Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Some philosophers say we should study the mind the scientific way, using outside, observable facts like brain and nerve studies; other philosophers insist that private, inner experiences (how things feel) are the real source of knowledge about the mind. Because each side starts from different basic assumptions, they can't really communicate or settle their disagreements—it's like arguing with people who trust different religious texts. To resolve this, we need to examine which way of knowing is trustworthy; in other words, studying knowledge itself (epistemology) might show whether science, introspection, or some other method best explains the mind.
Logic Breakdown
Identify the structural features of the fourth-paragraph analogy: each side relies on a different authoritative source (their sacred texts), conflicts can’t be resolved by appealing to those sources alone, and resolution requires investigating the authority of those sources. Choose the option that mirrors parties relying on different kinds of evidence/authority rather than merely conflicting interpretations of the same evidence.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage28.Which one of the following is most closely analogous to the debate described in the hypothetical example given by the author in the fourth paragraph?
Correct Answer
E
Relevant passage sentences: "The situation may be likened to a debate between adherents of different religions about the creation of the universe." "While each religion may be confident that its cosmology is firmly grounded in its respective sacred text, there is little hope that conflicts between their competing cosmologies could be resolved by recourse to the texts alone." "Only further investigation into the authority of the texts themselves would be sufficient." (Also relevant: "Starting from radically divergent perspectives, subjectivists and objectivists lack a common context in which to consider evidence presented from each other's perspectives.") These lines show the analogy’s structure: opposing parties rely on different authoritative sources and lack a shared standard for adjudication, so resolving the dispute requires examining which sources are authoritative. Option E — two historians drawing conflicting conclusions based on different types of historical data — matches that structure: each historian relies on a different kind of evidence (different authorities), and the disagreement is between evidentiary frameworks, not merely a dispute resolvable within a single shared method.
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