- Fri Oct 11, 2019 4:09 pm
#71057
I would adjust that analysis just slightly, ser219 - Lowe's theory is that when construction at a given location stops it means the site at which the construction stopped had been abandoned. That doesn't mean a stoppage indicates a collapse of the civilization, but just that a particular location was left behind. The collapse of the civilization took place over the next hundred years or so. So, what we are looking for is "evidence that a certain thing stopped happening is used to show that something related to it also stopped happening" (construction stopped, so use of the site stopped.)
Answer A deals with a shortage, rather than a complete stoppage - what does a current shortage of food on shelves tell us about the weather that may have led to that shortage? What we want, though, is an answer that shows one thing completely stopping, and using that as evidence to show that something else also completely stopped. Maybe "stores stopped stocking fresh produce, so farmers must have stopped growing it" (when the change at stores might be explained another way, like farmers started selling at farm stands or farmers markets or through direct co-ops instead of in stores.) That's why E is the better answer - someone stopped buying stamps, so she must have gotten rid of her collection/stopped being a stamp collector (when they might just be holding on to their existing collection, or trading stamps rather than buying them, etc.)
Also, answer A is more directly causal than is the situation in the stimulus. Cause and effect is implied in Lowe's theory - abandoning a site is assumed to be the cause of stopping new construction - but never explicitly stated. That's one more reason to dislike answer A - it's more directly, explicitly causal than is what Lowe claimed, while E is more like the implied causal relationship Lowe posited.
So, two good reasons to select E over A here, and one of them is the one you pegged (shortage isn't stoppage, reduced production due to weather isn't the same as no longer trying.) Good work!
Adam M. Tyson
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