- Tue Feb 28, 2017 12:43 pm
#33180
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=13642)
The correct answer choice is (D)
This question asks what the author would think about the colleagues who advised Dunham not to take part in the dances that she was researching, so as to avoid the extreme physical demands and maintain a detached perspective, which, according to the prevailing belief at the time, was preferable for the researcher. The author does not agree with this belief, as is clear in the author’s admiration for Dunham, who chose to ignore her colleagues’ perspective, and by the fact that the author refers to such a perspective as “unrealistic.”
Answer choice (A): The author never mentions or reflects any concern regarding such risk, nor offers any such concession to the colleagues’ opinions, so this cannot be the right answer to this Must Be True, Author’s Perspective question.
Answer choice (B): There is no mention in the passage regarding the need for such initial caution, nor any support for this answer choice.
Answer choice (C): Many test takers found this choice appealing based on the first half of the answer: The author would agree that the colleagues were incorrect in their recommendations, but there is no reason to believe that the author would make a broad statement that personal investment enhances scientific rigor as a general rule.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The author points out on line 38 that the anthropologists’ assertion (that research “can and must be conducted from a position of complete detachment”) is now “fortunately recognized as unrealistic.” So, the author is saying, fortunately we have developed a new perspective: it is unrealistic to assert that research can be done from a position of complete detachment, or, as phrased in this answer choice, “in an entirely objective manner.”
Answer choice (E): This was not their assumption; Dunham’s peers did not assume that the same scientific rigor could be achieved, and if they had made such an assumption, the author would not disagree.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=13642)
The correct answer choice is (D)
This question asks what the author would think about the colleagues who advised Dunham not to take part in the dances that she was researching, so as to avoid the extreme physical demands and maintain a detached perspective, which, according to the prevailing belief at the time, was preferable for the researcher. The author does not agree with this belief, as is clear in the author’s admiration for Dunham, who chose to ignore her colleagues’ perspective, and by the fact that the author refers to such a perspective as “unrealistic.”
Answer choice (A): The author never mentions or reflects any concern regarding such risk, nor offers any such concession to the colleagues’ opinions, so this cannot be the right answer to this Must Be True, Author’s Perspective question.
Answer choice (B): There is no mention in the passage regarding the need for such initial caution, nor any support for this answer choice.
Answer choice (C): Many test takers found this choice appealing based on the first half of the answer: The author would agree that the colleagues were incorrect in their recommendations, but there is no reason to believe that the author would make a broad statement that personal investment enhances scientific rigor as a general rule.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The author points out on line 38 that the anthropologists’ assertion (that research “can and must be conducted from a position of complete detachment”) is now “fortunately recognized as unrealistic.” So, the author is saying, fortunately we have developed a new perspective: it is unrealistic to assert that research can be done from a position of complete detachment, or, as phrased in this answer choice, “in an entirely objective manner.”
Answer choice (E): This was not their assumption; Dunham’s peers did not assume that the same scientific rigor could be achieved, and if they had made such an assumption, the author would not disagree.