blaisebayno wrote: ↑Sat Jul 30, 2022 3:50 pm
Hi there,
This is confusing to me. The historians believe that Sumerian was the first to produce literature. This discovery says wow no, they weren't. The discovery challenges the belief of Sumerian primacy in literature. This means, I have to assume, that before this discovery, historians generally believed that the Sumerians DID create literature earlier than 3300 B.C. That is what the discovery is challenging. Please help me understand where I'm going wrong.
Hi blaisebayno!
In order to challenge the belief that the Sumerian civilization was the first to create literature, we don't have to assume that historians believes the Sumerians created literature earlier than 3300 B.C. In fact, the stimulus does not tell us when exactly historians believe Sumerians created literature (for all we know, historians could believe Sumerians created literature in the past twenty years), which is exactly why we must eliminate the possibility that the Sumerians created literature before 3300 B.C. in order to make this argument.
Perhaps it could be useful to think about a timeline to show why we do not have to assume Sumerians first wrote literature before 3300 B.C. Let's say that the earliest literature historians have ever found was written by the Sumerians in 2000 B.C. This would give us a timeline that looks like this:
No example of literature discovered
2000 B.C. Sumerian literature discovered
other literature may have been discovered
As you can see, nothing about this hypothetical timeline contradicts the stimulus. If we introduce the clay tablets from the stimulus, our timeline would now look like this:
No example of literature discovered
3300 to 3200 B.C. Egyptian literature discovered
2000 B.C. Sumerian literature discovered
other literature may have been discovered
This timeline helps show why these tablets challenge the belief that the Sumerian civilization was the first to create literature. But I've arbitrarily picked 2000 B.C. -- the stimulus didn't say that's when the Sumerians first wrote literature (as mentioned earlier, the stimulus doesn't say when exactly the historians believe Sumerians first wrong literature at all)! So, let's create some more timelines. What if the earliest literature discovered was Sumerian literature from 5000 B.C.?
No example of literature discovered
5000 B.C. Sumerian literature discovered
3300 to 3200 B.C. Egyptian literature discovered
other literature may have been discovered
This would absolutely destroy the argument in the article! Though it might not have been evident at first, this was actually an application of the Assumption Negation Technique to answer choice (C). In the above timeline, we have an example of historians believing that Sumerians DID create literature earlier than 3300 B.C., which would make it very very difficult to conclude that the Egyptian tablets challenge the belief that Sumerians were the first to create literature. That's exactly what we want from our correct answer!
I hope this helps
Kate