Helen: Reading a book is the intellectual equivalent of investing money: you're investing time, thereby foregoing other ways of spending that time, in the hope that what you learn will later afford you more opportunities than you'd get by spending the time doing something other than reading that book.
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Randi concludes that reading books is only an intellectual investment if those books are vocational. This qualifies Helen’s general claim that reading a book in hopes that it will lead to gains later on makes reading similar to investing money. To support this qualification, Randi says that reading fiction is a waste of time, comparable to watching sitcoms.
Randi argues that Helen’s analogy cannot be accurately drawn between two kinds of action, because not all the instances of one action are analogous to the other action. By claiming that reading fiction is analogous to watching a sitcom instead of to financial investment, Randi undermines the strength of Helen’s general analogy between book-reading and investment.
Which one of the following ████ ██████████ █████████ ███ █████████ █████ ████ ██ ██████████ ██ ███████ ███████
questioning how the ████████ █████ ████ ███ █ █████ ███ ████████
disputing the scope ██ ███████ ███████ ██ ██████████ ███████ ███████
arguing that Helen's █████████ ██████████ █████ ██ ██ ██████ ██████████
drawing an analogy ██ ██ ███████ █████████ ██ █████
denying the relevance ██ ██ ███████ █████████ ██ █████