- Wed Jan 21, 2015 12:00 am
#26067
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=10828)
The correct answer choice is (E)
This question asks how Shostak’s approach differs from the standard ethnographer’s approach; in the first paragraph, the author specifies that Shostak challenges the standard tendency of ethnographers to focus on the more general and anonymous.
Answer choice (A): There is no mention of such observation or of such inferences, so this choice fails the Fact Test and cannot be the right answer to this Must Be True question.
Answer choice (B): Shostak studies only one particular individual, so this choice is not supported by the passage.
Answer choice (C): The author does not draw such contrasts, and this is certainly not the departure specified in the first paragraph of the passage, so it cannot be the right answer to this question.
Answer choice (D): She does not accumulate illustrative data to exemplify general hypotheses, so this choice cannot describe Shostak’s departure from the standard approach.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Since the author discusses a departure from the general and anonymous, this is of course, the opposite: an emphasis on the importance of the personal and the individual.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=10828)
The correct answer choice is (E)
This question asks how Shostak’s approach differs from the standard ethnographer’s approach; in the first paragraph, the author specifies that Shostak challenges the standard tendency of ethnographers to focus on the more general and anonymous.
Answer choice (A): There is no mention of such observation or of such inferences, so this choice fails the Fact Test and cannot be the right answer to this Must Be True question.
Answer choice (B): Shostak studies only one particular individual, so this choice is not supported by the passage.
Answer choice (C): The author does not draw such contrasts, and this is certainly not the departure specified in the first paragraph of the passage, so it cannot be the right answer to this question.
Answer choice (D): She does not accumulate illustrative data to exemplify general hypotheses, so this choice cannot describe Shostak’s departure from the standard approach.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Since the author discusses a departure from the general and anonymous, this is of course, the opposite: an emphasis on the importance of the personal and the individual.