- Posts: 54
- Joined: Sep 01, 2021
- Thu Aug 11, 2022 12:38 pm
#96114
Hi, I understand why E is correct, but I had actually eliminated C and E as losers on my first go at the answer choices because they both use the word "premodern". I wasn't sure what this term meant, but since it was never defined or explicitly equated to "Mesolithic", I assumed it referred to something different than "Mesolithic".
'Premodern' only appears once in the passage: "Most of the evidence invoked in favor of the resource-procurement model for clearings comes from ethnography rather than archaeology, and principally from the recognition that some recent premodern populations used fire to increase grazing areas."
I don't think this sentence implies at all that 'premodern' and 'Mesolithic' are the same thing... Couldn't it be possible that 'premodern' refers to some time earlier than 'Mesolithic' and that experts would still use that evidence to draw a conclusion about Mesolithic populations? I'm not saying that's the correct way to use that evidence, but I do think it's a possibility.
Any advice on dealing with (in my opinion) ambiguous terms in the future? Thanks!
'Premodern' only appears once in the passage: "Most of the evidence invoked in favor of the resource-procurement model for clearings comes from ethnography rather than archaeology, and principally from the recognition that some recent premodern populations used fire to increase grazing areas."
I don't think this sentence implies at all that 'premodern' and 'Mesolithic' are the same thing... Couldn't it be possible that 'premodern' refers to some time earlier than 'Mesolithic' and that experts would still use that evidence to draw a conclusion about Mesolithic populations? I'm not saying that's the correct way to use that evidence, but I do think it's a possibility.
Any advice on dealing with (in my opinion) ambiguous terms in the future? Thanks!