- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#74576
Complete Question Explanation
The correct answer choice is E.
This is a Parallel Reasoning form of Must Be True question, and it asks for an answer choice that is "most closely analogous" to the hypothetical debate described in the fourth paragraph. The best approach to Parallel Reasoning questions in Reading Comprehension is to create an abstract description of the portion of the paragraph you're being asked to match. Be as comprehensive as possible (under time constraints) with this abstract description, and make sure all the "key players" and key concepts are covered by your abstract description.
The key players in the hypothetical debate are "adherents of different religions." The abstract description of these key players is "people who are already committed to a position or conclusion," since an "adherent" is someone who is already committed.
What are the key players debating over? The creation of the universe. So the abstract description of the topic of the debate is "something important to the key players."
What do the key players rely on for their debate positions? Different religious texts. So the abstract description of the evidence the key players use is "different sources of evidence."
What will ultimately solve the debate? Not the religious texts themselves (because an adherent of Christianity, for example, is unlikely to be swayed by the Bhagavad Gita; and an adherent of Hinduism, for example, is unlikely to be swayed by the Bible). Something outside the religious texts (in this case, their "authority"). So the abstract description of what will solve the debate is "something other than the different sources of evidence."
Let's put all the abstract pieces of our description together. In the answer, we want to be able to find "debaters who are already committed to a position or conclusion, debating something of common importance to them, relying on different sources of evidence, where something other than those sources themselves must be used to resolve the debate." That's our prephrase. Using that, we can evaluate the answer choices.
Answer choice (A): The investigators in answer choice A are not already "adherents" of a certain position (in other words, they're not already committed to a conclusion). They're simply attempting to determine identity, without any preconceived notions. Thus, answer choice A is not a good analog to our description of the fourth paragraph, and it is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is probably the most tempting wrong answer choice, but it can be set aside based on the first part of our prephrased description. The jurors described in answer choice B are not clearly "adherents" to a position. In other words, as far as we can tell from the answer choice, none of the jurors has already determined which eyewitness to believe. Like the investigators in answer choice A, they are still "attempting to determine" what position to take, and which eyewitness to believe.
Answer choice (C): In answer choice C there is "no evidence" for either of the archaeologists' positions on the meaning of the written symbols. This is different from the passage, where the adherents each have their own religious text as the evidence for their positions about the creation of the universe. Thus, answer choice C is incorrect.
Answer choice (D): Answer choice D can be ruled out for the same reason we've ruled out answer choices A and B. The museum curators are not apparently committed to ("adherents" of) any particular position about the value of the painting. Thus, this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The historians in answer choice E are debating something on which they are "adherents," because they've each drawn a different conclusion about the event in question. Thus, they're already committed to a position. In accord with our description they're debating something of importance to them (an event about which they've drawn conclusions). Also consistent with our description, they're each relying on a different source of evidence, since the answer choice states their conclusions are based on "different types of historical data." Since each is committed to a position based on a source, they are unlikely to come around to the other person's position just by being shown the other person's data (they already have data from which they've drawn a solid conclusion). Thus, something beyond the data itself will likely be needed to resolve the debate between them.
The correct answer choice is E.
This is a Parallel Reasoning form of Must Be True question, and it asks for an answer choice that is "most closely analogous" to the hypothetical debate described in the fourth paragraph. The best approach to Parallel Reasoning questions in Reading Comprehension is to create an abstract description of the portion of the paragraph you're being asked to match. Be as comprehensive as possible (under time constraints) with this abstract description, and make sure all the "key players" and key concepts are covered by your abstract description.
The key players in the hypothetical debate are "adherents of different religions." The abstract description of these key players is "people who are already committed to a position or conclusion," since an "adherent" is someone who is already committed.
What are the key players debating over? The creation of the universe. So the abstract description of the topic of the debate is "something important to the key players."
What do the key players rely on for their debate positions? Different religious texts. So the abstract description of the evidence the key players use is "different sources of evidence."
What will ultimately solve the debate? Not the religious texts themselves (because an adherent of Christianity, for example, is unlikely to be swayed by the Bhagavad Gita; and an adherent of Hinduism, for example, is unlikely to be swayed by the Bible). Something outside the religious texts (in this case, their "authority"). So the abstract description of what will solve the debate is "something other than the different sources of evidence."
Let's put all the abstract pieces of our description together. In the answer, we want to be able to find "debaters who are already committed to a position or conclusion, debating something of common importance to them, relying on different sources of evidence, where something other than those sources themselves must be used to resolve the debate." That's our prephrase. Using that, we can evaluate the answer choices.
Answer choice (A): The investigators in answer choice A are not already "adherents" of a certain position (in other words, they're not already committed to a conclusion). They're simply attempting to determine identity, without any preconceived notions. Thus, answer choice A is not a good analog to our description of the fourth paragraph, and it is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is probably the most tempting wrong answer choice, but it can be set aside based on the first part of our prephrased description. The jurors described in answer choice B are not clearly "adherents" to a position. In other words, as far as we can tell from the answer choice, none of the jurors has already determined which eyewitness to believe. Like the investigators in answer choice A, they are still "attempting to determine" what position to take, and which eyewitness to believe.
Answer choice (C): In answer choice C there is "no evidence" for either of the archaeologists' positions on the meaning of the written symbols. This is different from the passage, where the adherents each have their own religious text as the evidence for their positions about the creation of the universe. Thus, answer choice C is incorrect.
Answer choice (D): Answer choice D can be ruled out for the same reason we've ruled out answer choices A and B. The museum curators are not apparently committed to ("adherents" of) any particular position about the value of the painting. Thus, this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The historians in answer choice E are debating something on which they are "adherents," because they've each drawn a different conclusion about the event in question. Thus, they're already committed to a position. In accord with our description they're debating something of importance to them (an event about which they've drawn conclusions). Also consistent with our description, they're each relying on a different source of evidence, since the answer choice states their conclusions are based on "different types of historical data." Since each is committed to a position based on a source, they are unlikely to come around to the other person's position just by being shown the other person's data (they already have data from which they've drawn a solid conclusion). Thus, something beyond the data itself will likely be needed to resolve the debate between them.
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
Follow me on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/JeremyLSAT
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
Follow me on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/JeremyLSAT