Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Anthropologists debate why the Aurignacians painted detailed images in caves 25,000 years ago. Some say the high skill shows they had enough food and time for specialist artists. But because the paintings are deep in dark caves, they were likely not made just to be admired; many experts think they were part of hunting rituals or magic to help control animals, as suggested by red-outlined hearts, arrow-like lines, pregnant animals, dancer footprints, and shaman-like figures.
Logic Breakdown
Ask why the author mentions the paintings' being hard to reach and unlit: the detail is used to argue against an aesthetic/display purpose and to introduce an alternative (practical/magical hunting) explanation.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage4.The author mentions the relative inaccessibility of the Aurignacian cave paintings primarily to
Correct Answer
B
Passage support: 'the paintings were usually placed in areas accessible only with extreme effort and completely unilluminated by natural light. This makes it unlikely that these representational cave paintings arose simply out of a love of beauty or pride in artistry—had aesthetic enjoyment been the sole purpose of the paintings, they would presumably have been located where they could have been easily seen and appreciated.' The author then presents the alternative: 'many anthropologists hypothesize that the paintings were also intended to provide a means of ensuring a steady supply of food.' Therefore the inaccessibility detail is cited primarily to undercut the idea that the paintings were made for aesthetic display and to lay the groundwork for the fuller practical/magical explanation about hunting, which corresponds to choice B.
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