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#74559
Complete Question Explanation

The correct answer choice is (A)

This question asks us about the primary purpose of the author's discussion of the work of scientists in lines 7-14 of the passage. As always with these Local Reference questions, we want to take a second look at those lines 7-14. We also want to look briefly look at the paragraph surrounding those lines. (In response to your question about this - we always want to look a bit before and after the referenced line numbers. It is not uncommon for the answer to be hidden there rather than in the actual referenced lines). Before moving onto examining the answer choices, we take a second to Pre-Phrase an answer. My Pre-Phrase would look something like: "The author seems to be describing the work of scientists in these lines primarily as a way to expound upon the approach of objectivist philosophers, and to contrast that approach with that of the more traditional view." With that in mind, we come down to the answer choices.

Answer Choice (A). This is the correct answer. It doesn't 100% match our Pre-Phrase, but it hits on a very important piece of it: that the discussion of scientists is used to contrast the objectivists' approach with the more traditional one.

Answer Choice (B). Don't be fooled just because this answer choice quotes a section of the referenced lines ("...particular point of view.") We're interested in the author's purpose in bringing up the scientists. Is the author advocating for describing the sensation of pain without reference to any particular point of view? No. That's an objectivist philosopher position. The author is not taking sides here between the objectivists and subjectivists. The author is not arguing for that, and so (B) is incorrect.

Answer Choice (C). Again, this answer choice attempts to assign an objectivist philosopher opinion to the author. The author is not arguing in favor of the objectivist position, and therefore is not arguing for "why scientists should not concern themselves with describing how a phenomenon feels from the inside". (C) is incorrect for the same reason as (B).

Answer Choice (D). The word "criticize" is the main reason this answer choice is incorrect. Again, we're interested in the author's purpose. If the question stem asked, "What was the objectivists' purpose in citing scientists, as referenced in lines 7-14," then "(D) would make for a good answer. As it is, the author is not taking sides here and does not criticize the subjectivists for thinking there is little to be gained from scientifically studying the mind. (D) is incorrect for primarily the same reason as (B) and (C).

Answer Choice (E). This is likely the most compelling of the incorrect answers. Unlike (B), (C), and (D), it doesn't try to assign the author an objectivist point of view, so we can't immediately cross it out for that simple reason. And the referenced lines do work in tandem with the following sentence, which says that the approach cited in those lines "has been remarkably successful in yielding knowledge". However, that is not the primary purpose for which the scientists are mentioned in lines 7-14. The author didn't bring up the scientists mainly to talk about how successful they've been in those other fields. No; she brought them up to explain the approach of objectivist philosophers and to contrast that approach with the traditional one - just like we said in our Pre-Phrase. So while (E) isn't "immediately" wrong like (B), (C), and (D), it's still incorrect as it doesn't describe the author's primary purpose like (A) does.
 blade21cn
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#74516
The question stem reads "The author discusses the work of scientists in lines 7-14 primarily to ..." This sounds to me concerns the reasoning structure and the scope is local, just one sentence. Some people call this a "bookend" question and suggest it's testing the bigger idea that "bookends" the detail, and most of the time the bigger claim that came right before the detail. In other words, we should look for the answer, not in the sentence quoted itself, but the context it's in.

Just a quick summary, ¶1 is about the objectivists' complaint of a subjective approach, ¶2 is about the subjectivists' complaint of an objective approach, ¶3 is about a possible reconciliation by the author, ¶4 hints at a solution in a analogous situation, ¶5 focuses on that solution applied in the current impasse.

Since the quoted sentence is in ¶1 and the central claim from that paragraph can be traced to "[objectivists] find the traditional, subjective approach ... outdated and ineffectual" and "[subjective approach] has been surpassed by advances in fields such as ..." - the first two sentences of ¶1 (where most main idea sentence appears) and immediately preceding the quoted sentence. So I chose (D) - "criticize subjectivists for thinking there is little to be gained from studying the mind scientifically." I especially like the word "criticize," and thought this captures the main idea of ¶1 well.

The reason I eliminate the credited response (A) is it just states "contrast the traditional approach ... with the approach advocated by objectivists." "Contrast" to me is just laying out the differences without any judgment, but clearly ¶1 is devoted to the objectivists' viewpoint and merely "contrast" is shy of their position. In addition, (A) comes from the quoted sentence itself. So what is your guys thoughts on approaching this type of question? Should we look for answers in the sentence itself, or the sentences that comes before it?

As I'm finalizing my post and reflecting, I think the only reason I can eliminate (D) is because the question stem asks about the author's purpose. In other words, all answer choices start in the middle of a sentence with a verb, and the implied subject of the sentence is "the author" from the question stem. So (A) becomes "the author contrasts ..."; (B) "the author argues that ..."; (C) "the author explains why scientists should not ..."; (D) "the author criticizes subjectivists for thinking ..."; and (E) "the author clarifies why the objectivists' approach has been successful ..." If that's the case, the rationale totally changes. Now, we know the author is not taking sides with the objectivists or subjectivists, but venturing for a possible reconciliation, or in other words, a synthesis. Therefore, answer choices that's clearly taking sides are wrong, and the the correct answer choice should be neutral. So it sounds like this is an author's opinion question disguised as a reasoning structure question. Any thoughts will be greatly appreciated!
 Paul Marsh
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#74532
Hi blade21cn! Let's go ahead and do a full walk-through of this problem. (The full explanation is also posted at the top of this thread.)

This question asks us about the primary purpose of the author's discussion of the work of scientists in lines 7-14 of the passage. As always with these Local Reference questions, we want to take a second look at those lines 7-14. We also want to look briefly look at the paragraph surrounding those lines. (In response to your question about this - we always want to look a bit before and after the referenced line numbers. It is not uncommon for the answer to be hidden there rather than in the actual referenced lines). Before moving onto examining the answer choices, we take a second to Pre-Phrase an answer. My Pre-Phrase would look something like: "The author seems to be describing the work of scientists in these lines primarily as a way to expound upon the approach of objectivist philosophers, and to contrast that approach with that of the more traditional view." With that in mind, we come down to the answer choices.

Answer Choice (A). This is the correct answer. It doesn't 100% match our Pre-Phrase, but it hits on a very important piece of it: that the discussion of scientists is used to contrast the objectivists' approach with the more traditional one.

Answer Choice (B). Don't be fooled just because this answer choice quotes a section of the referenced lines ("...particular point of view.") As you astutely pointed out in your last paragraph, we're interested in the author's purpose in bringing up the scientists. Is the author advocating for describing the sensation of pain without reference to any particular point of view? No. That's an objectivist philosopher position. The author is not taking sides here between the objectivists and subjectivists. The author is not arguing for that, and so (B) is incorrect.

Answer Choice (C). Again, this answer choice attempts to assign an objectivist philosopher opinion to the author. The author is not arguing in favor of the objectivist position, and therefore is not arguing for "why scientists should not concern themselves with describing how a phenomenon feels from the inside". (C) is incorrect for the same reason as (B).

Answer Choice (D). You said that you initially liked this answer choice because of the word "criticize". In fact, the word "criticize" is the main reason this answer choice is incorrect. Again, we're interested in the author's purpose. If the question stem asked, "What was the objectivists' purpose in citing scientists, as referenced in lines 7-14," then "(D) would make for a good answer. As it is, the author is not taking sides here and does not criticize the subjectivists for thinking there is little to be gained from scientifically studying the mind. (D) is incorrect for primarily the same reason as (B) and (C).

Answer Choice (E). This is likely the most compelling of the incorrect answers. Unlike (B), (C), and (D), it doesn't try to assign the author an objectivist point of view, so we can't immediately cross it out for that simple reason. And the referenced lines do work in tandem with the following sentence, which says that the approach cited in those lines "has been remarkably successful in yielding knowledge". However, that is not the primary purpose for which the scientists are mentioned in lines 7-14. The author didn't bring up the scientists mainly to talk about how successful they've been in those other fields. No; she brought them up to explain the approach of objectivist philosophers and to contrast that approach with the traditional one - just like we said in our Pre-Phrase. So while (E) isn't "immediately" wrong like (B), (C), and (D), it's still incorrect as it doesn't describe the author's primary purpose like (A) does.

Again, nice job in the last paragraph of your post - your reasoning there is spot on.

Hope that helps!

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