Library/PT 111/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Many philosophers like physics because it finds clear, universal laws that work everywhere, and they view biology as messy because it depends on particular historical events. Some biologists try to make evolution lawlike (for example, claiming a universal “struggle for existence” or a steady DNA “clock”), but other biologists argue that chance and history shape life so outcomes aren’t guaranteed. The main debate in evolutionary theory is whether biology is governed by unavoidable laws or by historical accidents.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Identify the author's central claim about whether biological phenomena are governed by universal laws by locating (1) the passage's statement that science is associated with universal, repeatable laws and (2) the passages noting that some biologists try to find universal laws while others question that project. Key supporting sentences: "Science is supposed to be the study of what is true everywhere and for all times, and the phenomena of science are supposed to be repeatable, arising from universal laws, rather than historically contingent."; "Some evolutionary biologists... tried to emulate physicists, constructing their science as a set of universal laws."; "Recently, however, some biologists have questioned whether biological history is really the necessary unfolding of universal laws of life, and they have raised the possibility that historical contingency is an integral factor in biology."

Passage Stimulus

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15.

Which one of the following best summarizes the main idea of the passage?

Correct Answer
B
Choice B accurately summarizes the passage's main idea: the author explains that science is often conceived as the study of universal, repeatable laws and that some evolutionary biologists have tried to formulate such universal laws in biology (e.g., the "struggle for existence" or a clocklike DNA rate), but that more recently other biologists have questioned whether biological history necessarily unfolds from such laws and have emphasized historical contingency. Support: "Science is supposed to be the study of what is true everywhere and for all times... arising from universal laws..."; "Some evolutionary biologists... tried to emulate physicists, constructing their science as a set of universal laws."; "Recently, however, some biologists have questioned whether biological history is really the necessary unfolding of universal laws of life..." The passage frames an explicit debate between deterministic (universal-law) and nondeterminist (historical-contingency) views, which B captures concisely.
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