Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Scientists often use math like a language to explain things, but people disagree about whether math (and language) actually matches the world or is just a useful set of agreed-upon tools. Many linguists now think language and math are conventions that are treated as true when they work well, so scientific formulas become accepted explanations because they predict and help, not because they literally mirror reality. The passage says linguists are asking what language can tell us if it doesn't inherently match life, and scientists should likewise ask what their models really do—yet that question hasn’t been widely explored.
Logic Breakdown
Scan the opening paragraph for the passage's definition of mathematics as a language; the key phrase 'a kind of language — a systematic contrivance of signs' directly points to the correct choice (B).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage24.According to the passage, mathematics can be considered a language because it
Correct Answer
B
The passage explicitly states, 'Some thinkers hold that mathematics is a kind of language — a systematic contrivance of signs, the criteria for the authority of which are internal coherence, elegance, and depth.' The phrase 'systematic contrivance of signs' is equivalent to a 'systematic collection of signs,' so choice B restates the passage's definition.
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