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maverick7777
February 5th, 2007, 03:34 PM
Mystery stories often feature a brilliant detective and the detective’s dull companion. Clues are presented in the story, and the companion wrongly infers an inaccurate solution to the mystery using the same clues that the detective uses to deduce the correct solution. Thus, the author’s strategy of including the dull companion gives readers a chance to solve the mystery while also diverting them from the correct solution.
Which one of the following is most strongly supported by the information above?
(A) Most mystery stories feature a brilliant detective who solves the mystery presented in the story.
(B) Mystery readers often solve the mystery in a story simply by spotting the mistakes in the reasoning of the detective’s dull companion in that story.
(C) Some mystery stories give readers enough clues to infer the correct solution to the mystery.
(D) The actions of the brilliant detective in a mystery story rarely divert readers from the actions of the detective’s dull companion.
(E) The detective’s dull companion in a mystery story generally uncovers the misleading clues that divert readers from the mystery’s correct solution.
C
Hagrid
February 5th, 2007, 05:36 PM
: bump :
c153
February 7th, 2007, 12:38 AM
E becoz the dull companion diverts the readers attention but also allows to solve.... B sounds good but we are unable to deduce whether it is mistake or not until mystery is finally solved. so E
islanderridz
February 7th, 2007, 05:08 AM
E....i think but wats the OA??
maverick7777
February 7th, 2007, 06:36 AM
Nope ... E is not the OA ... try again.
sidhant
February 7th, 2007, 11:05 AM
C is the answer..
Because of the reason that most of the stories would distract the reader from the correct solution but eventually a few would lead them to the right/correct solution using the uncovered clues provided by the Companion.
gauravprohit
October 12th, 2007, 01:28 AM
a
tanuj82
October 12th, 2007, 04:49 AM
whats the OA maverick ?? is it E? I go for E
L.Doit
October 13th, 2007, 10:47 AM
IMO E
adi19
October 22nd, 2007, 07:09 AM
I would go with E.. but since Maverick says thats not the OA, i wonder what could be.. No other option convinces me..
Maverick, Pls provide us with the Official Explanation, along with the Official Answer. Thanks!
Aditi
sidd_k
October 22nd, 2007, 12:58 PM
First thought it is E but later confirmed it is B.As the dull companion tries to diver from real clue,these clues themselves act as a catalyst for readers'thinking
Sneha
October 22nd, 2007, 02:20 PM
Mystery stories often feature a brilliant detective and the detective’s dull companion. Clues are presented in the story, and the companion wrongly infers an inaccurate
solution to the mystery using the same clues that the detective uses to deduce the correct solution. Thus, the author’s strategy of including the dull companion gives
readers a chance to solve the mystery while also diverting them from the correct solution.
Which one of the following is most strongly supported by the information above?
(A) Most mystery stories feature a brilliant detective who solves the mystery presented in the story. - Clearly out of scope, we have to relate how having the dull companion helps the readers. This option has nothing to relate with that line of thought, hence OUT
(B) Mystery readers often solve the mystery in a story simply by spotting the mistakes in the reasoning of the detective’s dull companion in that story. - Not really, the implied purpose of including the dull companion is to use his theroies to weed out what he reader might also think. In doing so, the author actually leads the reader in eliminating incorrect deductions, hence the presence of the dull reader. OUT
(C) Some mystery stories give readers enough clues to infer the correct solution to the mystery. - Only if this were to be true, would the theory of using the dull companion hold. If there were no clues and the readers were not atall interested in solving the mystery but just read it then the argument won't hold. Hence there has to be an intention on the reader's part to solve the mystery with the provided clues, in such a case the argument holds. This clearly strongly supports the argument. CORRECT ANSWER
(D) The actions of the brilliant detective in a mystery story rarely divert readers from the actions of the detective’s dull companion. - The detective does not derive inaccurate conclusions, so there is no question. The readers will always focus on what the devective says, does so the detective cannot divert attention. Also the argument is not about diverting attention from the dull companion's. OUT
(E) The detective’s dull companion in a mystery story generally uncovers the misleading clues that divert readers from the mystery’s correct solution. - This contradicts the argument, the dull companion does not uncover misleading clues, the dull companion draws incorrect deductions from the same set of clues, and in doing so diverts the readers attenetion and makes the reader think than just focus on the detective. OUT
IMO C
L.Doit
October 22nd, 2007, 04:59 PM
Thanks Sneha!
adi19
October 23rd, 2007, 06:35 AM
Hi Sneha, Thanks for the detailed explanation. However, a doubt still lingers in my mind.
In explanation of option B, you mentioned : the author actually leads the reader in eliminating incorrect deductions, hence the presence of the dull reader.
Which means, the author wants the reader to arrive at the correct deduction.
However, in the original argument, it is mentioned: "Thus, the author’s strategy of including the dull companion gives
readers a chance to solve the mystery while also diverting them from the correct solution."
Based on the words in bold, is it not implied that the author wants to divert readers, and not lead them to the correct solution?
Please advise.
Thanks a ton!!
Aditi
Guardian
October 23rd, 2007, 12:13 PM
Let me explain my take on why option B cannot be true:
What we need to support : "Thus, the author’s strategy of including the dull companion gives
readers a chance to solve the mystery while also diverting them from the correct solution.
"
We have to support the conclusion which shows "author's" intent to give the readers a chance and ALSO divert them in different directions.
"(B) Mystery readers often solve the mystery in a story simply by spotting the mistakes in the reasoning of the detective’s dull companion in that story."
- Here the dull companion's story is actually helping them resolve the mystery and not divert them in a different direction. It actually kinda contradicts the conclusion which we need to support.
Helps?
ashgmat
October 24th, 2007, 01:44 AM
Even I will go with C .... cause its given that the author's strategy is to give readers a clur to solve the mystery
anshula
January 9th, 2008, 01:14 AM
IMO D
(A) Most mystery stories feature a brilliant detective who solves the mystery presented in the story. out of scope
(B) Mystery readers often solve the mystery in a story simply by spotting the mistakes in the reasoning of the detective’s dull companion in that story. the author states that "dull companion gives readers a chance to solve the mystery while also diverting them from the correct solution" hence it cannot be right
(C) Some mystery stories give readers enough clues to infer the correct solution to the mystery. again, the stories' objective is not to give the correct solution; hence incorrect
(D) The actions of the brilliant detective in a mystery story rarely divert readers from the actions of the detective’s dull companion. "Clues are presented in the story, and the companion wrongly infers an inaccurate solution to the mystery using the same clues that the detective uses to deduce the correct solution. Thus, the author’s strategy of including the dull companion gives readers a chance to solve the mystery while also diverting them from the correct solution." => that the actions of the detective do not divert the reader's attention from the dull companion => Answer
(E) The detective’s dull companion in a mystery story generally uncovers the misleading clues that divert readers from the mystery’s correct solution.Nothing in the passage suggests this.
vscid
January 18th, 2008, 08:40 PM
B for me.
Whats the OA maverick?
angryMOFO
January 25th, 2008, 02:22 PM
C for me.
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