- Mon Nov 01, 2021 11:54 am
#91733
Some people struggling with answer E as you are, rightway1566, might be placing too much emphasis on finding a direct quotation in the text to prove the answer, rather than using the context of the passage to draw a reasonable inference, as we do with Most Strongly Supported questions in the Logical Reasoning section. If musicologists and other scholars cannot get access to the music easily, it would be reasonable to assume that musicians also cannot easily get their hands on it, unless we assume that musicians have some secret club that musicologists are not allowed to enter, in which the music is kept hidden in locked vaults, only to be viewed by those who will play it and not study it!
The overall gist of the first paragraph is that the music is scarce - it is generally unavailable, it has vanished, and those who wish to study it encounter formidable obstacles. How formidable would those obstacles be if scholars could just find a musician and ask to see their copy, or attend a concert and listen to and even record the music? No, it must be that musicians generally also lack easy access, or else this would make no sense.
There's also some further evidence in the way the author talks about Temperley's anthology, saying that it has "intrinsic value" in part because it "reproduces nearly all of the original music in facsimile." How valuable could that be if the music was already widely available to musicians? Again, this strongly suggests that even musicians have lacked general access to the music.
Finally, what makes E the correct answer is that it is better than any of the other answer choices. Correct answers on the LSAT need not be perfect (though in my opinion, this answer is pretty darn near perfect); they only have to be the best answer among the five choices presented. Don't reject an answer just because you don't fully love it! Reject it because it is clearly wrong and because another answer is clearly superior. If there isn't a better answer, you have to pick the one you hate the least!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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