Robert Carroll wrote:est,
There is a difference in that paragraph between the linguists' view and the scientists' view. The linguists are looking at mathematical language in science as an instance of their broader hypothesis about the strong or weak analogy between the language and the thing described by that language. The scientists are looking at mathematical language as a tool for explaining phenomena and making discoveries.
The key to the difference is that linguists are thinking about mathematical language, whereas the scientists are just using the language and concerned about science rather than the linguistic theory. So when answer choice (D) talks about "a current debate among scientists about the nature of explanation," it's adding new information. The linguists, not the scientists, were talking about the nature of explanation. That's why (D) is incorrect.
Robert Carroll
Hi,
I don't really understand what you mean by the "linguists are looking at mathematical language in science as an instance of their broader hypothesis..." I guess more specifically I don't see where in the passage the linguists even discuss the topic of mathematical language at all. How I understood the passage was that there's this debate going on between linguists about the role language has in the pursuit of knowledge where some argue that it directly corresponds in some essential way to objects, and others say it doesn't, rather its an agreed upon convention. The third paragraph then expands on the latter explanation which is then applied to the topic of mathematical language and science. So it's not the linguists that are debating about mathematical language in science, but rather that their general debate about the relationship between language and knowledge is used by the author to understand/explore the relationship of mathematical language in science. Is that right, or am I missing something?
At first I chose D for this answer because I think I just misunderstood the paragraph in a sense.. But after going over it again I think I see why D is not right, because it's not about the similarities of the 2 debates, rather it's about using the latter explanation of language from the linguists debate and applying it to the specific example in science (as I described above). Therefore, B is right.
I'm really struggling on RC so just trying to really understand if my thought process and understanding is correct?
Thanks so much!