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Question ID:PT31 S3 Q17 Passage:Selena: Asteroid impact on the Earth caused the extinction of the dinosaurs by raising vast clouds of dust, thus blocking the Sun's rays and cooling the planet beyond the capacity of the dinosaurs, or perhaps the vegetation that supported them, to adapt. A worldwide dust layer provides ... | PT31 S3 Q17 |
Question ID:PT31 S3 Q18 Passage:It is impossible to do science without measuring. It is impossible to measure without having first selected units of measurement. Hence, science is arbitrary, since the selection of a unit of measurement‚ kilometer, mile, fathom, etc.‚ is always arbitrary. Stem:The pattern of reasoning i... | PT31 S3 Q18 |
Question ID:PT31 S3 Q19 Passage:Professor Beckstein: American Sign Language is the native language of many North Americans. Therefore, it is not a foreign language, and for that reason alone, no student should be permitted to satisfy the university's foreign language requirement by learning it.Professor Sedley: Accor... | PT31 S3 Q19 |
Question ID:PT31 S3 Q20 Passage:Professor Beckstein: American Sign Language is the native language of many North Americans. Therefore, it is not a foreign language, and for that reason alone, no student should be permitted to satisfy the university's foreign language requirement by learning it.Professor Sedley: Accor... | PT31 S3 Q20 |
Question ID:PT31 S3 Q21 Passage:So-called "engineered foods," usually in powder or liquid form, consist of protein that is distilled from natural sources and supplemented with vitamins and minerals. Although the amino acids contained in such products stimulate the production of growth hormones, these hormones produce g... | PT31 S3 Q21 |
Question ID:PT31 S3 Q22 Passage:Some types of organisms originated through endosymbiosis, the engulfing of one organism by another so that a part of the former becomes a functioning part of the latter. An unusual nucleomorph, a structure that contains DNA and resembles a cell nucleus, has been discovered within a plant... | PT31 S3 Q22 |
Question ID:PT31 S3 Q23 Passage:Reviewer: Although finalism‚ the view that there are purposes in nature‚ has been universally rejected, this book launches another attack on that view. Its arguments are based on a complete misunderstanding of the operation of pure chance in nature and so it fails as a critique of final... | PT31 S3 Q23 |
Question ID:PT31 S3 Q24 Passage:Appliance dealer: Appliance manufacturers commonly modify existing models without giving the modified versions new model names. Some people have complained that this practice makes it impossible for consumers to be certain that the appliance they are about to purchase is identical to t... | PT31 S3 Q24 |
Question ID:PT31 S3 Q25 Passage:In our solar system only one of the nine planets‚ Earth‚ qualifies as fit to sustain life. Nonetheless, using this ratio, and considering the astonishingly large number of planetary systems in the universe, we must conclude that the number of planets fit to sustain some form of life is e... | PT31 S3 Q25 |
Question ID:PT31 S3 Q26 Passage:Sociologist: Suggestions for improved efficiency that derive from employers are unlikely to elicit positive responses from employees, who tend to resent suggestions they did not generate. An employer should therefore engage the employee in a nonthreatening dialogue that emphasizes the p... | PT31 S3 Q26 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q1 Passage:By the year 2030, the Earth's population is expected to increase to 10 billion; ideally, all would enjoy standards of living equivalent to those of present-day industrial democracies. However, if 10 billion people consume critical natural resources such as copper, nickel, and petroleum at... | PT31 S4 Q1 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q2 Passage:By the year 2030, the Earth's population is expected to increase to 10 billion; ideally, all would enjoy standards of living equivalent to those of present-day industrial democracies. However, if 10 billion people consume critical natural resources such as copper, nickel, and petroleum at... | PT31 S4 Q2 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q3 Passage:By the year 2030, the Earth's population is expected to increase to 10 billion; ideally, all would enjoy standards of living equivalent to those of present-day industrial democracies. However, if 10 billion people consume critical natural resources such as copper, nickel, and petroleum at... | PT31 S4 Q3 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q4 Passage:By the year 2030, the Earth's population is expected to increase to 10 billion; ideally, all would enjoy standards of living equivalent to those of present-day industrial democracies. However, if 10 billion people consume critical natural resources such as copper, nickel, and petroleum at... | PT31 S4 Q4 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q5 Passage:By the year 2030, the Earth's population is expected to increase to 10 billion; ideally, all would enjoy standards of living equivalent to those of present-day industrial democracies. However, if 10 billion people consume critical natural resources such as copper, nickel, and petroleum at... | PT31 S4 Q5 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q6 Passage:Thurgood Marshall's litigation of Brown v. Board of Education in 1952‚ the landmark case, decided in 1954, that made segregation illegal in United States public schools‚ was not his first case before the U.S. Supreme Court. Some legal scholars claim that the cases he presented to the cour... | PT31 S4 Q6 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q7 Passage:Thurgood Marshall's litigation of Brown v. Board of Education in 1952‚ the landmark case, decided in 1954, that made segregation illegal in United States public schools‚ was not his first case before the U.S. Supreme Court. Some legal scholars claim that the cases he presented to the cour... | PT31 S4 Q7 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q8 Passage:Thurgood Marshall's litigation of Brown v. Board of Education in 1952‚ the landmark case, decided in 1954, that made segregation illegal in United States public schools‚ was not his first case before the U.S. Supreme Court. Some legal scholars claim that the cases he presented to the cour... | PT31 S4 Q8 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q9 Passage:Thurgood Marshall's litigation of Brown v. Board of Education in 1952‚ the landmark case, decided in 1954, that made segregation illegal in United States public schools‚ was not his first case before the U.S. Supreme Court. Some legal scholars claim that the cases he presented to the cour... | PT31 S4 Q9 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q10 Passage:Thurgood Marshall's litigation of Brown v. Board of Education in 1952‚ the landmark case, decided in 1954, that made segregation illegal in United States public schools‚ was not his first case before the U.S. Supreme Court. Some legal scholars claim that the cases he presented to the cou... | PT31 S4 Q10 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q11 Passage:Thurgood Marshall's litigation of Brown v. Board of Education in 1952‚ the landmark case, decided in 1954, that made segregation illegal in United States public schools‚ was not his first case before the U.S. Supreme Court. Some legal scholars claim that the cases he presented to the cou... | PT31 S4 Q11 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q12 Passage:Thurgood Marshall's litigation of Brown v. Board of Education in 1952‚ the landmark case, decided in 1954, that made segregation illegal in United States public schools‚ was not his first case before the U.S. Supreme Court. Some legal scholars claim that the cases he presented to the cou... | PT31 S4 Q12 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q13 Passage:Donna Haraway's Primate Visions is the most ambitious book on the history of science yet written from a feminist perspective, embracing not only the scientific construction of gender but also the interplay of race, class, and colonial and postcolonial culture with the "Western" construct... | PT31 S4 Q13 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q14 Passage:Donna Haraway's Primate Visions is the most ambitious book on the history of science yet written from a feminist perspective, embracing not only the scientific construction of gender but also the interplay of race, class, and colonial and postcolonial culture with the "Western" construct... | PT31 S4 Q14 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q15 Passage:Donna Haraway's Primate Visions is the most ambitious book on the history of science yet written from a feminist perspective, embracing not only the scientific construction of gender but also the interplay of race, class, and colonial and postcolonial culture with the "Western" construct... | PT31 S4 Q15 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q16 Passage:Donna Haraway's Primate Visions is the most ambitious book on the history of science yet written from a feminist perspective, embracing not only the scientific construction of gender but also the interplay of race, class, and colonial and postcolonial culture with the "Western" construct... | PT31 S4 Q16 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q17 Passage:Donna Haraway's Primate Visions is the most ambitious book on the history of science yet written from a feminist perspective, embracing not only the scientific construction of gender but also the interplay of race, class, and colonial and postcolonial culture with the "Western" construct... | PT31 S4 Q17 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q18 Passage:Donna Haraway's Primate Visions is the most ambitious book on the history of science yet written from a feminist perspective, embracing not only the scientific construction of gender but also the interplay of race, class, and colonial and postcolonial culture with the "Western" construct... | PT31 S4 Q18 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q19 Passage:Donna Haraway's Primate Visions is the most ambitious book on the history of science yet written from a feminist perspective, embracing not only the scientific construction of gender but also the interplay of race, class, and colonial and postcolonial culture with the "Western" construct... | PT31 S4 Q19 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q20 Passage:Donna Haraway's Primate Visions is the most ambitious book on the history of science yet written from a feminist perspective, embracing not only the scientific construction of gender but also the interplay of race, class, and colonial and postcolonial culture with the "Western" construct... | PT31 S4 Q20 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q21 Passage:Some philosophers find the traditional, subjective approach to studying the mind outdated and ineffectual. For them, the attempt to describe the sensation of pain or anger, for example, or the awareness that one is aware, has been surpassed by advances in fields such as psychology, neuro... | PT31 S4 Q21 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q22 Passage:Some philosophers find the traditional, subjective approach to studying the mind outdated and ineffectual. For them, the attempt to describe the sensation of pain or anger, for example, or the awareness that one is aware, has been surpassed by advances in fields such as psychology, neuro... | PT31 S4 Q22 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q23 Passage:Some philosophers find the traditional, subjective approach to studying the mind outdated and ineffectual. For them, the attempt to describe the sensation of pain or anger, for example, or the awareness that one is aware, has been surpassed by advances in fields such as psychology, neuro... | PT31 S4 Q23 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q24 Passage:Some philosophers find the traditional, subjective approach to studying the mind outdated and ineffectual. For them, the attempt to describe the sensation of pain or anger, for example, or the awareness that one is aware, has been surpassed by advances in fields such as psychology, neuro... | PT31 S4 Q24 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q25 Passage:Some philosophers find the traditional, subjective approach to studying the mind outdated and ineffectual. For them, the attempt to describe the sensation of pain or anger, for example, or the awareness that one is aware, has been surpassed by advances in fields such as psychology, neuro... | PT31 S4 Q25 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q26 Passage:Some philosophers find the traditional, subjective approach to studying the mind outdated and ineffectual. For them, the attempt to describe the sensation of pain or anger, for example, or the awareness that one is aware, has been surpassed by advances in fields such as psychology, neuro... | PT31 S4 Q26 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q27 Passage:Some philosophers find the traditional, subjective approach to studying the mind outdated and ineffectual. For them, the attempt to describe the sensation of pain or anger, for example, or the awareness that one is aware, has been surpassed by advances in fields such as psychology, neuro... | PT31 S4 Q27 |
Question ID:PT31 S4 Q28 Passage:Some philosophers find the traditional, subjective approach to studying the mind outdated and ineffectual. For them, the attempt to describe the sensation of pain or anger, for example, or the awareness that one is aware, has been surpassed by advances in fields such as psychology, neuro... | PT31 S4 Q28 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q1 Passage:This morning, a bakery makes exactly one delivery, consisting of exactly six loaves of bread. Each of the loaves is exactly one of three kinds: oatmeal, rye, or wheat, and each is either sliced or unsliced. The loaves that the bakery delivers this morning must be consistent with the follo... | PT30 S1 Q1 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q2 Passage:This morning, a bakery makes exactly one delivery, consisting of exactly six loaves of bread. Each of the loaves is exactly one of three kinds: oatmeal, rye, or wheat, and each is either sliced or unsliced. The loaves that the bakery delivers this morning must be consistent with the follo... | PT30 S1 Q2 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q3 Passage:This morning, a bakery makes exactly one delivery, consisting of exactly six loaves of bread. Each of the loaves is exactly one of three kinds: oatmeal, rye, or wheat, and each is either sliced or unsliced. The loaves that the bakery delivers this morning must be consistent with the follo... | PT30 S1 Q3 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q4 Passage:This morning, a bakery makes exactly one delivery, consisting of exactly six loaves of bread. Each of the loaves is exactly one of three kinds: oatmeal, rye, or wheat, and each is either sliced or unsliced. The loaves that the bakery delivers this morning must be consistent with the follo... | PT30 S1 Q4 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q5 Passage:This morning, a bakery makes exactly one delivery, consisting of exactly six loaves of bread. Each of the loaves is exactly one of three kinds: oatmeal, rye, or wheat, and each is either sliced or unsliced. The loaves that the bakery delivers this morning must be consistent with the follo... | PT30 S1 Q5 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q6 Passage:The six messages on an answering machine were each left by one of Fleure, Greta, Hildy, Liam, Pasquale, or Theodore, consistent with the following:At most one person left more than one message.No person left more than three messages.If the first message is Hildy's, the last is Pasquale's.... | PT30 S1 Q6 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q7 Passage:The six messages on an answering machine were each left by one of Fleure, Greta, Hildy, Liam, Pasquale, or Theodore, consistent with the following:At most one person left more than one message.No person left more than three messages.If the first message is Hildy's, the last is Pasquale's.... | PT30 S1 Q7 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q8 Passage:The six messages on an answering machine were each left by one of Fleure, Greta, Hildy, Liam, Pasquale, or Theodore, consistent with the following:At most one person left more than one message.No person left more than three messages.If the first message is Hildy's, the last is Pasquale's.... | PT30 S1 Q8 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q9 Passage:The six messages on an answering machine were each left by one of Fleure, Greta, Hildy, Liam, Pasquale, or Theodore, consistent with the following:At most one person left more than one message.No person left more than three messages.If the first message is Hildy's, the last is Pasquale's.... | PT30 S1 Q9 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q10 Passage:The six messages on an answering machine were each left by one of Fleure, Greta, Hildy, Liam, Pasquale, or Theodore, consistent with the following:At most one person left more than one message.No person left more than three messages.If the first message is Hildy's, the last is Pasquale's... | PT30 S1 Q10 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q11 Passage:Exactly five cars‚ Frank's, Marquitta's, Orlando's, Taishah's, and Vinquetta's‚ are washed, each exactly once. The cars are washed one at a time, with each receiving exactly one kind of wash: regular, super, or premium. The following conditions must apply:The first car washed does not re... | PT30 S1 Q11 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q12 Passage:Exactly five cars‚ Frank's, Marquitta's, Orlando's, Taishah's, and Vinquetta's‚ are washed, each exactly once. The cars are washed one at a time, with each receiving exactly one kind of wash: regular, super, or premium. The following conditions must apply:The first car washed does not re... | PT30 S1 Q12 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q13 Passage:Exactly five cars‚ Frank's, Marquitta's, Orlando's, Taishah's, and Vinquetta's‚ are washed, each exactly once. The cars are washed one at a time, with each receiving exactly one kind of wash: regular, super, or premium. The following conditions must apply:The first car washed does not re... | PT30 S1 Q13 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q14 Passage:Exactly five cars‚ Frank's, Marquitta's, Orlando's, Taishah's, and Vinquetta's‚ are washed, each exactly once. The cars are washed one at a time, with each receiving exactly one kind of wash: regular, super, or premium. The following conditions must apply:The first car washed does not re... | PT30 S1 Q14 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q15 Passage:Exactly five cars‚ Frank's, Marquitta's, Orlando's, Taishah's, and Vinquetta's‚ are washed, each exactly once. The cars are washed one at a time, with each receiving exactly one kind of wash: regular, super, or premium. The following conditions must apply:The first car washed does not re... | PT30 S1 Q15 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q16 Passage:Exactly five cars‚ Frank's, Marquitta's, Orlando's, Taishah's, and Vinquetta's‚ are washed, each exactly once. The cars are washed one at a time, with each receiving exactly one kind of wash: regular, super, or premium. The following conditions must apply:The first car washed does not re... | PT30 S1 Q16 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q17 Passage:Exactly seven toy-truck models‚ F, G, H, J, K, M, and S‚ are assembled on seven assembly lines, exactly one model to a line. The seven lines are arranged side by side and numbered consecutively 1 through 7. Assignment of models to lines must meet the following conditions:F is assembled o... | PT30 S1 Q17 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q18 Passage:Exactly seven toy-truck models‚ F, G, H, J, K, M, and S‚ are assembled on seven assembly lines, exactly one model to a line. The seven lines are arranged side by side and numbered consecutively 1 through 7. Assignment of models to lines must meet the following conditions:F is assembled o... | PT30 S1 Q18 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q19 Passage:Exactly seven toy-truck models‚ F, G, H, J, K, M, and S‚ are assembled on seven assembly lines, exactly one model to a line. The seven lines are arranged side by side and numbered consecutively 1 through 7. Assignment of models to lines must meet the following conditions:F is assembled o... | PT30 S1 Q19 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q20 Passage:Exactly seven toy-truck models‚ F, G, H, J, K, M, and S‚ are assembled on seven assembly lines, exactly one model to a line. The seven lines are arranged side by side and numbered consecutively 1 through 7. Assignment of models to lines must meet the following conditions:F is assembled o... | PT30 S1 Q20 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q21 Passage:Exactly seven toy-truck models‚ F, G, H, J, K, M, and S‚ are assembled on seven assembly lines, exactly one model to a line. The seven lines are arranged side by side and numbered consecutively 1 through 7. Assignment of models to lines must meet the following conditions:F is assembled o... | PT30 S1 Q21 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q22 Passage:Exactly seven toy-truck models‚ F, G, H, J, K, M, and S‚ are assembled on seven assembly lines, exactly one model to a line. The seven lines are arranged side by side and numbered consecutively 1 through 7. Assignment of models to lines must meet the following conditions:F is assembled o... | PT30 S1 Q22 |
Question ID:PT30 S1 Q23 Passage:Exactly seven toy-truck models‚ F, G, H, J, K, M, and S‚ are assembled on seven assembly lines, exactly one model to a line. The seven lines are arranged side by side and numbered consecutively 1 through 7. Assignment of models to lines must meet the following conditions:F is assembled o... | PT30 S1 Q23 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q1 Passage:More and more computer programs that provide solutions to mathematical problems in engineering are being produced, and it is thus increasingly unnecessary for practicing engineers to have a thorough understanding of fundamental mathematical principles. Consequently, in training engineers ... | PT30 S2 Q1 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q2 Passage:Raymond Burr played the role of lawyer Perry Mason on television. Burr's death in 1993 prompted a prominent lawyer to say "Although not a lawyer, Mr. Burr strove for such authenticity that we feel as if we lost one of our own." This comment from a prestigious attorney provides appalling e... | PT30 S2 Q2 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q3 Passage:Opponents of peat harvesting in this country argue that it would alter the ecological balance of our peat-rich wetlands and that, as a direct consequence of this, much of the country's water supply would be threatened with contamination. But this cannot be true, for in Ireland, where peat... | PT30 S2 Q3 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q4 Passage:For next year, the Chefs' Union has requested a 10 percent salary increase for each of its members, whereas the Hotel Managers' Union has requested only an 8 percent salary increase for each of its members. These facts demonstrate that the average dollar amount of the raises that the Chef... | PT30 S2 Q4 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q5 Passage:Parent: I had tried without success to get my young child to brush her teeth. I had hoped that she would imitate me, or that she would be persuaded by reason to brush her teeth. Then, I made a point of brushing her teeth for her immediately before reading her a story before her naps and a... | PT30 S2 Q5 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q6 Passage:The student body at this university takes courses in a wide range of disciplines. Miriam is a student at this university, so she takes courses in a wide range of disciplines. Stem:Which one of the following arguments exhibits flawed reasoning most similar to that exhibited by the argument... | PT30 S2 Q6 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q7 Passage:Opponent of offshore oil drilling: The projected benefits of drilling new oil wells in certain areas in the outer continental shelf are not worth the risk of environmental disaster. The oil already being extracted from these areas currently provides only 4 percent of our country's daily o... | PT30 S2 Q7 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q8 Passage:Opponent of offshore oil drilling: The projected benefits of drilling new oil wells in certain areas in the outer continental shelf are not worth the risk of environmental disaster. The oil already being extracted from these areas currently provides only 4 percent of our country's daily o... | PT30 S2 Q8 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q9 Passage:A running track with a hard surface makes for greater running speed than a soft one, at least under dry conditions, because even though step length is shorter on a hard surface, the time the runner's foot remains in contact with the running surface is less with a hard surface. Stem:Which ... | PT30 S2 Q9 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q10 Passage:Goswami: I support the striking workers at Ergon Foods. They are underpaid. The majority of them make less than $20,000 per year. Nordecki: If pay is the issue, I must disagree. The average annual salary of the striking workers at Ergon Foods is over $29,000. Stem:Goswami and Nordecki di... | PT30 S2 Q10 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q11 Passage:Teacher to a student: You agree that it is bad to break promises. But when we speak to each other we all make an implicit promise to tell the truth, and lying is the breaking of that promise. So even if you promised Jeanne that you would tell me she is home sick, you should not tell me t... | PT30 S2 Q11 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q12 Passage:Despite the fact that antilock brakes are designed to make driving safer, research suggests that people who drive cars equipped with antilock brakes have more accidents than those who drive cars not equipped with antilock brakes. Stem:Each of the following, if true, would help resolve th... | PT30 S2 Q12 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q13 Passage:President of the Regional Chamber of Commerce: We are all aware of the painful fact that almost no new businesses have moved into our region or started up here over the last ten years. But the Planning Board is obviously guilty of a gross exaggeration in its recent estimate that business... | PT30 S2 Q13 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q14 Passage:It is inaccurate to say that a diet high in refined sugar cannot cause adult-onset diabetes, since a diet high in refined sugar can make a person overweight, and being overweight can predispose a person to adult-onset diabetes. Stem:The argument is most parallel, in its logical structure... | PT30 S2 Q14 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q15 Passage:During the recent economic downturn, banks contributed to the decline by loaning less money. Prior to the downturn, regulatory standards for loanmaking by banks were tightened. Clearly, therefore, banks will lend more money if those standards are relaxed. Stem:The argument assumes that C... | PT30 S2 Q15 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q16 Passage:Zoos have served both as educational resources and as entertainment. Unfortunately, removing animals from their natural habitats to stock the earliest zoos reduced certain species' populations, endangering their survival. Today most new zoo animals are obtained from captive breeding prog... | PT30 S2 Q16 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q17 Passage:Only a very small percentage of people from the service professions ever become board members of the 600 largest North American corporations. This shows that people from the service professions are underrepresented in the most important corporate boardrooms in North America. Stem:Which o... | PT30 S2 Q17 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q18 Passage:If there are any inspired musical performances in the concert, the audience will be treated to a good show. But there will not be a good show unless there are sophisticated listeners in the audience, and to be a sophisticated listener one must understand one's musical roots. Stem:If all ... | PT30 S2 Q18 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q19 Passage:Columnist: A recent study suggests that living with a parrot increases one's risk of lung cancer. But no one thinks the government should impose financial impediments on the owning of parrots because of this apparent danger. So by the same token, the government should not levy analogous ... | PT30 S2 Q19 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q20 Passage:Scientist: Some critics of public funding for this research project have maintained that only if it can be indicated how the public will benefit from the project is continued public funding for it justified. If the critics were right about this, then there would not be the tremendous pub... | PT30 S2 Q20 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q21 Passage:The new agriculture bill will almost surely fail to pass. The leaders of all major parties have stated that they oppose it. Stem:Which one of the following, if true, adds the most support for the prediction that the agriculture bill will fail to pass? Correct Answer Choice:AChoice A:Most... | PT30 S2 Q21 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q22 Passage:The folktale that claims that a rattlesnake's age can be determined from the number of sections in its rattle is false, but only because the rattles are brittle and sometimes partially or completely break off. So if they were not so brittle, one could reliably determine a rattlesnake's a... | PT30 S2 Q22 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q23 Passage:Tony: A new kind of videocassette has just been developed. It lasts for only half as many viewings as the old kind does but costs a third as much. Therefore, video rental stores would find it significantly more economical to purchase and stock movies recorded on the new kind of videocass... | PT30 S2 Q23 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q24 Passage:Tony: A new kind of videocassette has just been developed. It lasts for only half as many viewings as the old kind does but costs a third as much. Therefore, video rental stores would find it significantly more economical to purchase and stock movies recorded on the new kind of videocass... | PT30 S2 Q24 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q25 Passage:Physician: Heart disease generally affects men at an earlier age than it does women, who tend to experience heart disease after menopause. Both sexes have the hormones estrogen and testosterone, but when they are relatively young, men have ten times as much testosterone as women, and wom... | PT30 S2 Q25 |
Question ID:PT30 S2 Q26 Passage:People ought to take into account a discipline's blemished origins when assessing the scientific value of that discipline. Take, for example, chemistry. It must be considered that many of its landmark results were obtained by alchemists‚ a group whose superstitions and appeals to magic d... | PT30 S2 Q26 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q1 Passage:The okapi, a forest mammal of central Africa, has presented zoologists with a number of difficult questions since they first learned of its existence in 1900. The first was how to classify it. Because it was horselike in dimension, and bore patches of striped hide similar to a zebra's (a ... | PT30 S3 Q1 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q2 Passage:The okapi, a forest mammal of central Africa, has presented zoologists with a number of difficult questions since they first learned of its existence in 1900. The first was how to classify it. Because it was horselike in dimension, and bore patches of striped hide similar to a zebra's (a ... | PT30 S3 Q2 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q3 Passage:The okapi, a forest mammal of central Africa, has presented zoologists with a number of difficult questions since they first learned of its existence in 1900. The first was how to classify it. Because it was horselike in dimension, and bore patches of striped hide similar to a zebra's (a ... | PT30 S3 Q3 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q4 Passage:The okapi, a forest mammal of central Africa, has presented zoologists with a number of difficult questions since they first learned of its existence in 1900. The first was how to classify it. Because it was horselike in dimension, and bore patches of striped hide similar to a zebra's (a ... | PT30 S3 Q4 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q5 Passage:The okapi, a forest mammal of central Africa, has presented zoologists with a number of difficult questions since they first learned of its existence in 1900. The first was how to classify it. Because it was horselike in dimension, and bore patches of striped hide similar to a zebra's (a ... | PT30 S3 Q5 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q6 Passage:The okapi, a forest mammal of central Africa, has presented zoologists with a number of difficult questions since they first learned of its existence in 1900. The first was how to classify it. Because it was horselike in dimension, and bore patches of striped hide similar to a zebra's (a ... | PT30 S3 Q6 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q7 Passage:Tragic dramas written in Greece during the fifth century B.C. engender considerable scholarly debate over the relative influence of individual autonomy and the power of the gods on the drama's action. One early scholar, B. Snell, argues that Aeschylus, for example, develops in his tragedi... | PT30 S3 Q7 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q8 Passage:Tragic dramas written in Greece during the fifth century B.C. engender considerable scholarly debate over the relative influence of individual autonomy and the power of the gods on the drama's action. One early scholar, B. Snell, argues that Aeschylus, for example, develops in his tragedi... | PT30 S3 Q8 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q9 Passage:Tragic dramas written in Greece during the fifth century B.C. engender considerable scholarly debate over the relative influence of individual autonomy and the power of the gods on the drama's action. One early scholar, B. Snell, argues that Aeschylus, for example, develops in his tragedi... | PT30 S3 Q9 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q10 Passage:Tragic dramas written in Greece during the fifth century B.C. engender considerable scholarly debate over the relative influence of individual autonomy and the power of the gods on the drama's action. One early scholar, B. Snell, argues that Aeschylus, for example, develops in his traged... | PT30 S3 Q10 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q11 Passage:Tragic dramas written in Greece during the fifth century B.C. engender considerable scholarly debate over the relative influence of individual autonomy and the power of the gods on the drama's action. One early scholar, B. Snell, argues that Aeschylus, for example, develops in his traged... | PT30 S3 Q11 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q12 Passage:Tragic dramas written in Greece during the fifth century B.C. engender considerable scholarly debate over the relative influence of individual autonomy and the power of the gods on the drama's action. One early scholar, B. Snell, argues that Aeschylus, for example, develops in his traged... | PT30 S3 Q12 |
Question ID:PT30 S3 Q13 Passage:Tragic dramas written in Greece during the fifth century B.C. engender considerable scholarly debate over the relative influence of individual autonomy and the power of the gods on the drama's action. One early scholar, B. Snell, argues that Aeschylus, for example, develops in his traged... | PT30 S3 Q13 |
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