- Tue Nov 14, 2017 6:05 pm
#41597
Hi Taylor,
This question doubles down on its use of recency bias to try and throw off test takers. The passage spends all but the final sentence praising the "stealing thunder" trial technique, including experimental evidence of its effectiveness, before throwing in a caveat for certain use cases in that last sentence. So the overwhelming majority of the passage is positive, with a recommendation against using the technique only when the "information is very damaging."
With that in mind, we look closely at answer choices (D) and (E) (note how the incorrect answer comes immediately after the correct one). (D) works on each level, although it does omit the caveat presented in the final sentence: the tone is approving overall, and the second paragraph explains the experimental evidence as well as the psychological theory behind the technique.
(E) misses the mark by being off about the tone ("skeptical" is too strong for only presenting a single caveat affecting only some use cases) while then adding in a condition not presented in the passage at all: only lawyers with "lengthy experience in courtroom strategies." The introduction of a new element not present in the passage should immediately set off red flags and move this answer choice from Contender to Loser status.
Hope this helps!