- Posts: 78
- Joined: Feb 22, 2021
- Wed Mar 10, 2021 11:14 am
#85189
Can you think of a better way to rephrase these questions? I find trying to imagine what an author would agree/disagree with to be too ambiguous. Lots of my wrong answer choices are wrong because they're not specifically in the passage but any reasonable person who wrote those passages (IMO) would probably agree with those statements, even if they're not technically in the passage. They're extremely close but not specifically called out.
For example, Dec 2007, Passage 4, q 21 (CR Bible p 396). I chose B, because it said the effectiveness of a predatory relationship should be verifiable in a controlled environment as well as an uncontrolled environment. Yes, the passage doesn't say you MUST verify results in a controlled environment but what self-respecting scientist would disagree with the idea that hypotheses should be experimentally verifiable before being accepted as fact?
Could I just convert "the author would agree with" to "it can be inferred from the passage" to remove the ambiguity created when imagining a live person? Is there a more effective rephrase than that?
For example, Dec 2007, Passage 4, q 21 (CR Bible p 396). I chose B, because it said the effectiveness of a predatory relationship should be verifiable in a controlled environment as well as an uncontrolled environment. Yes, the passage doesn't say you MUST verify results in a controlled environment but what self-respecting scientist would disagree with the idea that hypotheses should be experimentally verifiable before being accepted as fact?
Could I just convert "the author would agree with" to "it can be inferred from the passage" to remove the ambiguity created when imagining a live person? Is there a more effective rephrase than that?