- Mon Jul 08, 2019 6:29 pm
#66306
We aren't ignoring the strong language in answer E, jacoba1119 - we're saying that the passage lacks support for it. In order to pick an answer as strong as that one, you need strong evidence. Here, we would need to see our author being not academic and reasonable, but more like a cheerleader arguing in favor of Carroll and Chen. We might be able to pick such an answer if our author had said things like "this is clearly the correct view and should be treated with complete deference" or "this must be the position that we take, rejecting all others", but he makes no such powerful statements.
Strong language like "zealous" is great when you are trying to justify a conclusion, or strengthen or weaken an argument. In a question that fits into the "prove" family, where we pick answers based solely on the facts presented in the text, strong language is deserving of suspicion, and should only be selected if sufficiently powerful evidence in the text backs it up. Answer E here lacks support from the passage, and that's why it has to be a loser. Not ignored - eliminated because it is not supported.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at
https://twitter.com/LSATadam