Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Donna Haraway's Primate Visions is a feminist book that says science, especially studies of primates, is shaped by social ideas about gender, race, class, and colonialism. She argues that scientists are not the only ones who make knowledge; animals and many kinds of people together create what we call 'nature,' so there is no single true story but many partial, connected views. Her writing is deliberately broken into different voices and uses pop-culture sources like science fiction and film, which some readers may find odd, because she wants us to rethink what belongs in the study of science.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on Haraway's claim that primates 'seem so much like ourselves' and thus invite scientists' conscious and unconscious projections; pick the choice that says primate researchers are especially likely to interpret behavior through their own beliefs.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.The passage suggests that Haraway would most probably agree with which one of the following statements about scientists observing animal behavior in the field?
Correct Answer
D
The passage states that 'primates seem so much like ourselves that they provide ready material for scientists' conscious and unconscious projections of their beliefs about nature and culture.' That language directly supports the idea that scientists who study primates are especially likely to interpret primate behavior in terms of their own beliefs (more so than scientists studying less humanlike animals). Haraway's emphasis on projection and multiple, partial perspectives underlies choice D.
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