QUESTION IMAGE
Question
question 10 of 10
why should historians make sound generalizations rather than oversimplifications when analyzing sources?
a. sound generalizations can accommodate a variety of complex sources.
b. sound generalizations make claims of fact rather than claims of value.
c. sound generalizations are very convincing as a form of rhetoric.
d. sound generalizations allow historians to ignore contradictory evidence.
Brief Explanations
- Option A: Sound generalizations in historical analysis consider the complexity and variety of sources, avoiding the error of oversimplification which might miss nuances.
- Option B: Generalizations (even sound ones) can involve value claims, and this is not a reason for preferring sound generalizations over oversimplifications.
- Option C: The goal of historians is accuracy, not just rhetorical convincing, so this is not the main reason.
- Option D: Historians should not ignore contradictory evidence, so this is incorrect.
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
A. Sound generalizations can accommodate a variety of complex sources.