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`Religions, like camel caravans, seem to avoid mountain passes. Buddhism spread quickly south from Buddha’s birth-place in southern Nepal across the flat Gangetic plain to Sri Lanka. But it took a millennium to reach China … The religious belt stretched eventually to Mongolia and Japan, but in Afghanistan Buddhism filled only a narrow belt that left pagans among the valleys to the east and west in Kailash and Ghor’.
Which of the following, if true, would most weaken the conclusion to the above argument?
Christianity took several centuries to cross the Atlantic Ocean to America.
The Hindukush mountains made no difference to the speed with which Islam spread.
Buddhism is strongest in mountainous regions.
Jainism is less popular in cold climates.
The conclusion that religions such as Buddhism took a lot of time to spread beyond mountain passes is getting weakened with the fact that Islam spread quickly beyond the Hindu Kush. Hence, option 2 is the correct answer.
By: Amit Kumar ProfileResourcesReport error
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