The statements above, if true, most strongly support which one of the following hypotheses?

This is a Most Strongly Supported question.

A purse containing 32 ancient gold coins that had been minted in Morocco was discovered in the ruins of an ancient Jordanian city some 4,000 kilometers to the east of Morocco.

It looks like we’re getting a potential phenomenon that needs to be explained. These gold coins were made in Morocco and found far away in an ancient Jordanian city. How did something so valuable, presumably, travel so far from their origin in ancient times?

In its time the Jordanian city was an important trading center along the trade route linking China and Europe, and it was also a popular stopover for pilgrims on the route between Morocco and Mecca.

This sentence suggests two hypotheses for how the coins got to the ancient Jordanian city. One option is they were used for trade – perhaps a merchant sold something in Morocco, got the coins in exchange, and then traveled along the trade route, passing or stopping in the city. The second option is that pilgrims who traveled between Morocco and Mecca may have brought the coins along their pilgrimage route.

The purse of a trader in the city would probably have contained a more diverse set of coins.

This fact casts doubt on the hypothesis that the coins were carried to the city by a merchant or trader. If they had been, the coins probably would have been more diverse. So the fact they are not as diverse as we would expect means they probably were not brought by a merchant or trader.

That leaves us with the pilgrimage hypothesis. When a stimulus in a Most Strongly Supported question raises potential hypotheses, but gives evidence suggesting that some of those hypotheses are not likely, there’s a strong chance the correct answer will relate to the hypotheses that are still left in contention. So we can anticipate that the answer likely relates to the pilgrimage hypothesis.

Answer Choice (A) Moroccan coins were more valuable in the ancient city than were Jordanian coins.

Nothing in the stimulus suggests anything about the value of Moroccan or Jordanian coins. The hypothesis that the Moroccan coins were carried to the ancient city because they were more valuable is weak. There are more obvious reasons why those coins were transported there. The stimulus suggests two and rejects one.

Answer Choice (B) Most gold coins available during the time when the ancient city thrived were minted in Morocco.

The stimulus doesn’t give us any reason to think this is true. All we have are 32 gold coins made in Morocco and found in the city. This doesn’t suggest anything about the origin of most gold coins in the world at the time – there could have been millions of gold coins in existence. Most could have been made in China, Russia, France, or anywhere else in the world. There’s no reason to think most were made in Morocco. Even if we take a more charitable interpretation of (B) to mean most gold coins available in only the ancient city, we still cannot infer this. Again, all we have are 32 gold coins. We won’t commit the hasty generalization flaw.

Correct Answer Choice (C) The purse with the gold coins had been brought to the ancient city by a pilgrim on the route between Morocco and Mecca.

This hypothesis is supported by the stimulus. The stimulus suggests two options for how the coins got to the city – by trader or by pilgrim. The last sentence told us a fact that cast doubt on the trader theory. So the pilgrim theory is more likely.

If you feel unsatisfied about (C), is it because you’re holding (C) up to too high of a standard? I do not think that the hypothesis in (C) must be true. In other words, I don’t think that this is guaranteed to be the explanation of the presence of the coins. But that’s not the standard we’re applying MSS questions. MSS sets a much lower standard of proof which (C) easily meets.

Answer Choice (D) Gold coins were the only medium of exchange used in the ancient city.

What about silver coins? Copper coins? Red or green rupees? Pokédollars? We have no reason to think gold coins were the only medium of exchange. They probably were one form of exchange, but the stimulus doesn’t give us evidence that they were exclusive.

Answer Choice (E) Pilgrims and traders in the ancient city were unlikely to have interacted with one another.

The stimulus doesn’t give us any evidence of how pilgrims and traders interacted. Perhaps they spoke to each other when they passed by on the streets. Maybe they stayed at an inn or met each other at local bars and shared tales of their journeys. We have nothing in the stimulus to tell us whether interaction was likely or unlikely.


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A study of the difference in earnings between men and women in the country of Naota found that the average annual earnings of women who are employed full time is 80 percent of the average annual earnings of men who are employed full time. However, other research consistently shows that, in Naota, the average annual earnings of all employed women is 65 percent of the average annual earnings of all employed men.

"Surprising" Phenomenon
Why do Naota women employed full-time earn a higher proportion of what their male counterparts earn than do employed Naota women in general?

Objective
Any hypothesis explaining this discrepancy must identify a difference between the collection of people employed in Naota and the collection of people employed full-time in Naota. This distinction must explain a smaller difference between the average earnings of women employed full-time and those of men employed full-time than the difference between the average earnings of employed women in general and those of employed men in general.

A
In Naota, the difference between the average annual earnings of all female workers and the average annual earnings of all male workers has been gradually increasing over the past 30 years.
This fails to distinguish between full-time workers and workers in general. It gives context for the large earning discrepancy between male and female workers in general, but gives no reason for the discrepancy between male and female full-time workers to be smaller.
B
In Naota, the average annual earnings of women who work full time in exactly the same occupations and under exactly the same conditions as men is almost the same as the men’s average annual earnings.
This identifies a subset of full-time workers with no earning discrepancy, but draws no contrast between full-time workers and Naota workers in general.
C
In Naota, a growing proportion of female workers hold full-time managerial, supervisory, or professional positions, and such positions typically pay more than other types of positions pay.
This introduces an irrelevant temporal dynamic. It does not indicate that the proportion of female managerial workers is large, only that it is growing, and it admits the possibility that more women are holding supervisory and professional positions on a part-time basis as well.
D
In Naota, a larger proportion of female workers than male workers are part-time workers, and part-time workers typically earn less than full-time workers earn.
This explains the discrepancy. Women are more likely to work lower-paying part-time jobs than men, so women earn a lower proportion of what men earn, on average, than the full-time numbers alone indicate.
E
In ten other countries where the proportion of women in the work force is similar to that of Naota, the average annual earnings of women who work full time ranges from a low of 50 percent to a high of 90 percent of the average annual earnings of men who work full time.
This introduces irrelevant information about other countries. It draws no distinction between the collection of all Naota’s workers and the collection of its full-time workers.

9 comments

Pieces of music consist of sounds and silences presented to the listener in a temporal order. A painting, in contrast, is not presented one part at a time to the viewer; there is thus no particular path that the viewer’s eye must follow in order to “read” the painting. Therefore, an essential distinction between the experiences of hearing music and of viewing paintings is that hearing music has a temporal dimension but viewing a painting has none.

A
the argument does not allow for the possibility of being immersed in experiencing a painting without being conscious of the passage of time
The argument doesn’t address whether viewers can lose track of time while looking at a painting.
B
the argument is based on a very general definition of music that does not incorporate any distinctions among particular styles
Distinctions between music styles are irrelevant to the argument. The argument just says that music doesn’t have a temporal dimension.
C
the argument fails to bring out the aspects of music and painting that are common to both as forms of artistic expression
The argument isn’t about the similarities between music and painting. It only focuses on a possible difference.
D
relying on the metaphor of “reading” to characterize how a painting is viewed presupposes the correctness of the conclusion to be drawn on the basis of that characterization
The argument doesn’t presuppose anything. It uses the metaphor of “reading” to describe how a painting is viewed, but it doesn’t cite that metaphor for why music and paintings are different. It cites the lack of a particular path for viewers to follow when looking at a painting.
E
the absence of a particular path that the eye must follow does not entail that the eye follows no path
This is a possibility the argument ignores. Even if viewers’ eyes don’t follow a particular path when looking at a painting, their eyes may still follow some path, allowing the possibility that paintings have a temporal element.

37 comments