Shzco wrote:
Could someone please explain why the second question's answer could not be C? Thank you for your time.
It has been a while, but Question C does not undermine the 2 key mistakes laid out:
1) marrying Mandane to Cambyses
2) telling Harpagus to kill their offspring
"Harpagus would not have killed the baby regardless of whether he knew the prophesy" is not the strongest knock on the argument. Sure, Harpagus would not have killed the child regardless, but what of it? It does not directly attack the 2 key mistakes. A is more correct because it is stressed throughout the passage that he is worry about who to wed his daughter with.
To undermine the claim that Astyages's downfall proceeded from two major mistakes, we would want an option that suggests those mistakes were not the primary cause of his downfall.
(A) Mandane’s son would have conquered his grandfather’s kingdom regardless of who his father was.
This option suggests that Cyrus's rise was inevitable, which would undermine the idea that Astyages's specific mistakes were the primary factors in his downfall.
Thus, (A) would most strongly undermine the claim.
While (C) suggests that Harpagus would not have killed the baby regardless of knowing the prophecy, it doesn't directly address the relationship between Astyages's mistakes and his downfall. It focuses on Harpagus's actions rather than the significance of Astyages's decisions.
In contrast, (A) directly asserts that Cyrus's conquest would have happened regardless of Astyages's mistakes, thereby directly challenging the idea that those mistakes were crucial to his downfall. So, while (C) provides some insight into Harpagus's actions, it doesn't effectively undermine the overall claim about Astyages's mistakes leading to his downfall.