- Mon Oct 17, 2022 3:16 pm
#97857
Tone and Main Point will be crucial to answering these kinds of Parallel Reasoning questions, mkarimi73, but we should also be thinking about our prephrase of the relationship between the passages. That, to me, is where answer B fails the most. I do think "computers as thinking machines" suggests a positive view about what computers can do, while "computer models for predicting elections" is just descriptive, but even if we see them both as somewhat neutral, we have to balance that analysis with how these statements relate to the second part of each answer choice.
In answer B, the second part of the answer is not pointing out a conflict or disagreement with the first part of the answer. It's not a pro/con kind of relationship, but more of a description of a purpose vs a description of one aspect (margin of error is not inherently a negative; it's just a description of the math involved). That pairing is not laying out a claim of "here's what they can do" against "no, not really."
In answer E we can more clearly see the pro/con relationship at work in the passages. The first part suggests that computers can do something, while the second part says they cannot. The first part of the answer, when lined up together with the second part, suggests a positive view vs a negative one of the same claim.
Tone and main point do matter, but we also have to look at the whole answer in terms of the relationship.
Adam M. Tyson
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