While researching a topic, a student has taken the following notes:
* The 'Great Man' theory of history posits that history is shaped by the actions of exceptional individuals.
* Historian Thomas Carlyle, a major proponent, argued that 'the history of the world is but the biography of great men.'
* The Annales School of history, developed in France, counters this by focusing on long-term social and economic structures.
* Annales historians like Fernand Braudel studied topics like climate patterns and trade routes over centuries.
* A potential synthesis is that 'great individuals' are often products of the very societal structures the Annales School emphasizes.
The student wants to present a counterargument to the 'Great Man' theory, using information from the notes.
Which choice most effectively accomplishes this goal?