- Wed Aug 30, 2017 5:01 pm
#39013
Fill in the blank questions like this one are usually (not always) in the Must Be True category, brcibake, and that means strong answers like A will require strong evidence in the stimulus before you should consider them as contenders. Remember the Fact Test - you cannot select an answer to a Must Be True question that does not follow directly from the facts given in the stimulus.
We know from the stimulus that the paleontologists' argument has lost some strength due to the crocodile example, but can we go so far as to say that they have no evidence at all? The nests could still be evidence, albeit less convincing in light of the example given. They could have other evidence that wasn't mentioned in the stimulus. Where is the evidence in the stimulus that they have absolutely no evidence of any kind or any weight to support their belief?
Your dislike of answer E because it is a "weak" answer is exactly why I like it and why you should select it. I would use different language, though - I would call it "easily defended". That's the kind of answer you want on Must Be True questions, and when you are trying to fill in a blank based solely on what came before, with no new information allowed, you should choose something sufficiently narrow that the facts of the stimulus alone are enough to support it. A good prephrase here would have been "those paleontologists might be wrong" or "their argument based on the nests is not very convincing."
Weak answers to MBT questions, as well as Assumption questions, are typically good things, while strong answers with powerful language tend to be reserved for weaken, strengthen, and justify questions. Don't be afraid to be weak!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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