carcass
In the same sentence we have both B and C in my view
Although Sibelius claimed periodically that he was continuing to work on the symphony, (B) Sibelius claimed he was working on the symphony even when he was not. Notice that the author CLAIMED to work on it but we do not have further info to sustain that he , indeed, worked on the symphony for real.he refused to release it to the public in any form, and nothing but short fragments, (C) The work was never published in Sibelius's lifetime because the composer felt it lacked merit. On the other hand , we do know that he NEVER released his job in ANY form. Thsi is stronger than what we assert in Bprobably sketches he drafted as he initially conceived the work, have ever been identified among his archived manuscripts.For me, C is a better candidate as final answer than BPerhaps GMATNinja could come in handy for the sakeSibelius claimed he was working on Symphony No. 8, but no one—neither experts nor contemporaries—has ever found a complete score or solid evidence to confirm this. The author highlights this contrast between Sibelius’s assertion and the lack of proof. When an author presents a claim alongside evidence that contradicts or fails to support it, readers naturally question the truthfulness of that claim. Because of this, we infer that the author believes Sibelius probably was not actually working on the symphony, even though he said he was.
For example, imagine a friend telling you, “I’ve finished writing a novel,” but when you ask for the manuscript or try to see it, no one has ever seen or heard of it. The contradiction between the claim and the lack of evidence would make you doubt your friend’s statement. Similarly, the author’s presentation suggests Sibelius’s claim is doubtful due to the absence of any concrete proof.
This inference supports answer choice B, which says that Sibelius claimed he was working on the symphony even when he was not. The author’s presentation leads us to doubt Sibelius’s statement because of the absence of any real evidence.
Also why others are wrong:
A: This option says that publishing the symphony would ensure Sibelius’s international reputation. The passage clearly states Sibelius was already world-renowned, so the symphony wouldn’t be necessary to establish his reputation. Therefore, this option is incorrect because it contradicts what the author says.
C: This suggests that the symphony was never published because Sibelius thought it lacked merit. While some experts believe this, the passage attributes this view to “others,” not the author directly. The author presents it as speculation, not a confirmed belief, so this choice doesn’t reflect the author’s stance.
D: This option states the symphony will someday be performed once reconstructed. The passage only mentions this as a possibility suggested by some experts, not a certainty or belief held by the author. The author remains neutral on this point, so this answer overstates what the passage conveys.
E: This claims that if a complete copy were found, it would be inferior. Again, this is an opinion attributed to “others” in the passage, not the author’s belief. The author does not confirm this view, so this option is incorrect.
Pls check
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