- Mon Oct 07, 2019 11:10 am
#70940
Hi Danny,
Yes, I generally agree with your analysis, with a couple additional comments.
Regarding answer choice A, it is what we'd call an opposite answer. The author of Passage A indicates uncertainty about whether a person's muscles actually retain something from prior training that assists in the ease of regaining strength and size. The final paragraph of Passage A shows this uncertainty, where the author indicates that the entire phenomenon could be mental, rather than physical. The author of Passage B is more certain that muscle memory (something physical retained by the muscles) is responsible for these types of easier gains, because the first paragraph says, "[N]ow scientists think they know why," and the author never contradicts the research that is subsequently presented. Thus, the author of Passage B displays more certainty about the existence of muscle memory.
Answer choices B, D, and E are, as you note, uncertain. The author of Passage A does not indicate awareness of the research regarding retained nuclei that Passage B discusses, so there's no way to know whether the author of Passage A would agree or disagree with the explanation, or be willing to adopt "cross-species" scientific conclusions.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
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