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TEST Oct 2001

SECTION I

Time 35 minutes 26 Questions

Directions: The questions in this section are based on the reasoning contained in brief statements or passages...

1.     Some critics argue that an opera’s stage directions are never reflected in its music. Many comic scenes in Mozart’s operas, however, open with violin phrases that sound like the squeaking of changing scenery. Clearly Mozart intended the music to echo the sounds occurring while stage directions are carried out. Hence, a change of scenery—the most basic and frequent stage direction—can be reflected in the music, which means that other operatic stage directions can be as well.

In the argument, the statement that many comic scenes in Mozart’s operas open with violin phrases that sound like the squeaking of changing scenery is offered in support of the claim that

(A) a change of scenery is the stage direction most frequently reflected in an opera’s music

(B) an opera’s stage directions are never reflected in its music

(C) an opera’s music can have an effect on the opera’s stage directions

(D) a variety of stage directions can be reflected in an opera’s musicD

(E) the most frequent relation between an opera’s music and its stage directions is one of musical imitation of the sounds that occur when a direction is carried out

2.     Lecture: Given our current state of knowledge and technology, we can say that the generalization that the entropy of a closed system cannot decrease for any spontaneous process has not been falsified by any of our tests of that generalization. So we conclude it to be true universally. Yet, it must be admitted that this generalization has not been conclusively verified, in the sense that it has not been tested in every corner of the universe, under every feasible condition. Nevertheless, this generalization is correctly regarded as a scientific law; indeed, it is referred to as the Second Law of Thermodynamics.

Which one of the following principles, if valid, most justifies the lecturer’s classification of the generalization described above?

(A) Whatever is a scientific law has not been falsified.

(B) If a generalization is confirmed only under a few circumstances, it should not be considered a scientific law.

(C) Whatever is true universally will eventually be confirmed to the extent current science allows.

(D) If a generalization is confirmed to the extent current science allows, then it is considered a scientific law.D

(E) Whatever is regarded as a scientific law will eventually be conclusively verified.

3.     More women than men suffer from Alzheimer’s disease—a disease that is most commonly contracted by elderly persons. This discrepancy has often been attributed to women’s longer life span, but his theory may be wrong. A recent study has shown that prescribing estrogen to women after menopause, when estrogen production in the body decreases, may prevent them from developing the disease. Men’s supply of testosterone may help safeguard them against Alzheimer’s disease because much of it is converted by the body to estrogen, and testosterone levels stay relatively stable into old age.

Which of the following most accurately expresses the main conclusion of the argument?

(A) A decrease in estrogen, rather than longer life span, may explain the higher occurrence of Alzheimer’s disease in women relative to men.

(B) As one gets older, one’s chances of developing Alzhimer’s disease increase.

(C) Women who go through menopause earlier in life than do most other women have an increased risk of contracting Alzheimer’s disease.

(D) The conversion of testosterone into estrogen may help safeguard men from Alzheimer’s disease.A

(E) Testosterone is necessary for preventing Alzheimer’s disease in older men.

4.     Parent P: Children will need computer skills to deal with tomorrow’s world. Computers should be introduced in kindergarten, and computer languages should be required in high school.

Parent O: That would be pointless. Technology advances so rapidly that the computers used by today’s high schools would become obsolete by the time these children are adults.

Which one of the following, if true, is the strongest logical counter parent P can make to parent Q’s objection?

(A) When technology is advancing rapidly, regular training is necessary to keep one’s skills at a level proficient enough to deal with the society in which one lives.

(B) Throughout history people have adapted to change, and there is no reason to believe that today’s children are not equally capable of adapting to technology as it advances.

(C) In the process of learning to language, children increase their ability to interact with computer technology.

(D) Automotive technology is continually advancing too, but that does not result in one’s having to relearn to drive cars as the new advances are incorporated into new automobiles.C

(E) Once people have graduated from high school, they have less time to learn about computers and technology than they had during their schooling years.

Questions 5-6

Proponent: Irradiation of food by gamma rays would keep it from spoiling before it reaches the consumer in food stores. The process leaves no radiation behind, and vitamin losses are comparable to those that occur in cooking, so there is no reason to reject irradiation on the grounds of nutrition or safety. Indeed, it kills harmful Salmonella bacteria, which in contaminated poultry have caused serious illness to consumers.

Opponent: The irradiation process has no effect on the bacteria that cause botulism, a very serious form of food poisoning, while those that cause bad odors that would warn consumers of botulism are killed. Moreover, Salmonella and the bacteria that cause botulism can easily be killed in poultry by using a safe chemical dip.

5.     The opponent’s argument proceeds by

(A) isolating an ambiguity in a crucial term in the proponent’s argument

(B) showing that claims made in the proponent’s argument result in a self-contradiction

(C) establishing that undesirable consequences result from the adoption of either one of two proposed remedies

(D) shifting perspective from safety with respect to consumers to safety with respect to producersE

(E) pointing out an alternative way of obtaining an advantage claimed by the proponent without risking a particular disadvantage

6.     Which one of the following could the opponent properly cite as indicating a flaw in the proponent’s reasoning concerning vitamin losses?

(A) After irradiation, food might still spoil if kept in storage for a long time after being purchased by the consumer.

(B) Irradiated food would still need cooking, or, if eaten raw, it would not have the vitamin advantage of raw food.

(C) Vitamin loss is a separate issue from safety.

(D) Vitamins can be ingested in pill form as well as in foods.B

(E) That food does not spoil before it can be offered to the consumer is primarily a benefit to the seller, not to the consumer.

7.     Due to wider commercial availability of audio recordings of authors reading their own books, sales of printed books have dropped significantly.

Which one of the following conforms most closely to the principle illustrated above?

(A) Because of the rising cost of farm labor, farmers began to make more extensive use of machines.

(B) Because of the wide variety of new computer games on the market, sales of high-quality computer video screens have improved.

(C) Because a new brand of soft drink entered the market, consumers reduced their consumption of an established brand of soft drink.

(D) Because a child was forbidden to play until homework was completed, that child did much less daydreaming and focused on homework.C

(E) Because neither of the two leading word processing programs has all of the features consumers want, neither has been able to dominate the market.

8.     Lobsters and other crustaceans eaten by humans are more likely to contract gill diseases when sewage contaminates their water. Under a recent proposal, millions of gallons of local sewage each day would be rerouted many kilometers offshore. Although this would substantially reduce the amount of sewage in the harbor where lobsters are caught, the proposal is pointless, because hardly any lobsters live long enough to be harmed by those diseases.

Which one of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the argument?

(A) Contaminants in the harbor other than sewage are equally harmful to lobsters.

(B) Lobsters, like other crustaceans, live longer in the open ocean than in industrial harbors.

(C) Lobsters breed as readily in sewage-contaminated water as in unpolluted water.

(D) Gill diseases cannot be detected by examining the surface of the lobster.E

(E) Humans often ill as a result of eating lobsters with gill diseases.

9.     Researcher: The rate of psychological problems is higher among children of divorced parents than among other children. But it would be a mistake to conclude that these problems are caused by the difficulty the children have adjusting to divorce. It is just as reasonable to infer that certain behaviors that increase the likelihood of divorce—hostility, distrust, lack of empathy—are learned by children from their parents, and that it is these learned behaviors, rather than the difficulty of adjusting to divorce, that cause the children’s psychological problems.

The assertion that children of divorced parents have a higher rate of psychological problems than other children figures in the argument in which one of the following ways?

(A) It is the conclusion of the argument.

(B) It is the claim that the argument tries to refute.

(C) It is offered as evidence for the claim that divorce is harmful to the children of the divorcing parents.

(D) It is offered as evidence for the claim that certain behaviors are often responsible for divorce.E

(E) It is cited as an established finding for which the argument proposes an explanation.

10.   Although marathons are 26.2 miles (42.2 kilometers) long and take even world-class marathoners over 2 hours to run, athletes who train by running 90 minutes a day fare better in marathons than do those who train by running 120 minutes or more a day.

Each of the following, if true, contributes to an explanation of the difference in marathon performances described above EXCEPT:

(A) The longer the period of time that one runs daily, the greater the chances of suffering adverse health effects due to air pollution.

(B) The longer the period of time that one runs daily, the easier it is to adjust to different race lengths.

(C) The longer the run, the more frequent is the occurrence of joint injuries that significantly interfere with overall training.

(D) Runners who train over 90 minutes per day grow bored with running and become less motivated.B

(E) Runners who train over 90 minutes per day deplete certain biochemical energy reserves, leaving them less energy for marathons.

11.   Linguist: Some people have understood certain studies as showing that bilingual children have a reduced “conceptual map” because bilingualism overstresses the child’s linguistic capacities. Vocabulary tests taken by bilingual children appear to show that these children tend to have a smaller vocabulary than do most children of the same age group. But these studies are deeply flawed, since the tests were given in only one language. Dual-language tests revealed that the children often expressed a given concept with a word from only one of their two languages.

The linguist’s argument proceeds by

(A) offering evidence for the advantages of bilingualism over monolingualism

(B) pointing out an inconsistency in the view that bilingualism overstresses a child’s linguistic capabilities

(C) offering evidence that undermines the use of any vocabulary test to provide information about a child’s conceptual map

(D) providing a different explanation for the apparent advantages of bilingualism from the explanation suggested by the results of certain studiesE

(E) pointing out a methodological error in the technique used to obtain the purported evidence of a problem with bilingualism

12.   Gene splicing can give rise to new varieties of farm animals that have only a partially understood genetic makeup. In addition to introducing the genes for whichever trait is desired, the technique can introduce genes governing the production of toxins or carcinogens, and these latter undesirable traits might not be easily discoverable.

The statements above, if true, most strongly support which one of the following?

(A) All toxin production is genetically controlled.

(B) Gene splicing to produce new varieties of farm animals should be used cautiously.

(C) Gene splicing is not effective as a way of producing new varieties of farm animals.

(D) Most new varieties of farm animals produced by gene splicing will develop cancer.B

(E) Gene splicing will advance to the point where unforeseen consequences are no longer a problem.

13.   Journal: In several psychological studies, subjects were given statements to read that caused them to form new beliefs. Later, the subjects were told that the original statements were false. The studies report, however, that most subjects persevered in their newly acquired beliefs, even after being told that the original statements were false. This strongly suggests that humans continue to hold onto acquired beliefs even in the absence of any credible evidence to support them.

Which one of the following, if true, most undermines the journal’s argument?

(A) Regardless of the truth of what the subjects were later told, the beliefs based on the original statements were, for the most part, correct.

(B) It is unrealistic to expect people to keep track of the original basis of their beliefs, and to revise a belief when its original basis is undercut.

(C) The statements originally given to the subjects would be highly misleading even if true.

(D) Most of the subjects had acquired confirmation of their newly acquired beliefs by the time they were told that the original statements were false.D

(E) Most of the subjects were initially skeptical of the statements originally given to them.

14.   Novelists cannot become great as long as they remain in academia. Powers of observation and analysis, which schools successfully hone, are useful to the novelist, but an intuitive grasp of the emotions of everyday life can be obtained only by the kind of immersion in everyday life that is precluded by being an academic.

Which one of the following is an assumption on which the argument depends?

(A) Novelists require some impartiality to get an intuitive grasp of the emotions of everyday life.

(B) No great novelist lacks powers of observation and analysis.

(C) Participation in life, interspersed with impartial observation of life, makes novelists great.

(D) Novelists cannot be great without an intuitive grasp of the emotions of everyday life.D

(E) Knowledge of the emotions of everyday life cannot be acquired by merely observing and analyzing life.

15.   Statistician: A financial magazine claimed that its survey of its subscribers showed that North Americans are more concerned about their personal finances than about politics. One question was: “Which do you think about more: politics or the joy of earning money?” This question is clearly biased. Also, the readers of the magazine are a self-selecting sample. Thus, there is reason to be skeptical about the conclusion drawn in the magazine’s survey.

Each of the following, if true, would strengthen the statistician’s argument EXCEPT:

(A) The credibility of the magazine has been called into question on a number of occasions.

(B) The conclusions drawn in most magazine surveys have eventually been disproved.

(C) Other surveys suggest that North Americans are just as concerned about politics as they are about finances.

(D) There is reason to be skeptical about the results of surveys that are biased and unrepresentative.E

(E) Other surveys suggest that North Americans are concerned not only with politics and finances, but also with social issues.

Questions 16-17

On the basis of the available evidence, Antarctica has generally been thought to have been covered by ice for at least the past 14 million years. Recently, however, three-million-year-old fossils of a kind previously found only in ocean-floor sediments were discovered under the ice sheet covering central Antarctica. About three million years ago, therefore, the Antarctic ice sheet must temporarily have melted. After all, either severe climatic warming or volcanic activity in Antarctica’s mountains could have melted the ice sheet, thus raising sea levels and submerging the continent.

16.   Which one of the following is the main conclusion of the argument?

(A) Antarctica is no longer generally thought to have been covered by ice for the past 14 million years.

(B) It is not the case that ancient fossils of the kind recently found in Antarctica are found only in ocean-floor sediments.

(C) The ice sheet covering Antarctica has not been continuously present throughout the past 14 million years.

(D) What caused Antarctica to be submerged under the sea was the melting of the ice sheet that had previously covered the continent.C

(E) The ice sheet covering Antarctica was melted either as a result of volcanic activity in Antarctica’s mountains or as a result of severe climatic warming.

17.   The reasoning in the argument is most vulnerable to which one of the following criticisms?

(A) That a given position is widely believed to be true is taken to show that the position in question must, in fact, be true.

(B) That either of two things could independently have produced a given effect is taken to show that those two things could not have operated in conjunction to produce that effect.

(C) Establishing that a certain event occurred is confused with having established the cause of that event.

(D) A claim that has a very general application is based entirely on evidence from a narrowly restricted range of cases.E

(E) An inconsistency that, as presented, has more than one possible resolution is treated as though only one resolution is possible.

18.   The current pattern of human consumption of resources, in which we rely on nonrenewable resources, for example metal ore, must eventually change. Since there is only so much metal ore available, ultimately we must either do without or turn to renewable resources to take its place.

Which one of the following is an assumption required by the argument?

(A) There are renewable resource replacements for all of the nonrenewable resources currently being consumed.

(B) We cannot indefinitely replace exhausted nonrenewable resources with other nonrenewable resources.

(C) A renewable resource cannot be exhausted by human consumption.

(D) Consumption of nonrenewable resources will not continue to increase in the future.B

(E) Ultimately we cannot do without nonrenewable resources.

19.   Lathyrism, a debilitating neurological disorder caused by the consumption of the legume Lathyrus sativus, is widespread among the domestic animals of some countries. Attempts to use rats to study Lathyrism have generally failed. Rats that ingested Lathyrus sativus did not produce the symptoms associated with the disorder.

Which one of the following is most strongly supported by the information above?

(A) The physiology of rats is radically different from that of domestic animals.

(B) The rats did not consume as much Lathyrus sativus as did the domestic animals that contracted Lathyrism.

(C) Not all animal species are equally susceptible to Lathyrism.

(D) Most of the animals that can contract Lathyrism are domestic.C

(E) Laboratory conditions are not conducive to the development of Lathyrism.

20.   Columnist: Almost anyone can be an expert, for there are no official guidelines determining what an expert must know. Anybody who manages to convince some people of his or her qualifications in an area—whatever those may be—is an expert.

The columnist’s conclusion follows logically if which one of the following is assumed?

(A) Almost anyone can convince some people of his or her qualifications in some area.

(B) Some experts convince everyone of their qualification in almost every area.

(C) Convincing certain people that one is qualified in an area requires that one actually be qualified in that area.

(D) Every expert has convinced some people of his or her qualifications in some area.A

(E) Some people manage to convince almost everyone of their qualifications in one or more areas.

21.   A patient complained of feeling constantly fatigued. It was determined that the patient averaged only four to six hours of sleep per night, and this was determined to contribute to the patient’s condition. However, the patient was not advised to sleep more.

Which one of the following, if true, most helps to resolve the apparent discrepancy in the information above?

(A) The shorter one’s sleep time, the easier it is to awaken from sleeping.

(B) The first two hours of sleep do the most to alleviate fatigue.

(C) Some people require less sleep than the eight hours required by the average person.

(D) Most people who suffer from nightmares experience them in the last hour of sleep before waking.E

(E) Worry about satisfying the need for sufficient sleep can make it more difficult to sleep.

22.   No chordates are tracheophytes, and all members of Pteropsida are tracheophytes. So no members of Pteropsida belong to the family Hominidae.

The conclusion above follows logically if which one of the following is assumed?

(A) All members of the family Hominidae are tracheophytes.

(B) All members of the family Hominidae are chordates.

(C) All tracheophytes are members of Pteropsida.

(D) No members of the family Hominidae are chordates.B

(E) No chordates are members of Pteropsida.

23.   Some statisticians claim that the surest way to increase the overall correctness of the total set of one’s beliefs is: never change that set, except by rejecting a belief when given adequate evidence against it. However, if this were the only rule one followed, then whenever one were presented with any kind of evidence, one would have to either reject some of one’s beliefs or else leave one’s beliefs unchanged. But then, over time, one could only have fewer and fewer beliefs. Since we need many beliefs in order to survive, the statisticians’ claim must be mistaken.

The argument is most vulnerable to criticism on the grounds that it

(A) presumes, without providing any justification, that the surest way of increasing the overall correctness of the total set of one’s beliefs must not hinder one’s ability to survive

(B) neglects the possibility that even while following the statisticians’ rule, one might also accept new beliefs when presented with some kinds of evidence

(C) overlooks the possibility that some large sets of beliefs are more correct overall than are some small sets of beliefs

(D) takes for granted that one should accept some beliefs related to survival even when given adequate evidence against themA

(E) takes for granted that the beliefs we need in order to have many beliefs must all be correct beliefs

24.   In every case of political unrest in a certain country, the police have discovered that some unknown person or persons organized and fomented that unrest. Clearly, therefore, behind all the cases of political unrest in that country there has been a single mastermind who organized and fomented them all.

The flawed reasoning in the argument above most closely parallels that in which one of the following?

(A) Every Chicago driver has a number on his or her license, so the number on some Chicago driver’s license is the exact average of the numbers on all Chicago drivers’ licenses.

(B) Every telephone number in North America has an area code, so there must be at least as many area codes as telephone numbers in North America.

(C) Every citizen of Edmonton has a social insurance number, so there must be one number that is the social insurance number for all citizens of Edmonton.

(D) Every loss of a single hair is insignificant, so no one who has a full head of hair at twenty ever becomes bald.C

(E) Every moment in Vladimir’s life is followed by a later moment in Vladimir’s life, so Vladimir’s life will never end.

25.   A company that produces men’s cologne had been advertising the product in general-circulation magazines for several years. Then one year the company decided to advertise its cologne exclusively in those sports magazines with a predominantly male readership. That year the company sold fewer bottles of cologne than it had in any of the three immediately preceding years.

Which one of the following, if true, best helps to explain why the sale of the company’s cologne dropped that year?

(A) Television advertising reaches more people than does magazine advertising, but the company never advertised its cologne on television because of the high cost.

(B) The general-circulation magazines in which the company had placed its advertisements experienced a large rise in circulation recently.

(C) Most men do not wear cologne on a regular basis.

(D) Women often buy cologne as gifts for male friends or relatives.D

(E) Successful advertisements for men’s cologne often feature well-known athletes.

26.   Kim: The rapidly growing world population is increasing demands on food producers in ways that threaten our natural resources. With more land needed for both food production and urban areas, less land will be available for forests and wildlife habitats.

Hampton: You are overlooking the promises of technology. I am confident that improvements in agriculture will allow us to feed the world population of ten billion predicted for 2050 without significantly increasing the percentage of the world’s land now devoted to agriculture.

Kim’s and Hampton’s statements most strongly support the claim that both of them would agree with which one of the following?

(A) Efforts should be taken to slow the rate of human population growth and to increase the amount of land committed to agriculture.

(B) Continued research into more-efficient agricultural practices and innovative biotechnology aimed at producing more food on less land would be beneficial.

(C) Agricultural and wilderness areas need to be protected from urban encroachment by preparing urban areas for greater population density.

(D) In the next half century, human population growth will continue to erode wildlife habitats and diminish forests.B

(E) The human diet needs to be modified in the next half century because of the depletion of our natural resources due to overpopulation.

SECTION IV

Time 35 minutes 26 Questions

Directions: The questions in this section are based on the reasoning contained in brief statements or passages...

1.     The graphical illustrations mathematics teachers use enable students to learn geometry more easily by providing them with an intuitive understanding of geometric concepts, which makes it easier to acquire the ability to manipulate symbols for the purpose of calculation. Illustrating algebraic concepts graphically would be equally effective pedagogically, even though the deepest mathematical understanding is abstract, not imagistic.

The statements above provide some support for each of the following EXCEPT:

(A) Pictorial understanding is not the final stage of mathematical understanding.

(B) People who are very good at manipulating symbols do not necessarily have any mathematical understanding.

(C) Illustrating geometric concepts graphically is an effective teaching method.

(D) Acquiring the ability to manipulate symbols is part of the process of learning geometry.B

(E) There are strategies that can be effectively employed in the teaching both of algebra and of geometry.

2.     Bureaucratic mechanisms are engineered to resist change. Thus, despite growing dissatisfaction with complex bureaucratic systems, it is unlikely that bureaucracies will be simplified.

The claim that bureaucratic mechanisms are engineered to resist change plays which one of the following roles in the argument?

(A) It is a premise offered in support of the claim that it is unlikely that bureaucracies will be simplified.

(B) It is a conclusion for which the only support offered is the claim that dissatisfaction with complex bureaucratic systems is growing.

(C) It is cited as evidence that bureaucratic systems are becoming more and more complex.

(D) It is used to weaken the claim that bureaucracies should be simplified.A

(E) It is a conclusion for which the claim that bureaucracies are unlikely to be simplified is offered as support.

3.     In speech, when words or sentences are ambiguous, gesture and tone of voice are used to indicate the intended meaning. Writers, of course, cannot use gesture or tone of voice and must rely instead on style; the reader detects the writer’s intention from the arrangement of words and sentences.

Which one of the following statements is most strongly supported by the information above?

(A) The primary function of style in writing is to augment the literal meanings of the words and sentences used.

(B) The intended meaning of a piece of writing is indicated in part by the writer’s arrangement of words and sentences.

(C) It is easier for a listener to detect the tone of a speaker than for a reader to detect the style of the writer.

(D) A writer’s intention will always be interpreted differently by different readers.B

(E) The writer’s arrangement of words and sentences completely determines the aesthetic value of his or her writing.

4.     Last year a large firm set a goal of decreasing its workforce by 25 percent. Three divisions, totaling 25 percent of its workforce at that time, were to be eliminated and no new people hired. These divisions have since been eliminated and no new people have joined the firm, but its workforce has decreased by only 15 percent.

Which one of the following, if true, contributes most to an explanation of the difference in the planned versus the actual reduction in the workforce?

(A) The three divisions that were eliminated were well run and had the potential to earn profits.

(B) Normal attrition in the retained divisions continued to reduce staff because no new people were added to the firm.

(C) Some of the employees in the eliminated divisions were eligible for early retirement and chose that option.

(D) As the divisions were being eliminated some of their employees were assigned to other divisions.D

(E) Employees in the retained divisions were forced to work faster to offset the loss of the eliminated divisions.

5.     One of the advantages of Bacillus thuringiensls (B.t.) toxins over chemical insecticides results from their specificity for pest insects. The toxins have no known detrimental effects on mammals or birds. In addition, the limited range of activity of the toxins toward insects means that often a particular toxin will kill pest species but not affect insets that prey upon the species. This advantage makes B.t. toxins preferable to chemical insecticides for use as components of insect pest management programs.

Which one of the following statements, if true, most weakens the argument?

(A) Chemical insecticides cause harm to a greater number of insect species than do B.t. toxins.

(B) No particular B.t. toxin is effective against all insects.

(C) B.t. toxins do not harm weeds that do damage to farm crops.

(D) Insects build up resistance more readily to B.t. toxins than to chemical insecticides.D

(E) Birds and rodents often do greater damage to farm crops than do insects.

6.     Many people are alarmed about the population explosion. They fail to appreciate that the present rise in population has in fact been followed by equally potent economic growth. Because of this connection between an increase in population and an increase in economic activity, population control measures should not be taken.

The questionable pattern of reasoning in the argument above is most similar to that in which one of the following?

(A) Subscribers to newsmagazines are concerned that increased postage costs will be passed on to them in the form of higher subscription rates. But that is a price they have to pay for having the magazines delivered. No group of users of the postal system should be subsidized at the expense of others.

(B) Most of the salespeople are concerned with complaints about the sales manager’s aggressive behavior. They need to consider that sales are currently increasing. Due to this success, no action should be taken to address the manager’s behavior.

(C) Parents are concerned about their children spending too much time watching television. Those parents should consider television time as time they could spend with their children. Let the children watch television, but watch it with them.

(D) Nutritionists warn people not to eat unhealthy foods. Those foods have been in people’s diets for years. Before cutting all those foods out of diets it would be wise to remember that people enjoy culinary variety.B

(E) Some consumers become concerned when the price of a product increases for several years in a row, thinking that the price will continue to increase. But these consumers are mistaken since a long-term trend of price increases indicates that the price will probably decline in the future.

7.     Attorney: I ask you to find Mr. Smith guilty of assaulting Mr. Jackson. Regrettably, there were no eyewitnesses to the crime, but Mr. Smith has a violent character. Ms. Lopez testified earlier that Mr. Smith, shouting loudly, had threatened her. Smith never refuted this testimony.

The attorney’s argument is fallacious because it reasons that

(A) aggressive behavior is not a sure indicator of a violent character

(B) Smith’s testimony is unreliable since he is loud and aggressive

(C) since Smith never disproved the claim that he threatened Lopez, he did in fact threaten her

(D) Lopez’s testimony is reliable since she is neither loud nor aggressiveC

(E) having a violent character is not necessarily associated with the commission of violent crimes

8.     It is widely believed that by age 80, perception and memory are each significantly reduced from their functioning levels at age 30. However, a recent study showed no difference in the abilities of 80-year-olds and 30-year-olds to play a card game devised to test perception and memory. Therefore, the belief that perception and memory are significantly reduced by age 80 is false.

The reasoning above is most vulnerable to criticism on the grounds that it fails to consider the possibility that

(A) the study’s card game does not test cognitive abilities other than perception and memory

(B) card games are among the most difficult cognitive tasks one can attempt to perform

(C) perception and memory are interrelated in ways of which we are not currently aware

(D) the belief that 80-year-olds’ perception and memory are reduced results from prejudice against senior citizensE

(E) playing the study’s card game perfectly requires fairly low levels of perception and memory

9.     Moralist: Humans have a natural disposition to altruism—that is, to behavior that serves the needs of others regardless of one’s own needs—but that very disposition prevents some acts of altruism from counting as moral. Reason plays an essential role in any moral behavior. Only behavior that is intended to be in accordance with a formal set of rules, or moral code, can be considered moral behavior.

Which one of the following most accurately states the main conclusion of the moralist’s argument?

(A) All moral codes prohibit selfishness.

(B) All moral behavior is motivated by altruism.

(C) Behavior must serve the needs of others in order to be moral behavior.

(D) Not all altruistic acts are moral behavior.D

(E) Altruism develops through the use of reason.

10.   A recent study suggests that Alzheimer’s disease, which attacks the human brain, may be caused by a virus. In the study, blood from 11 volunteers, each of whom had the disease, was injected into rats. The rats eventually exhibited symptoms of another degenerative neurological disorder, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, which is caused by a virus. This led the scientist who conducted the study to conclude that Alzheimer’s disease might be caused by a virus.

Which one of the following statements, if true, would most strengthen the scientist’s hypothesis that Alzheimer’s disease is caused by a virus?

(A) Alzheimer’s disease in rats is not caused by a virus.

(B) Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease affects only motor nerves in rats’ limbs, not their brains.

(C) The virus that causes Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in rats has no effect on humans.

(D) The symptoms known, respectively, as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and Alzheimer’s disease are different manifestations of the same disease.D

(E) Blood from rats without Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease produced no symptoms of the disease when injected into other experimental rats.

11.   One approach to the question of which objects discussed by a science are real is to designate as real all and only those entities posited by the most explanatorily powerful theory of the science. But since most scientific theories contain entities posited solely on theoretical grounds, this approach is flawed.

Which one of the following principles, if valid, most helps to justify the reasoning above?

(A) Any object that is posited by a scientific theory and that enhances the explanatory power of that theory should be designated as real.

(B) Objects posited for theoretical reasons only should never be designated as real.

(C) A scientific theory should not posit any entity that does no enhance the explanatory power of the theory.

(D) A scientific theory should sometimes posit entities on grounds other than theoretical ones.B

(E) Only objects posited by explanatorily powerful theories should be designated as real.

12.   Most doctors recommend that pregnant women eat a nutritious diet to promote the health of their babies. However, most babies who are born to women who ate nutritious diets while pregnant still develop at least one medical problem in their first year.

Which one of the following, if true, does most to resolve the apparent discrepancy in the information above?

(A) Women who regularly eat a nutritious diet while pregnant tend to eat a nutritious diet while breast-feeding.

(B) Most of the babies born to women who did not eat nutritious diet while pregnant develop no serious medical problems later in childhood.

(C) Babies of women who did not eat nutritious diets while pregnant tend to have more medical problems in their first year than do other babies.

(D) Medical problems that develop in the first year of life tend to be more serious than those that develop later in childhood.C

(E) Many of the physicians who initially recommended that pregnant women consume nutritious diets have only recently reaffirmed their recommendation.

13.   Mayor: The law prohibiting pedestrians from crossing against red lights serves no useful purpose. After all, in order to serve a useful purpose, a law must deter the kind of behavior it prohibits. But pedestrians who invariably violate this law are clearly not dissuaded by it; and those who comply with the law do not need it, since they would never cross against red light even if there were no law prohibiting pedestrians from crossing against red lights.

The mayor’s argument is flawed because it

(A) takes for granted that most automobile drivers will obey the law that prohibits them from driving through red lights

(B) uses the word “law” in one sense in the premises and in another sense in the conclusion

(C) ignores the possibility that a law might not serve a useful purpose even if it does deter the kind of behavior it prohibits

(D) fails to consider whether the law ever dissuades people who sometimes but not always cross against red lightsD

(E) provides no evidence that crossing against red lights is more dangerous than crossing on green lights

14.   Marian Anderson, the famous contralto, did not take success for granted. We know this because Anderson had to struggle early in life, and anyone who has to struggle early in life is able to keep a good perspective on the world.

The conclusion of the argument follows logically if which one of the following is assumed?

(A) Anyone who succeeds takes success for granted.

(B) Anyone who is able to keep a good perspective on the world does not take success for granted.

(C) Anyone who is able to keep a good perspective on the world has to struggle early in life.

(D) Anyone who does not take success for granted has to struggle early in life.B

(E) Anyone who does not take success for granted is able to keep a good perspective on the world.

15.   Geneticist: Ethicists have fears, many of them reasonable, about the prospect of cloning human beings, that is, producing exact genetic duplicates. But the horror-movie image of a wealthy person creating an army of exact duplicates is completely unrealistic. Clones must be raised and educated, a long-term process that could never produce adults identical to the original in terms of outlook, personality, or goals. More realistic is the possibility that wealthy individuals might use clones as living “organ banks.”

The claim that cloning will not produce adults with identical personalities plays which one of the following roles in the geneticist’s argument?

(A) It is a reason for dismissing the various fears raised by ethicists regarding the cloning of human beings.

(B) It is evidence that genetic clones will never be produced successfully.

(C) It illustrates the claim that only wealthy people would be able to have genetic duplicates made of themselves.

(D) It is evidence for the claim that wealthy people might use genetic duplicates of themselves as sources of compatible organs for transplantation.E

(E) It is a reason for discounting one possible fear concerning the cloning of human beings.

16.   Publicity campaigns for endangered species are unlikely to have much impact on the most important environmental problems, for while the ease of attributing feelings to large mammals facilitates evoking sympathy for them, it is more difficult to elicit sympathy for other kinds of organisms, such as the soil microorganisms on which large ecosystems and agriculture depend.

Which one of the following is an assumption on which the argument depends?

(A) The most important environmental problems involve endangered species other than large mammals.

(B) Microorganisms cannot experience pain or have other feelings.

(C) Publicity campaigns for the environment are the most effective when they elicit sympathy for some organism.

(D) People ignore environmental problems unless they believe the problems will affect creatures with which they sympathize.A

(E) An organism can be environmentally significant only if it affects large ecosystems or agriculture.

17.   Politician: All nations that place a high tax on income produce thereby a negative incentive for technological innovation, and all nations in which technological innovation is hampered inevitably fall behind in the international arms race. Those nations that, through historical accident or the foolishness of their political leadership, wind up in a strategically disadvantageous position are destined to lose their voice in the world affairs. So if a nation wants to maintain its value system and way of life, it must not allow its highest tax bracket to exceed 30 percent of income.

Each of the following, if true, weakens the politician’s argument EXCEPT:

(A) The top level of taxation must reach 45 percent before taxation begins to deter inventors and industrialists from introducing new technologies and industries.

(B) Making a great deal of money is an insignificant factor in driving technological innovation.

(C) Falling behind in the international arms race does not necessarily lead to a strategically less advantageous position.

(D) Those nations that lose influence in the world community do not necessarily suffer from a threat to their value system or way of life.E

(E) Allowing one’s country to lose its technological edge, especially as concerns weaponry, would be foolish rather than merely a historical accident.

18.   Philosopher: Scientists talk about the pursuit of truth, but like most people, they are self-interested. Accordingly, the professional activities of most scientists are directed toward personal career enhancement, and only incidentally toward the pursuit of truth. Hence, the activities of the scientific community are largely directed toward enhancing the status of that community as a whole, and only incidentally toward the pursuit of truth.

The reasoning in the philosopher’s argument is flawed because the argument

(A) improperly infers that each and every scientist has a certain characteristic from premise that most scientists have that characteristic

(B) improperly draws an inference about the scientific community as a whole from a premise about individual scientists

(C) presumes, without giving justification, that the aim of personal career enhancement never advances the pursuit of truth

(D) illicitly takes advantage of an ambiguity in the meaning of “self-interested”B

(E) improperly draws an inference about a cause from premises about its effects

19.   Several critics have claimed that any contemporary poet who writes formal poetry—poetry that is rhymed and metered—is performing a politically conservative act. This is plainly false. Consider Molly Peacock and Marilyn Hacker, two contemporary poets whose poetry is almost exclusively formal and yet who are themselves politically progressive feminists.

The conclusion drawn above follows logically if which one of the following is assumed?

(A) No one who is a feminist is also politically conservative.

(B) No poet who writes unrhymed or unmetered poetry is politically conservative.

(C) No one who is politically progressive is capable of performing a politically conservative act.

(D) Anyone who sometimes writes poetry that is not politically conservative never writes poetry that is politically conservative.C

(E) The content of a poet’s work, not the work’s form, is the most decisive factor in determining what political consequences, if any, the work will have.

20.   Archaeologist: A skeleton of a North American mastodon that became extinct at the peak of the Ice Age was recently discovered. It contains a human-made projectile dissimilar to any found in that part of Eurasia closest to North America. Thus, since Eurasians did not settle in North America until shortly before the peak of the Ice Age, the first Eurasian settlers in North America probably came from a more distant part of Eurasia.

Which one of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the archaeologist’s argument?

(A) The projectile found in the mastodon does not resemble any that were used in Eurasia before or during the Ice Age.

(B) The people who occupied the Eurasian area closest to North America remained nomadic throughout the Ice Age.

(C) The skeleton of a bear from the same place and time as the mastodon skeleton contains a similar projectile.

(D) Other North American artifacts from the peak of the Ice Age are similar to ones from the same time found in more distant parts of Eurasia.A

(E) Climatic conditions in North America just before the Ice Age were more conducive to human habitation than were those in the part of Eurasia closest to North America at that time.

21.   All social systems are based upon a division of economic roles. The values of a social system are embodied in the prestige accorded persons who fill various economic roles. It is therefore unsurprising that, for any social system, the introduction of labor-saving technology that makes certain economic roles obsolete will tend to undermine the values in that social system.

Which one of the following can most reasonably be concluded on the basis of the information above?

(A) Social systems will have unchanging values if they are shielded from technological advancement.

(B) No type of technology will fail to undermine the values in a social system.

(C) A social system whose values are not susceptible to change would not be one in which technology can eliminate economic roles.

(D) A technologically advanced society will place little value on the prestige associated with an economic role.C

(E) A technological innovation that is implemented in a social system foreign to the one in which it was developed will tend to undermine the foreign social system.

22.   Multiple sclerosis is an autoimmune disease: white blood cells attack the myelin sheath that protects nerve fibers in the spinal cord and brain. Medical science now has a drug that can be used to successfully treat multiple sclerosis, but the path that led medical researchers to this drug was hardly straightforward. Initially, some scientists believed attacks characteristic of multiple sclerosis might be triggered by chronic viral infections. So in 1984 they began testing gamma interferon, one of the body’s own antiviral weapons. To their horror, all the multiple sclerosis patients tested became dramatically worse. The false step proved to be instructive however.

Which of the following is LEAST compatible with the results of the gamma interferon experiment?

(A) Gamma interferon stops white blood cells from producing myelin-destroying compounds.

(B) Administering gamma interferon to those without multiple sclerosis causes an increase in the number of white blood cells.

(C) Medical researchers have discovered that the gamma interferon level in the cerebrospinal fluid skyrocket just before and during multiple sclerosis infections.

(D) It has now been established that most multiple sclerosis sufferers do not have chronic viral infections.A

(E) The drug now used to treat multiple sclerosis is known to inhibit the activity of gamma.

23.   The higher the altitude, the thinner the air. Since Mexico City’s altitude is higher than that of Panama City, the air must be thinner in Mexico City than in Panama City.

Which one of the following arguments is most similar in its reasoning to the argument above?

(A) As one gets older one gets wiser. Since Henrietta is older than her daughter, Henrietta must be wiser than her daughter.

(B) The more egg whites used and the longer they are beaten, the fluffier the meringue. Since Lydia used more egg whites in her meringue than Joseph used in his, Lydia’s meringue must be fluffier than Joseph’s.

(C) The people who run the fastest marathons these days are faster than the people who ran the fastest marathons ten years ago. Charles is a marathon runner. So Charles must run faster marathons these days than he did ten years ago.

(D) The older a tree, the more rings it has. The tree in Lou’s yard is older than the tree in Theresa’s yard. Therefore, the tree in Lou’s yard must have more rings than does the tree in Theresa’s yard.D

(E) The bigger the vocabulary a language has, the harder it is to learn. English is harder to learn than Italian. Therefore, English must have a bigger vocabulary than Italian.

24.   A recent study of 6,403 people showed that those treated with the drug pravastatin, one of the effects of which is to reduce cholesterol, had about one-third fewer nonfatal heart attacks and one-third fewer deaths from coronary disease than did those not taking the drug. This result is consistent with other studies, which show that those who have heart disease often have higher than average cholesterol levels. This shows that lowering cholesterol levels reduces the risk of heart disease.

The argument’s reasoning is flawed because the argument

(A) neglects the possibility that pravastatin may have severe side effects

(B) fails to consider that pravastatin may reduce the risk of heart disease but not as a consequence of its lowering cholesterol levels

(C) relies on past finding, rather than drawing its principal conclusion from the data found in the specific study cited

(D) draws a conclusion regarding the effects of lowering cholesterol levels on heart disease, when in fact the conclusion should focus on the relation between pravastatin and cholesterol levelsB

(E) fails to consider that percentage of the general population might be taking pravastatin

Questions 25-26

Zachary: The term “fresco” refers to paint that has been applied to wet plaster. Once dried, a fresco indelibly preserves the paint that a painter has applied in this way. Unfortunately, additions known to have been made by later painters have obscured the original fresco work done by Michelangelo in the Sistine Chapel. Therefore, in order to restore Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel paintings to the appearance that Michelangelo intended them to have, everything except the original fresco work must be stripped away.

Stephen: But it was extremely common for painters of Michelangelo’s era to add painted details to their own fresco work after the frescos had dried.

25.   Stephen’s response to Zachary proceeds by

(A) calling into question an assumption on which Zachary’s conclusion depends

(B) challenging the definition of a key term in Zachary reaches

(C) drawing a conclusion other than the one that Zachary reaches

(D) denying the truth of one of the stated premises of Zachary’s argumentA

(E) demonstrating that Zachary’s conclusion is not consistent with the premises he uses to support it

26.   Stephen’s response to Zachary, if true, most strongly supports which one of the following?

(A) It is impossible to distinguish the later painted additions made to Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel paintings from the original fresco work.

(B) Stripping away everything except Michelangelo’s original fresco work from the Sistine Chapel paintings would be unlikely to restore them to the appearance Michelangelo intended them to have.

(C) The painted details that painters of Michelangelo’s era added to their own fresco work were not an integral part of the completed paintings’ overall design.

(D) None of the painters of Michelangelo’s era who made additions to the Sistine Chapel paintings was important artist in his or her own right.B

(E) Michelangelo was rarely satisfied with the appearance of his finished works.

TEST 2001.10

SECTION I

1.        D

2.        D

3.        A

4.        C

5.        E

6.        B

7.        C

8.        E

9.        E

10.    B

11.    E

12.    B

13.    D

14.    D

15.    E

16.    C

17.    E

18.    B

19.    C

20.    A

21.    E

22.    B

23.    A

24.    C

25.    D

26.    B

27.     

28.     

29.     

30.     

SECTION IV

1.        B

2.        A

3.        B

4.        D

5.        D

6.        B

7.        C

8.        E

9.        D

10.    D

11.    B

12.    C

13.    D

14.    B

15.    E

16.    A

17.    E

18.    B

19.    C

20.    A

21.    C

22.    A

23.    D

24.    B

25.    A

26.    B

27.     

28.     

29.     

30.     





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