- Thu Oct 24, 2019 1:28 pm
#71470
Pulford did give us a principle, which is also his opinion, and that's the last sentence of the stimulus. He thinks that it is a general rule that an inquiry into someone's health history is only okay if it's for the advancement of scientific knowledge.
The problem with answer B is that Varela does NOT dispute this principle. He never says anything like "no, you can do that kind of inquiry without caring about science." Rather, he says that curiosity IS about advancing scientific knowledge, and so that it fits into the principle.
"Untenable" means it cannot hold up under scrutiny, or can't be defended. It's wrong. Varela thinks that Pulford is wrong to try to distinguish "legitimate scientific inquiry" from "mere curiosity," because Varela thinks that curiosity is a valid basis for scientific inquiry. "I wonder what I might learn if I look into this" is often the basis for scientific inquiry, he tells us. Varela thinks Pulford's argument is based on an indefensible distinction between curiosity and science.
Adam M. Tyson
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