- Wed Dec 18, 2019 3:33 am
#72618
Can anyone explain why (B) is the credited answer choice? It states "Observation of physical phenomena was not a major concern in Aristotle's cosmological theory." I think it correlates with the first requirement for good theory: "Accurately describe a large class of observations in terms of ..." The stimulus told us that A's theory "satisfied the first requirement." So it is not a major concern. Why that is not supported?
Also, why is (D) supported? Admin's explanation defined "many" as "a large number of." But logically speaking, "many" is just "some (1 to 100%)"; grammatically speaking, "many" means "more than one" or "two or above." What is the exact distinction between "a few" and "many"? Can we put a number as a cutoff? Are they opposite of each other? In addition, grammatically speaking, I think "a few" is positive and "few" is negative. For example, "a few of the students stayed in the classroom" could mean several; "few of the students stayed in the classroom" could mean "virtually none of." Lastly, I tend to think "a large number" is a "some" statement as well. How do we negotiate through this loosey-gooseyly defined number describers? Thanks in advance!
Also, why is (D) supported? Admin's explanation defined "many" as "a large number of." But logically speaking, "many" is just "some (1 to 100%)"; grammatically speaking, "many" means "more than one" or "two or above." What is the exact distinction between "a few" and "many"? Can we put a number as a cutoff? Are they opposite of each other? In addition, grammatically speaking, I think "a few" is positive and "few" is negative. For example, "a few of the students stayed in the classroom" could mean several; "few of the students stayed in the classroom" could mean "virtually none of." Lastly, I tend to think "a large number" is a "some" statement as well. How do we negotiate through this loosey-gooseyly defined number describers? Thanks in advance!