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Re: For anyone claiming to write a history of a science of which [#permalink]
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Added question #3.
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Re: For anyone claiming to write a history of a science of which [#permalink]
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3. The author is primarily concerned with:

Difficulty Level: Medium

Explanation

The author talks about our modern mathematical standards (show a proof for everything), then talks about how most traditional Chinese works do not do this, but one, the commentaries on the Jiuzhang Suanshu, does. This latter work follows the same standards we keep in modern times. The credited answer is (B), because this one ancient work conforms to our modern standards of showing proofs for mathematical results. The term "logical transparency" simply means: showing the logical basis for something; explaining logically why something is true, which is precisely what a proof does.

The author is not discussing the history of science in general --- that's a much much broader topic. The author is very specifically focused on this one ancient Chinese work. Choice (A) is not correct.

The author makes clear the methodology used to study the history of mathematics, and voices no objection to it whatsoever. The author does make clear that most ancient Chinese writers did not follow the standards of our modern methodology, but that does not constitute an argument against this methodology. Choice (C) is not correct.

Choice (D) is tricky. At the end, the passage definitely says that we know more about mathematical reason in China than we know in the other civilizations. Does this mean Chinese math was more advanced? Not necessarily. We just know about it better. Choice (D) is not correct.

The passage talks about "justification" in terms of the logical justification a mathematical proof implies. Nowhere does it discuss people justifying themselves. Choice (E) is not correct.

Answer: B
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Re: For anyone claiming to write a history of a science of which [#permalink]
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