Steve Stein wrote:Hi kcho ,
That's a great question. The author begins that passage with a discussion about recent historians of science who argue that accepted scientific views are based on the beliefs of influential scientists rather than on the objective validity of those views. The author states that these extreme historians might be aligned on some level with certain philosophers of science, but then closes the paragraph by saying that those philosophers would probably have nothing to do with those historians (still being a step away from the views of those extreme historians).
The excerpt quoted in the passage is part of an attack on those historians and their extreme view that scientific observations are not based on objective reality. This view, says the author, is implausible, and that any serious-minded person must admit, for example, that water is composed of hydrogen and oxygen.
Tough question! Please let me know whether this is clear—thanks!
~Steve
Hi Steve,
Thank you for your response! I'm not sure I completely understand your explanation...so are you basically saying that answer (B) is wrong because although it does reinforce the stated opinion, it is not the actual general function of the statement? So in the future, when approaching this question, is it better to find what this statement does in relation to the main point/main argument of the passage, rather than its immediate relation to the statement it directly responds to?
Also, what would you say is the main idea of this passage? Is there a specific line reference that states the main idea, or is it a combination of multiple statements?
Thank you in advance