PrepTest 45, Section 3, Question 10
The enthusiastic acceptance of ascetic lifestyles evidenced in the surviving writings of monastic authors indicates that medieval societies were much less concerned with monetary gain than are contemporary Western cultures.
The enthusiastic acceptance of ascetic lifestyles evidenced in the surviving writings of monastic authors indicates that medieval societies were much less concerned with monetary gain than are contemporary Western cultures.
The enthusiastic acceptance of ascetic lifestyles evidenced in the surviving writings of monastic authors indicates that medieval societies were much less concerned with monetary gain than are contemporary Western cultures.
The enthusiastic acceptance of ascetic lifestyles evidenced in the surviving writings of monastic authors indicates that medieval societies were much less concerned with monetary gain than are contemporary Western cultures.
The reasoning in the argument is most vulnerable to criticism on the grounds that the argument
employs the imprecise term "ascetic"
generalizes from a sample that is likely to be unrepresentative
applies contemporary standards inappropriately to medieval societies
inserts personal opinions into what purports to be a factual debate
advances premises that are inconsistent
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