- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23606
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion-PR. The correct answer choice is (E)
The archaeologist grants that the restoration project the corporation offers to fund would conform to current theories about the site, but on the basis that many parts of the site contain unexamined information, the archaeologist concludes that the offer should be rejected.
The archaeologist is probably concerned that the new evidence could have a significant impact on the theories about how the site appeared. The archaeologist seems to operate on the broad assumption that one should not reconstruct archaeological sites until as much evidence as possible is evaluated. Since you are asked to find the principle that would justify the argument, you should locate a choice that reinforces the archaeologist's broad assumption.
Answer choice (A): The archaeologist does not seem to have a problem with commercial interests; the archaeologist is merely concerned with accuracy. Furthermore, even if the stimulus clearly indicated (it does not) that the corporation would own the site, this choice does not respond to the argument, which is based on the idea of evidence, not ownership.
Answer choice (B): This response reinforces the idea that restorations should represent the most ancient period of a site's history, but the stimulus promotes the idea that the restorations should represent the site at the relevant civilization's height.
Answer choice (C): This response suggests that the corporation is wrong to make a judgment concerning the height of the civilization in question, but the archaeologist actually seems to accept that judgment and only argues that more evidence should be evaluated, presumably to paint a better picture of that civilization at its height.
Answer choice (D): Since the archaeologist's argument was concerned with the state of evidence rather than the source of funding, the idea that the corporation should not be the source of funding is irrelevant to the argument, and this choice is wrong even if you incorrectly presume it supports the archaeologist's conclusion. In fact, this choice does not even support the conclusion, because it is entirely possible that the corporation in question actually has a true concern for the site's history.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The archaeologist is concerned with the potential of new evidence, and the principle that the risk of losing evidence for future theories outweighs the advantages of displaying the results of theories based on current evidence speaks to that issue. You cannot plausibly deny that restoration and public access incurs some risk to evidence.
Justify the Conclusion-PR. The correct answer choice is (E)
The archaeologist grants that the restoration project the corporation offers to fund would conform to current theories about the site, but on the basis that many parts of the site contain unexamined information, the archaeologist concludes that the offer should be rejected.
The archaeologist is probably concerned that the new evidence could have a significant impact on the theories about how the site appeared. The archaeologist seems to operate on the broad assumption that one should not reconstruct archaeological sites until as much evidence as possible is evaluated. Since you are asked to find the principle that would justify the argument, you should locate a choice that reinforces the archaeologist's broad assumption.
Answer choice (A): The archaeologist does not seem to have a problem with commercial interests; the archaeologist is merely concerned with accuracy. Furthermore, even if the stimulus clearly indicated (it does not) that the corporation would own the site, this choice does not respond to the argument, which is based on the idea of evidence, not ownership.
Answer choice (B): This response reinforces the idea that restorations should represent the most ancient period of a site's history, but the stimulus promotes the idea that the restorations should represent the site at the relevant civilization's height.
Answer choice (C): This response suggests that the corporation is wrong to make a judgment concerning the height of the civilization in question, but the archaeologist actually seems to accept that judgment and only argues that more evidence should be evaluated, presumably to paint a better picture of that civilization at its height.
Answer choice (D): Since the archaeologist's argument was concerned with the state of evidence rather than the source of funding, the idea that the corporation should not be the source of funding is irrelevant to the argument, and this choice is wrong even if you incorrectly presume it supports the archaeologist's conclusion. In fact, this choice does not even support the conclusion, because it is entirely possible that the corporation in question actually has a true concern for the site's history.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The archaeologist is concerned with the potential of new evidence, and the principle that the risk of losing evidence for future theories outweighs the advantages of displaying the results of theories based on current evidence speaks to that issue. You cannot plausibly deny that restoration and public access incurs some risk to evidence.