avengingangel wrote:In B, the correct answer, can someone please clarify exactly who "many medieval guilds" are? Where are they mentioned in the passage (I know "all over", but pointing out on exactly which lines(s) will be helpful, because I'm only aware of the ecclesiastical/church bar/guild and the civil bar/guild, which are both a type of medieval guild. And in which case, is answer choice B saying that's true of both of those types of guilds? Where can we find that in the passage ??
Also, how is C wrong? It seems like Lines 7-11 ("One might...happened") perfectly illustrates answer choice C!
Also also, how is E wrong? It seems it could very much be true, supported by the author stating: "Some even attempted to hobble efforts of enforcement. The Florentine guild of lawyers, for example..." Which means that a Florence guild, and thus has different ethical standards!
Thanks!!!! This passage was a real doozy.
Hello,
Answer C is not provable, as we don't know "most" guilds were more exacting than canon lawyers.
Answer E, as you say yourself, is more "It seems it could very much be true" rather than a Must Be True.
And, the evidence you use for answer C, around lines 7-11, supports answer B, especially since "many" is more flexible than "most". The guilds could be of whatever type. And re "And in which case, is answer choice B saying that's true of both of those types of guilds? Where can we find that in the passage ??", answer B does not say anything has to be true of church or civil law guilds.
David