Statements A, C, D and F present a balanced view of analogical reasoning and explanation in exam contexts. B is false because a single example cannot guarantee a universal generalisation; it can only suggest or illustrate. E is false since analogical arguments are typically inductive, providing support but not deductive certainty. The correct combination therefore includes A, C, D and F and excludes the two exaggerated claims.
Option A:
Option A is incomplete because it omits F, failing to mention that exams explicitly test the distinction between analogy and illustration. It also lacks an explicit reference to the exam context, making it less aligned with the question’s focus.
Option B:
Option B is incorrect as it leaves out C and includes F but misses one of the true statements about the dual role of analogies in clarification and argument. Without C, the description of analogical use remains incomplete.
Option C:
Option C is correct since it captures both the logical nature of analogy and the explanatory role, while emphasising that UGC NET questions may ask candidates to identify these patterns. It avoids the false claims that one example proves universals or that analogies are always deductive.
Option D:
Option D is wrong because it includes E, which mistakenly says all analogical arguments are deductive, and omits A, losing the core definition of analogical argument. This mix of omission and error makes the option unacceptable.
Comment Your Answer
Please login to comment your answer.
Sign In
Sign Up
Answers commented by others
No answers commented yet. Be the first to comment!