by ohthatpatrick Wed Dec 25, 2013 1:31 pm
The support for (D) is actually the same as the support for (E), lines 23-24.
"Knowledge, they argue, relies on the data of experience, which includes subjective experience."
Like (E), (D) does not match up specifically with the words said, so you really have to think about the meaning of what's being talked about.
When you say that one category includes another, you're indicating that the latter is a subset of the former.
"Diana is fondest of the primate family, which includes chimpanzees" ... this indicates that chimpanzees are a subset of primates, and it also conveys that there are other members of the primate family beyond chimpanzees (i.e. there are non-chimpanzees in the primate family).
So lines 23-24 are saying that subjective experience is a subset of the overall data of experience. This tells us that the overall data of experience includes subjective experience and non-subjective (i.e. objective) experience.
You can also hear this in lines 25-27 ... these philosophers are saying "why should we reduce the sources of knowledge to ONLY objective ones"?
These philosophers aren't saying that objective knowledge is dumb or worthless. They're saying that subjective knowledge is ALSO legitimate and valuable.
So that's all that (D) is expressing: objective knowledge isn't EVERYTHING. There's also subjective knowledge.
=== other answers ===
(A) There's no support for the idea that these philosophers specifically recommend the subjective approach when it comes to studying nerve impulses. This is way too specific a claim, and we have no support for that. Hence, this is the correct answer.
(B) Lines 20-22 support this.
(C) Lines 23-27 support this.
(D) Lines 23-24 support this.