- Mon Oct 30, 2017 6:59 pm
#41057
Hello,
I narrowed down my answers to C and E, and chose C because I though since I had the whole number (woo) and the other percent (40%) that this was a legitimate inference. The answer explanations in the book say the 60% being described would require us to know how many people woke up seemingly paralyzed without sensing a strange prescence in the room. I thought since the “seemingly paralyzed” in the stimulus was set off with commas that this phrase isn’t necessary to the main point of the question which was whether the strange prescence was involved.
Thank you,
Taylor
I narrowed down my answers to C and E, and chose C because I though since I had the whole number (woo) and the other percent (40%) that this was a legitimate inference. The answer explanations in the book say the 60% being described would require us to know how many people woke up seemingly paralyzed without sensing a strange prescence in the room. I thought since the “seemingly paralyzed” in the stimulus was set off with commas that this phrase isn’t necessary to the main point of the question which was whether the strange prescence was involved.
Thank you,
Taylor