trevor.lovell Wrote:I chose A on this one and felt pretty comfortable.
Any help on how to arrive at E? I didn't eliminate it, but didn't eliminate A either. It seemed to me that the inability to define biology by immutable laws was equivalent to being unable to discover such laws. Thus the philosophers' preference for physics.
Ah, but (A) doesn't say the laws are impossible to discover! It just describes the belief that biological laws are harder to discover. But that's not supported by the passage. Philosophers are wary of biology precisely because, as you say, it's apparently not governed by immutable laws. This answer actually contradicts the passage by suggesting that philosophers believe those laws are there, just harder to find.
(E), on the other hand, gets the job done because philosophers' affinity for physics does depend on the nature of the phenomena studied; specifically, the fact that these phenomena can be described by universal, immutable laws.
(B), (C), and (D) are pretty easy to eliminate: they're all way out of scope, not mentioned at all in the passage.
Does that answer your question?