- Fri Nov 13, 2020 5:24 pm
#81126
L,
I don't think there's a substantial difference between "context" and "manner" in this case. "Context" just refers very generically to the situation, and "manner" refers to how you do something - I think either of these could be valid. You could say "Make sure the context in which you do something is appropriate" or "Make sure the manner in which you do something is appropriate". What's "appropriate" is going to depend both on the context and the way you do it, so both matter!
The real problem with answer choice (C) is that, as Adam said above, it's far too strong. This is an Assumption question, so an answer that assumes too much is wrong. The author is not committed to the idea that any chance of a lack of high quality is enough to make it wrong for a psychotherapist to provide therapy. Instead, the second sentence of the stimulus tells us that entertaining psychotherapy is particularly unlikely to be high-quality. So we need an assumption like "Psychotherapy in circumstances that create a high degree of likelihood that the psychotherapy will not be high quality should be avoided." Answer choice (C) is saying something like "Psychotherapy in circumstances that have any chance of being less than high quality should be avoided." That's far stronger than we need.
Robert Carroll
I don't think there's a substantial difference between "context" and "manner" in this case. "Context" just refers very generically to the situation, and "manner" refers to how you do something - I think either of these could be valid. You could say "Make sure the context in which you do something is appropriate" or "Make sure the manner in which you do something is appropriate". What's "appropriate" is going to depend both on the context and the way you do it, so both matter!
The real problem with answer choice (C) is that, as Adam said above, it's far too strong. This is an Assumption question, so an answer that assumes too much is wrong. The author is not committed to the idea that any chance of a lack of high quality is enough to make it wrong for a psychotherapist to provide therapy. Instead, the second sentence of the stimulus tells us that entertaining psychotherapy is particularly unlikely to be high-quality. So we need an assumption like "Psychotherapy in circumstances that create a high degree of likelihood that the psychotherapy will not be high quality should be avoided." Answer choice (C) is saying something like "Psychotherapy in circumstances that have any chance of being less than high quality should be avoided." That's far stronger than we need.
Robert Carroll