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Re: The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
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Question 2


wishmasterdj wrote:
Q2 ->

Nineteenth-century biologists
(40)⠀⠀recognized this problem and attempted to resolve
⠀⠀⠀ it. Their solution today appears to be only verbal,
⠀⠀⠀ but was then regarded as eminently causal.

Does this not indicate that C could be right? What you believe is right, you propose that as a solution.

GMATNinja GMATninja2


Quote:
2. According to information presented in the passage, which of the following is a true statement about the methods of explanation used by biologists and historians in the nineteenth century?

The passage primarily discusses biologists who use a historical explanation to explore evolutionary events. Historians themselves are only directly mentioned in one piece of the passage:

    "The biologist-as-historian and the general historian of human events dealt with comparable phenomena and assumed necessarily a common mode of explanation."

This sentence provides strong support for (D), the correct answer to Question 2:
Quote:
D. Biologists' and historians' methods of explaining what they believed to be comparable phenomena were similar.


Take another look at (C):
Quote:
C. Biologists believed that they had refined the methods of explanation used by historians.

Here's the piece of the passage that you've quoted:

    "The temporal continuity of living forms was convincing, but was an assumption that was difficult to uphold when one compared species or organisms forming any two stages of the evolutionary record. Nineteenth-century biologists recognized this problem and attempted to resolve it. Their solution today appears to be only verbal, but was then regarded as eminently causal."

This implies that biologists believed that they resolved an issue. But did they refine the methods of explanation used by historians?

Not really. The "problem" that biologists addressed was a specific issue with the historical explanation of evolution, NOT a problem with historical explanations in general. So, we can't conclude that biologists refined the methods used by historians. For that reason, (C) is incorrect.
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Re: The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
Overall got 4/5 right. (Time 11:29 - Science passage :D)

In the 2nd question I thought

D. Biologists' and historians' methods of explaining what they believed to be comparable phenomena were similar.

means that "what Biologists and Historians believed to be comparable phenomena, the methods of explanation were similar for these phenomena but clearly this is the only logical conclusion.

The key is to go slow on such RC's, so slow that one reading should suffice or else for every question you would keep going back like me.
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Re: The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
AjiteshArun AndrewN
Wherever it was applied,
⠀⠀⠀ historical explanation was deemed causal explanation.
⠀⠀⠀ The biologist-as-historian and the general historian of
⠀⠀⠀ human events dealt with comparable phenomena and
⠀⠀⠀ assumed necessarily a common mode of explanation

can u explain this line and also connection with the passage

The argument
⠀⠀⠀ that these scientists employed confuses temporal
⠀⠀⠀ succession and causal explanation, of course,
⠀⠀⠀ but such confusion is the heart of most historical
⠀⠀⠀ explanation.
also this line
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The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
Hi avigutman for Q5, i had a hard time eliminating D specifically.

Reason :

The book is about discovery of fossils in the 19th century.

Example of a my Review on Amazon.com for this book
" The analysis made by biologists regarding the fossils mentioned in the book is no longer relevant. Biologists used to have a historical explanation regarding these fossils. Now Biologists have a causaul explanation (through experimental manipulation) regarding fossils mentioned in the book.
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Re: The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
avigutman - Do you think that maybe my thinking is wrong because

-- technically reviews about the book should be the topic of the book, i.e. discovery of fossils. What biologists' subsequent views on the fossils discovered perhaps is the topic of a completely different book

-- Reviews of a book will be about "methods" of discovery by geologists / archeologists used. biologists' views on the
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Re: The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
Expert Reply
jabhatta2 wrote:
avigutman - Do you think that maybe my thinking is wrong because

-- technically reviews about the book should be the topic of the book, i.e. discovery of fossils. What biologists' subsequent views on the fossils discovered perhaps is the topic of a completely different book

-- Reviews of a book will be about "methods" of discovery by geologists / archeologists used. biologists' views on the


Yeah jabhatta2 note that the question stem had the words "most likely".
A book about the discovery of fossils could theoretically go into biologists' and historians' analysis of those fossils, but the likelihood that a whole passage detailing this:

biologists became less interested in applying an ideal of historical explanation deductively to organic function and more interested in discerning the causes of vital processes through experimental manipulation

would appear within the review of that book is extremely low.
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Re: The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
gmatt1476 wrote:
The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked
⠀⠀⠀ a turning point in the history of biology—biologists
⠀⠀⠀ became less interested in applying an ideal of
⠀⠀⠀ historical explanation deductively to organic function
(5)⠀⠀and more interested in discerning the causes of vital
⠀⠀⠀ processes through experimental manipulation. But it
⠀⠀⠀ is impossible to discuss the history of biology in the
⠀⠀⠀ nineteenth century without emphasizing that those
⠀⠀⠀ areas of biology most in the public eye had depended
(10)⠀⠀on historical explanation. Wherever it was applied,
⠀⠀⠀ historical explanation was deemed causal explanation.
⠀⠀⠀ The biologist-as-historian and the general historian of
⠀⠀⠀ human events dealt with comparable phenomena and
⠀⠀⠀ assumed necessarily a common mode of explanation.
(15)⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Nineteenth-century biologists found a historical
⠀⠀⠀ explanation of organic function attractive partly
⠀⠀⠀ because their observation of the formation of a
⠀⠀⠀ new cell from a preexisting cell seemed to confirm
⠀⠀⠀ a historical explanation of cell generation. The
(20)⠀⠀same direct observation of continuous stages of
⠀⠀⠀ development was also possible when they examined
⠀⠀⠀ the complex sequence of events of embryogenesis.
⠀⠀⠀ In both cases, the observer received a concrete
⠀⠀⠀ impression that the daughter cell was brought into
(25)⠀⠀being, or caused, by the prior cell. The argument
⠀⠀⠀ that these scientists employed confuses temporal
⠀⠀⠀ succession and causal explanation, of course,
⠀⠀⠀ but such confusion is the heart of most historical
⠀⠀⠀ explanation.
(30)⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Not surprisingly, the evolutionary biologists of
⠀⠀⠀ the nineteenth century encountered a particularly
⠀⠀⠀ troublesome problem in their attempts to document
⠀⠀⠀ historical explanation convincingly: the factual record
⠀⠀⠀ of the history of life on earth (e.g., that provided by
(35)⠀⠀fossils) was incomplete. The temporal continuity of
⠀⠀⠀ living forms was convincing, but was an assumption
⠀⠀⠀ that was difficult to uphold when one compared
⠀⠀⠀ species or organisms forming any two stages of the
⠀⠀⠀ evolutionary record. Nineteenth-century biologists
(40)⠀⠀recognized this problem and attempted to resolve
⠀⠀⠀ it. Their solution today appears to be only verbal,
⠀⠀⠀ but was then regarded as eminently causal. The fact
⠀⠀⠀ of evolution demanded some connection between
⠀⠀⠀ all reproducing individuals and the species that they
(45)⠀⠀compose, as well as between living species and
⠀⠀⠀ their extinct ancestors. Their solution, the concept
⠀⠀⠀ of heredity, seemed to fill in an admittedly deficient
⠀⠀⠀ historical record and seemed to complete the
⠀⠀⠀ argument for a historical explanation of evolutionary
(50)⠀⠀events.

1. The primary purpose of the passage is to

A. compare the information about organic function made available by historical explanation with that made available by the experimental investigation of living organisms
B. assess the influence that theories of history had on developments in the field of biology in the nineteenth century
C. discuss the importance of historical explanation in the thinking of nineteenth century biologists
D. contrast biologists' use of historical explanation during the early nineteenth century with its use during the final quarter of the nineteenth century
E. evaluate the way in which the concept of heredity altered the use of historical explanation by nineteenth-century biologists

RC49461.01-10


2. According to information presented in the passage, which of the following is a true statement about the methods of explanation used by biologists and historians in the nineteenth century?

A. Neither biologists nor historians were able to develop methods of explanation that were accepted by the majority of their colleagues.
B. The methods used by biologists to explain phenomena changed dramatically, whereas the methods used by historians to explain events did not change as noticeably.
C. Biologists believed that they had refined the methods of explanation used by historians.
D. Biologists' and historians' methods of explaining what they believed to be comparable phenomena were similar.
E. Although biologists and historians adopted similar methods of explanation, the biologists were more apologetic about their use of these methods.

RC49461.01-20


3. Which of the following best summarizes the “turning point” mentioned in line 2?

A. The beginning of the conflict between proponents of the ideal of historical explanation and the proponents of experimentation
B. The substitution of historical explanation for causal explanation
C. The shift from interest in historical explanation to interest in experimentation
D. The attention suddenly paid to problems of organic function
E. The growth of public awareness of the controversies among biologists

RC49461.01-30


4. The author implies that nineteenth-century biologists who studied embryogenesis believed that they

A. had discovered physical evidence that supported their use of historical explanation
B. were the first biologists to call for systematic experimentation on living organisms
C. were able to use historical explanation more systematically than were biologists who did not study embryogenesis
D. had inadvertently discovered an important part of the factual record of the history of living organisms on earth
E. had avoided the logical fallacies that characterize the reasoning of most nineteenth-century biologists

RC49461.01-40


5. The passage would be most likely to appear in which of the following?

A. An essay investigating the methodology used by historians of human events
B. A book outlining the history of biology in the nineteenth century
C. A seminar paper on the development of embryogenesis as a field of study in nineteenth-century biology
D. A review of a book whose topic is the discovery of fossils in the nineteenth century
E. A lecture whose subject is the limitations of experimental investigation in modern biology
RC49461.01-50



Hi GMATNinja KarishmaB GMATRockstar! In question 3, I got between C and D, but I couldn't choose between the two. Can you help? Tks! :please:
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Re: The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
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Expert Reply
Will2020 wrote:
gmatt1476 wrote:
The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked
⠀⠀⠀ a turning point in the history of biology—biologists
⠀⠀⠀ became less interested in applying an ideal of
⠀⠀⠀ historical explanation deductively to organic function
(5)⠀⠀and more interested in discerning the causes of vital
⠀⠀⠀ processes through experimental manipulation. But it
⠀⠀⠀ is impossible to discuss the history of biology in the
⠀⠀⠀ nineteenth century without emphasizing that those
⠀⠀⠀ areas of biology most in the public eye had depended
(10)⠀⠀on historical explanation. Wherever it was applied,
⠀⠀⠀ historical explanation was deemed causal explanation.
⠀⠀⠀ The biologist-as-historian and the general historian of
⠀⠀⠀ human events dealt with comparable phenomena and
⠀⠀⠀ assumed necessarily a common mode of explanation.
(15)⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Nineteenth-century biologists found a historical
⠀⠀⠀ explanation of organic function attractive partly
⠀⠀⠀ because their observation of the formation of a
⠀⠀⠀ new cell from a preexisting cell seemed to confirm
⠀⠀⠀ a historical explanation of cell generation. The
(20)⠀⠀same direct observation of continuous stages of
⠀⠀⠀ development was also possible when they examined
⠀⠀⠀ the complex sequence of events of embryogenesis.
⠀⠀⠀ In both cases, the observer received a concrete
⠀⠀⠀ impression that the daughter cell was brought into
(25)⠀⠀being, or caused, by the prior cell. The argument
⠀⠀⠀ that these scientists employed confuses temporal
⠀⠀⠀ succession and causal explanation, of course,
⠀⠀⠀ but such confusion is the heart of most historical
⠀⠀⠀ explanation.
(30)⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Not surprisingly, the evolutionary biologists of
⠀⠀⠀ the nineteenth century encountered a particularly
⠀⠀⠀ troublesome problem in their attempts to document
⠀⠀⠀ historical explanation convincingly: the factual record
⠀⠀⠀ of the history of life on earth (e.g., that provided by
(35)⠀⠀fossils) was incomplete. The temporal continuity of
⠀⠀⠀ living forms was convincing, but was an assumption
⠀⠀⠀ that was difficult to uphold when one compared
⠀⠀⠀ species or organisms forming any two stages of the
⠀⠀⠀ evolutionary record. Nineteenth-century biologists
(40)⠀⠀recognized this problem and attempted to resolve
⠀⠀⠀ it. Their solution today appears to be only verbal,
⠀⠀⠀ but was then regarded as eminently causal. The fact
⠀⠀⠀ of evolution demanded some connection between
⠀⠀⠀ all reproducing individuals and the species that they
(45)⠀⠀compose, as well as between living species and
⠀⠀⠀ their extinct ancestors. Their solution, the concept
⠀⠀⠀ of heredity, seemed to fill in an admittedly deficient
⠀⠀⠀ historical record and seemed to complete the
⠀⠀⠀ argument for a historical explanation of evolutionary
(50)⠀⠀events.

1. The primary purpose of the passage is to

A. compare the information about organic function made available by historical explanation with that made available by the experimental investigation of living organisms
B. assess the influence that theories of history had on developments in the field of biology in the nineteenth century
C. discuss the importance of historical explanation in the thinking of nineteenth century biologists
D. contrast biologists' use of historical explanation during the early nineteenth century with its use during the final quarter of the nineteenth century
E. evaluate the way in which the concept of heredity altered the use of historical explanation by nineteenth-century biologists

RC49461.01-10


2. According to information presented in the passage, which of the following is a true statement about the methods of explanation used by biologists and historians in the nineteenth century?

A. Neither biologists nor historians were able to develop methods of explanation that were accepted by the majority of their colleagues.
B. The methods used by biologists to explain phenomena changed dramatically, whereas the methods used by historians to explain events did not change as noticeably.
C. Biologists believed that they had refined the methods of explanation used by historians.
D. Biologists' and historians' methods of explaining what they believed to be comparable phenomena were similar.
E. Although biologists and historians adopted similar methods of explanation, the biologists were more apologetic about their use of these methods.

RC49461.01-20


3. Which of the following best summarizes the “turning point” mentioned in line 2?

A. The beginning of the conflict between proponents of the ideal of historical explanation and the proponents of experimentation
B. The substitution of historical explanation for causal explanation
C. The shift from interest in historical explanation to interest in experimentation
D. The attention suddenly paid to problems of organic function
E. The growth of public awareness of the controversies among biologists

RC49461.01-30


4. The author implies that nineteenth-century biologists who studied embryogenesis believed that they

A. had discovered physical evidence that supported their use of historical explanation
B. were the first biologists to call for systematic experimentation on living organisms
C. were able to use historical explanation more systematically than were biologists who did not study embryogenesis
D. had inadvertently discovered an important part of the factual record of the history of living organisms on earth
E. had avoided the logical fallacies that characterize the reasoning of most nineteenth-century biologists

RC49461.01-40


5. The passage would be most likely to appear in which of the following?

A. An essay investigating the methodology used by historians of human events
B. A book outlining the history of biology in the nineteenth century
C. A seminar paper on the development of embryogenesis as a field of study in nineteenth-century biology
D. A review of a book whose topic is the discovery of fossils in the nineteenth century
E. A lecture whose subject is the limitations of experimental investigation in modern biology
RC49461.01-50



Hi GMATNinja KarishmaB GMATRockstar! In question 3, I got between C and D, but I couldn't choose between the two. Can you help? Tks! :please:



3. Which of the following best summarizes the “turning point” mentioned in line 2?

A. The beginning of the conflict between proponents of the ideal of historical explanation and the proponents of experimentation
B. The substitution of historical explanation for causal explanation
C. The shift from interest in historical explanation to interest in experimentation
D. The attention suddenly paid to problems of organic function
E. The growth of public awareness of the controversies among biologists


The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked
⠀⠀⠀ a turning point in the history of biology—biologists
⠀⠀⠀ became less interested in applying an ideal of
⠀⠀⠀ historical explanation deductively to organic function
(5)⠀⠀and more interested in discerning the causes of vital
⠀⠀⠀ processes through experimental manipulation.


What was the turning point?
Before the turning point, biologists were interested in "applying an ideal of historical explanation deductively to organic function"
After the turning point they became interested in "discerning the causes of vital processes through experimental manipulation" instead.

Note that "vital processes" is similar to "organic function".
Before - they used to apply historical explanation to explain organic function. After - they started experimenting to explain the processes.

Hence (C) fits.

(D) is incorrect because before the turning point too they were interested in applying explanations to organic function so they were interested in organic function. They did not suddenly get interested in organic function after the turning point.

Answer (C)
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Re: The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
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1. Why is the correct answer right
2. WHat does it mean "The biologist-as-historian and the general historian of
⠀⠀⠀ human events dealt with comparable phenomena and
⠀⠀⠀ assumed necessarily a common mode of explanation."?
3. What is "biologist as historian" and what is its significance?
4. DIdn't historians have a different method which aso included identifying causes so how are we saying they had the same?
5. How does it confuse and what does it mean " The argument
⠀⠀⠀ that these scientists employed confuses temporal
⠀⠀⠀ succession and causal explanation, of course,
⠀⠀⠀ but such confusion is the heart of most historical
⠀⠀⠀ explanation."

6. Also did not understand any word in theses sentences and what it means as a whole:" The temporal continuity of
⠀⠀⠀ living forms was convincing, but was an assumption
⠀⠀⠀ that was difficult to uphold when one compared
⠀⠀⠀ species or organisms forming any two stages of the
⠀⠀⠀ evolutionary record. Nineteenth-century biologists
⠀⠀recognized this problem and attempted to resolve
⠀⠀⠀ it. Their solution today appears to be only verbal,
⠀⠀⠀ but was then regarded as eminently causal."

7. Alsp pls clarify Q5- A

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Re: The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
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Expert Reply
Hello, ag153. It is not entirely clear to me which question(s) you may be asking about, other than number 5, specifically answer choice (A). It just so happens that I discussed this question and answer choice in an earlier post. If you find something confusing or inadequate about that explanation, please let me know, and I will do my best to provide further clarity.

Also, I cannot speak for the other five people you mentioned, but these "list" mentions can be a little off-putting. Such a list may be construed as an attempt to get your questions answered quickly, never mind who responds (as long as somebody does). I understand if you like reading the responses that certain Experts provide: I do, too. But I, for one, am less inclined to prioritize a list mention than I am a single mention or one alongside one other Expert.

If you are having trouble with RC in general, you might not want to jump into GMAT Advanced questions. Work your way up to them instead. If you need help on your approach, try GMAT Ninja's RC Guide for Beginners or the pertinent sections of All GMAT Ninja LIVE YouTube videos by topic.

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Re: The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
Dear experts

Request any one of you to help me with passage summary. I found it very difficult to understand the passage and connect the third paragraph with the previous ones.
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The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
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tanishkamishra wrote:
Dear experts

Request any one of you to help me with passage summary. I found it very difficult to understand the passage and connect the third paragraph with the previous ones.

----------------------------------
I am no Expert.. But I guess if you read the passage at your normal speed (without rushing through) you'll be able to get the summary of the passage...
Infact it's been explained by GMATNinja quite succinctly. Excerpt from the same is reproduced below:-
In the first paragraph, the author: -
Introduces a turning point in the history of biology: from a "historical explanation" to "experimental manipulation."
Says that the "historical explanation" era is important to the discussion and gives some further info.

In the second paragraph, the author:
Explains why biologists liked the historical explanation
Raises an issue with the historical explanation ("The argument that these scientists employed confuses temporal succession and causal explanation.")

In the third paragraph, the author:
Raises a difficulty with the historical explanation ("the factual record of the history of life on earth (e.g., that provided by fossils) was incomplete."
Explains the solution to this difficulty.

Overall, the author's purpose is to discuss the history of biology, and particularly how the historical explanation is important to that discussion.
I hope this helps....
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1. The primary purpose of the passage is (C) "discuss the importance of historical explanation in the thinking of nineteenth-century biologists." The passage explores the shift in the field of biology during the nineteenth century, where biologists became less interested in deductive historical explanation and more focused on experimental manipulation. It emphasizes the significance of historical explanation in the thinking of biologists during that period.

2. According to the information presented in the passage, the correct answer is (D) "Biologists' and historians' methods of explaining what they believed to be comparable phenomena were similar." The passage states that the biologist-as-historian and the general historian of human events dealt with comparable phenomena and assumed a common mode of explanation. This implies that biologists and historians used similar methods of explanation for phenomena they studied.

3. The best summary of the "turning point" mentioned in line 2 is (C) "The shift from interest in historical explanation to interest in experimentation." The passage highlights that during the final quarter of the nineteenth century, biologists became less interested in applying historical explanation deductively and more interested in discerning the causes of vital processes through experimental manipulation. This marks the shift in focus from historical explanation to experimentation.

4. The author implies that nineteenth-century biologists who studied embryogenesis believed that they (A) "had discovered physical evidence that supported their use of historical explanation." The passage mentions that the observation of the formation of a new cell from a preexisting cell during embryogenesis seemed to confirm a historical explanation of cell generation. This suggests that the biologists who studied embryogenesis believed they had found physical evidence supporting their use of historical explanation.

5. The passage would be most likely to appear in (B) "A book outlining the history of biology in the nineteenth century." The passage provides an overview of the shift in the field of biology during the nineteenth century, discussing the changing interests and methods of biologists. It explores the importance of historical explanation and its relationship with experimental investigation, making it suitable for a book outlining the history of biology in that period.
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The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
GMATNinja

Thanks for your explanation. I do not understand the last sentence of P2, can you help explain?

1st paragraph: "Wherever it was applied, historical explanation was deemed causal explanation."
2nd paragraph:"The argument that these scientists employed confuses temporal succession and causal explanation"

I thought it mentioned historical explanation = causal explanation in 1st para, then why the example in para 2 confuses temporal succession and causal explanation?

Thanks in advanced


GMATNinja wrote:

Question 1


mSKR wrote:
Hi IanStewart GMATNinja CrackVerbalGMAT GMATRockstar BrightOutlookJenn

Quote:
1. The primary purpose of the passage is to

B. assess the influence that theories of history had on developments in the field of biology in the nineteenth century
C. discuss the importance of historical explanation in the thinking of nineteenth century biologists


We should reject B only because it is mentioned theories of history? Actually I liked B because whatever was derived by 19th century biologists depends on historical explanation .So it means historical explanation had influence in development . But assess means estimate. 1st line of 2nd passage says: partly attracted , so I took it as kind of assess. Somehow i ignored "theories" and end up in choosing B.

I rejected C because biologists were adding experiments beyond what was given in historical explanation. But I am still confused whether I consider this consideration as importance? Infact as experiments add value to the historical explanation so it should be discussion the importance of experiments /methods of 19th century.

Please share your insights once again on primary purpose question:)

Thanks!

To answer primary purpose questions, first break down the structure of the passage as a whole:

In the first paragraph, the author:
  • Introduces a turning point in the history of biology: from a "historical explanation" to "experimental manipulation."
  • Says that the "historical explanation" era is important to the discussion and gives some further info.

In the second paragraph, the author:
  • Explains why biologists liked the historical explanation
  • Raises an issue with the historical explanation ("The argument that these scientists employed confuses temporal succession and causal explanation.")

In the third paragraph, the author:
  • Raises a difficulty with the historical explanation ("the factual record of the history of life on earth (e.g., that provided by fossils) was incomplete."
  • Explains the solution to this difficulty.

Overall, the author's purpose is to discuss the history of biology, and particularly how the historical explanation is important to that discussion. Sure, he/she mentions experimental manipulation -- but only in passing.

Which answer choice best captures the author's primary purpose?
Quote:
A. compare the information about organic function made available by historical explanation with that made available by the experimental investigation of living organisms

The author does not tell us about the information gleaned from experimental instigation. So, there isn't a clean comparison between the information made available by the two different methods.

(A) is out.

Quote:
B. assess the influence that theories of history had on developments in the field of biology in the nineteenth century

The author discusses the biologists' "historical explanation" at length -- but that's not quite the same as "theories of history". "Theories of history" would be some kind of conceptual underpinning used by historians. The author doesn't go into anything like that, so (B) is out.

Quote:
C. discuss the importance of historical explanation in the thinking of nineteenth century biologists

This one looks pretty good. The author states that "it is impossible to discuss the history of biology in the nineteenth century without emphasizing that those areas of biology most in the public eye had depended on historical explanation." Then, he/she spend the rest of the passage discussing the historical explanation.

Keep (C) for now.

Quote:
D. contrast biologists' use of historical explanation during the early nineteenth century with its use during the final quarter of the nineteenth century

Nope, biologists shifted away from the historical explanation during the final quarter of the nineteenth century -- so it's a bit off to say that the author contrasts how BOTH the earlier and the more recent biologists used the historical explanation.

Eliminate (D).

Quote:
E. evaluate the way in which the concept of heredity altered the use of historical explanation by nineteenth-century biologists

Heredity is mentioned near the end of the passage. However, it is only included as a small detail in a much broader discussion of biologists' historical explanation. So, the bit about heredity isn't the author's primary purpose for writing the passage as a whole.

Eliminate (E). (C) is the correct answer to question 1.
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augustus021 wrote:
GMATNinja

Thanks for your explanation. I do not understand the last sentence of P2, can you help explain?

1st paragraph: "Wherever it was applied, historical explanation was deemed causal explanation."

2nd paragraph:"The argument that these scientists employed confuses temporal succession and causal explanation"

I thought it mentioned historical explanation = causal explanation in 1st para, then why the example in para 2 confuses temporal succession and causal explanation?

Thanks in advanced

GMATNinja wrote:


There are a couple of details in the 1st paragraph that merit some attention.

First, the author doesn't say that historical explanation = causal explanation. He/she says that "historical explanation was deemed causal explanation." In other words, people treated historical explanations as causal -- but does the author think that this holds up?

Not really. Earlier in that paragraph, he/she says that "biologists became less interested in applying an ideal of historical explanation deductively to organic function and more interested in discerning the causes of vital processes through experimental manipulation."

Here, the author implies that experimental biology can be used to find causal relationships. This is contrasted to historical explanations. So, when the author later says that "historical explanation was deemed causal explanation," we know that he/she does not agree with the people making that assessment.

So, overall, the author remains a bit skeptical of historical explanations until the end, when an issue with those explanations is resolved.

I hope that helps!
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Re: The final quarter of the nineteenth century marked a turning point in [#permalink]
Thanks a lot

GMATNinja wrote:
augustus021 wrote:
GMATNinja

Thanks for your explanation. I do not understand the last sentence of P2, can you help explain?

1st paragraph: "Wherever it was applied, historical explanation was deemed causal explanation."

2nd paragraph:"The argument that these scientists employed confuses temporal succession and causal explanation"

I thought it mentioned historical explanation = causal explanation in 1st para, then why the example in para 2 confuses temporal succession and causal explanation?

Thanks in advanced

GMATNinja wrote:


There are a couple of details in the 1st paragraph that merit some attention.

First, the author doesn't say that historical explanation = causal explanation. He/she says that "historical explanation was deemed causal explanation." In other words, people treated historical explanations as causal -- but does the author think that this holds up?

Not really. Earlier in that paragraph, he/she says that "biologists became less interested in applying an ideal of historical explanation deductively to organic function and more interested in discerning the causes of vital processes through experimental manipulation."

Here, the author implies that experimental biology can be used to find causal relationships. This is contrasted to historical explanations. So, when the author later says that "historical explanation was deemed causal explanation," we know that he/she does not agree with the people making that assessment.

So, overall, the author remains a bit skeptical of historical explanations until the end, when an issue with those explanations is resolved.

I hope that helps!
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