Okay. So in this one we're going to think about if a Gestalt psychologist were to criticize a structuralist, what might they say? Let's look through these options. So option A says, "We lack empirical evidence for the unconscious mind, therefore we can never know how it actually impacts us." That is a very fair criticism of psychoanalytic theory, though, not structuralism.
So we'll cross that out. Option B states, "Mental processes cannot be understood by analyzing parts. Humans tend to perceive things as organized wholes." And that sounds like an argument that a Gestalt psychologist would make. Remember, Gestalt psychologists are concerned with how people process things as patterns and coherent wholes.
So it looks like our answer is going to be option B. Just to understand why option C is incorrect, option C reads, "When we examine group averages to better understand how behaviors are adaptive, we risk overlooking individual differences." So that might be a criticism that you would level at functionalism, not necessarily structuralism because they're thinking of that adaptive significance there. Alright, so our answer here is going to be option B.
And there you go.