Library/PT 129/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Scientists and humanists often misunderstand each other: humanists sometimes think scientists only study cold physical facts and can’t explain values, while scientists sometimes think humanists are just emotional and not useful. These wrong ideas block teamwork, but since both fields try to understand people and the world, they can join together in a “scientific humanism” that uses careful, scientific methods while still respecting human values.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Read the phrase in context — it's part of scientists' caricature of humanists. Paraphrase 'vagrant fancies of an undisciplined mind' as whimsical, aimless, impractical thinking. Supporting quote: 'Some scientists ... claim that the humanist is interested in nothing more than emotion and sentiment, exhibiting the vagrant fancies of an undisciplined mind.'

Passage Stimulus

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12.

In using the phrase "vagrant fancies of an undisciplined mind" (first sentence of the third paragraph), the author suggests that humanists are sometimes considered to be

Correct Answer
B
The phrase pairs 'vagrant' (wandering/aimless) with 'fancies' (whimsical ideas) and labels the source an 'undisciplined mind,' which together portray humanists as holding fanciful, not well-grounded ideas. That characterization is best captured by 'excessively impractical.'
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