3. In saying that Temple’s supporting evidence lent his argument a “semblance of rigor” (Highlighted), the author most likely intends to indicate that
(A) despite his attempts to use strict scientific methodology, Temple’s experimental findings regarding Calvaria major pits were not carefully derived and thus merely appeared to support his hypothesis - no.
(B) direct proof of a hypothesis of the sort Temple was investigating is virtually impossible to obtain, even with the most exact measurements and observations - No.
(C) in contrast to Temple’s secondhand information concerning the age of the thirteen overmature Calvaria major trees he found, his experiments with turkeys and other birds represented careful and accurate firsthand research - The usage of "semblance" is not used for this contrast of information between trees and experiments.
(D) in his experimentation on Calvaria major pits, Temple produced quantitative experimental results that superficially
...
(A) despite his attempts to use strict scientific methodology, Temple’s experimental findings regarding Calvaria major pits were not carefully derived and thus merely appeared to support his hypothesis - no.
(B) direct proof of a hypothesis of the sort Temple was investigating is virtually impossible to obtain, even with the most exact measurements and observations - No.
(C) in contrast to Temple’s secondhand information concerning the age of the thirteen overmature Calvaria major trees he found, his experiments with turkeys and other birds represented careful and accurate firsthand research - The usage of "semblance" is not used for this contrast of information between trees and experiments.
(D) in his experimentation on Calvaria major pits, Temple produced quantitative experimental results that superficially
...
Statistics : Posted by Raman109 • on 01 Feb 2023, 07:00 • Replies 22 • Views 10679





