Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
People used to think disease-causing germs would evolve to be harmless so their hosts would stay healthy, but scientists now say germs can still succeed if they make a host very sick as long as they still spread to enough new people. How a germ spreads matters: germs that need close contact (like the common cold) usually don’t make people too sick because sick people can’t spread them, germs carried by insects (like mosquitoes) can be much worse because the insect can pass them on even from a bedridden person, and some germs that survive a long time outside a body can also afford to be deadly. So, insect-carried germs and germs that last a long time outside hosts tend to be more dangerous than those that need direct contact.
Logic Breakdown
Find the biologists' claim in para. 1: they say that "even death-causing pathogens can achieve evolutionary success" if replication in an incapacitated host yields enough transmission to new hosts to offset losses. To weaken that claim, pick the option showing that transmission from incapacitated hosts does not produce successful propagation in new hosts. Key supporting quotes: "...if a pathogen reproduced so extensively as to cause its host to become gravely sick, it could still achieve evolutionary success if its replication led to a level of transmission into new hosts that exceeded the loss of pathogens resulting from the host's incapacitation." and "...it can still pass along its genes if a mosquito bites the host and transmits this dose to the next human it bites."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage23.Which one of the following, if true, would most seriously challenge the position of the biologists mentioned in the second-to-last sentence of the first paragraph?
Correct Answer
E
E says that most pathogens transmitted from incapacitated hosts are unable to reproduce in their new hosts. The biologists' position depends on transmission from an incapacitated host producing successful, reproducing infections in new hosts so that transmission outweighs losses. If transmitted pathogens typically cannot reproduce in new hosts, then transmission cannot produce net evolutionary success and the biologists' position is seriously undermined. (See: "...it could still achieve evolutionary success if its replication led to a level of transmission into new hosts that exceeded the loss...")
Upgrade Your Prep
Ready to go beyond free explanations?
LSAT Perfection is the #1 modern LSAT prep platform, trusted by thousands of students for comprehensive test strategies, advanced drilling, and full analytics on every PrepTest.
Detailed explanations for 59 PrepTests
Advanced drillset builder
Personalized analytics
Built-in Wrong Answer Journal