter writer is wrong to blindly accept Mr. Holan's (an intermediary source) claim, which is incongruent with the letter's argument.
First with regard to A,
Who are we to say whether or not testimony is “evidence of extraordinarily high standard”
Yes it makes sense it’s not, but what gives us that right to make that assessment
Secondly,
What’s wrong with B?
I imagine intermediate source is not stated nor alluded to in stimulus and so is wrong, at least that is the explanation I read elsewhere.
But to me, isn’t Mr Honlan the intermediate source here? I mean, he saw it, and the newspaper published it, doesn’t that make the newspaper not the true source, i.e. there is intermediate source—that is, Mr Holan?
I also was skeptical of A because it forces us to make a judgement about the article through the description provided by an opposing argument. It just seems rather odd to me that we're reading other peoples' interpretations of writing.