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
Identify the author's overall aim: decide whether the passage defends, modifies, attacks, or traces the prevailing view. Find the thesis sentences that state the revised account (linking virulence to mode of transmission) and note how the examples illustrate that modification.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage26.The primary purpose of the passage is to
Correct Answer
C
Correct. The passage's main purpose is to offer a modification to the prevailing view by proposing that a pathogen's virulence depends on its mode of transmission. Support: the passage contrasts the traditional idea that "host and parasite ultimately develop a benign coexistence," then reports that "Some biologists...recently have suggested that...even death-causing pathogens can achieve evolutionary success." It then states the central claim of the revision: "One implication of this perspective is that a pathogen's virulence...is a function of its mode of transmission." The rest of the passage develops and illustrates this modified account with examples (direct transmission vs. vector-borne transmission and 'sit and wait' pathogens).
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