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I'm confused. Isn't D just a restatement of the second premise?
Ahhh...makes sense now. I read "C" as "non-financial" as opposed to "financial." It makes perfect sense in retrospect...
Great - thanks! This is good news for me :)
When you say "at your target score" does that mean an average of say, the last five tests? Or simply meaning that you have hit your target score on your most recent test? Just curious for clarification. Thanks!
I am having a bit of trouble with question 14. I chose E over A. I felt the traditional school of thought was the incorporation of history into the study of law. The author discusses how students of British law are required to study medieval cases, and goes on to say that "centuries-old custom serves as the basis" for this division of subject matter. This would be the "traditional" school of thought. The "new trend" he criticizes is obviously the academic study of jurisprudence. My support for it being a "new" trend was his use of the word "modern" to describe jurisprudence treating law as a unified system of rules (see line 24).
In retrospect I can see how answer choice A could work. But how do we support that this is a "new view" as A supposes? If anything the author's view isn't new, but is a return to an old idea, as supported by paragraph 1. And what about choice E makes it incorrect? Maybe the word "trend" is not fully supported?
Thanks!
Could you point out other questions that have flaws similar to this one?