- Sun Aug 09, 2020 3:57 am
#77835
I thought this is a tough question. I'm really lost in its convoluted language ... to the point that I thought the third sentence starting with "For" is a typo. Specifically, the period before "For" should be a comma and "For" should be in lowercase. While I'm on it, is the third sentence even grammatical? Isn't it a sentence fragment? "For such a perpetual expansion of one's mind makes it impossible to be fully comprehended, making one a constant mystery to others." What is the subject of this sentence? I know "because/as/since/for" all can introduce a "reason" clause, but all these conjunctions are used in the same sentence as the phononemon it attempts to explain, i.e., the main clause. How can a subordinating clause be upgraded/elevated to a standalone independent sentence, still with a conjunction "for" in front of it? In addition, I've never seen "for" used as a conjunctive adverb and I'm pretty sure "for" is not an adverb, unlike "therefore," "however," etc.
Failing to comprehend the logic in the stimulus, I thought I could cheat myself out of it by analyzing the structure. "It is a given that ..." indicates this part does not need support, which is a premise. Thus, (A) is eliminated. (B), (C), and (E) all contain conditional language, which I did not spot in the stimulus, which seems to be all fact-based. So I'm stuck with (D). But with hindsight, "must" in (D) also signifies a conditional relationship.
Hope some expert can unpack the stimulus for me! Thanks.
Failing to comprehend the logic in the stimulus, I thought I could cheat myself out of it by analyzing the structure. "It is a given that ..." indicates this part does not need support, which is a premise. Thus, (A) is eliminated. (B), (C), and (E) all contain conditional language, which I did not spot in the stimulus, which seems to be all fact-based. So I'm stuck with (D). But with hindsight, "must" in (D) also signifies a conditional relationship.
Hope some expert can unpack the stimulus for me! Thanks.