- Thu Jul 30, 2020 1:25 pm
#77573
Hi Vicki7411!
I can definitely address the conclusion as well as answer choice (E) in explaining this one further.
On determining how "otherwise" is being used, it's important to look to the closest clause/variable/subject being modified by the word. Here, the sentence is: "Thus, contemporary artists, all of whom believe that their works enable many people to feel more aesthetically fulfilled than they otherwise could, are mistaken." "Otherwise" seems to be modifying aesthetic feeling--in other words, "Thus, contemporary artists, all of whom believe that their works enable many people to feel more aesthetically fulfilled than they otherwise could [aesthetically feel], are mistaken."
Regarding answer choice (E), that answer choice states that the flaw is that the stimulus "presumes, without providing justification, that the number and variety of great artworks already in the world affects the amount of aesthetic fulfillment derivable from any contemporary artwork." One problem with this answer choice is that one must take the information given in the stimulus as true, including the sentence, "There are already more great artworks in the world than any human being could appreciate in a lifetime." If one is taking the sentences themselves in the stimulus as true (even if the author reaches an incorrect conclusion from them), then a flaw in such a case won't be that the author is assuming the truth of those sentences. Another problem is that it speaks to the stimulus making a presumption about the "number and variety" of great artworks; the stimulus, however, doesn't specifically mention the number and variety of great artworks (maybe a large number exist but not a large variety, or vice versa). Lastly, one could argue that there is some justification provided for the claim about the relationship between existing great art and the possibility of aesthetic fulfillment--namely, the justification is that this existing great art is more "than any human being could appreciate in a lifetime."
By contrast, answer choice (D) gets to the fundamental flaw that the stimulus misses a potential problem about access. Just because these great artworks exist, there's no information in the stimulus establishing that people are able to view them (perhaps most of them are locked away in vaults, or kept in private collections, or perhaps most people live in areas too impoverished to have art museums). However, if there were a contemporary artist with art appreciated by people "whose access to the great majority of other artworks is severely restricted," then this shows how just because great works exist doesn't mean everyone can view and be aesthetically fulfilled by them; this acknowledges the existence of those great works that are more than anyone can appreciate in a lifetime (it takes the information from the stimulus as true), but it shows how the conclusion of the stimulus (that artists are mistaken in thinking they can provide aesthetic fulfillment) does not follow from this. Answer choice (D) suggests that perhaps contemporary artists can provide aesthetic fulfillment because, taking the information from the stimulus as true, there's a problem of access to great works that they are able to surmount.