- Tue Nov 26, 2019 12:37 pm
#72284
Hi Hanna! Your goal of wanting to think like the test-makers is the right one. Here's how a test-maker would look at this problem: for these kind of Must be True questions in Reading Comprehension, we want to be able to point to something specific in the passage to support our answer choice. This question is asking specifically about Lessing's beliefs, not those of the author, so to find that support I am going to be looking solely at the third paragraph of the passage (where the information about Lessing is contained). So, we even think about looking at the answer choices, we want to briefly scan the information in that paragraph, and see what it supports about Lessing's beliefs. After looking at the paragraph, we can Pre-Phrase a few possible answers: "a forged work can be equal to the original in aesthetic qualities", "forged works can be flawless", "forged works are inferior because of a lack of originality of vision", "originality of vision can mean a new way of seeing at the time", etc. With those in mind, I come down to the answer choices. Answer Choice (B) has clear support from the final sentence: "Thus Vermeer is acclaimed for having inaugurated, in the seventeenth century, a new way of seeing, and for pioneering techniques for embodying this new way of seeing through distinctive treatment of light, color, and form." This sentence tells us that Vermeer's "new way of seeing" didn't exist yet in the 17th century, and that Vermeer essentially invented it - this is a "historical circumstance". You are defining "historical circumstances" too narrowly when you're specifically looking for non-artistic historical events of the time, such as a war. Again, that sentence is telling us how artists at Vermeer's time painted, which certainly is a historical circumstance.
Answer Choice (E) finds almost no support in that third paragraph, which means that we can't ascribe that belief to Lessing. Steve is right up above when he says that it is too strongly worded. There are a couple other problems with it: (E) discusses the artist as a whole whereas Lessing is only discussing individual forged works of art. Furthermore, (E) finds the use of techniques developed by others sufficient to merit the label "not innovative". Lessing, however, is not interested in what causes being not innovative; his thoughts in the passage are directed more at what a lack of innovation means - and for Lessing, it means that a work can't be as artistically great as the original. If we were to fix those problems and make answer choice (E) read something like "A work of art that is not innovative cannot be artistically great," it would still be a strongly worded answer choice but there would be much more support in the passage for picking it. Hope that helps!