Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Isamu Noguchi was a very original sculptor who thought like a scientist and didn’t follow normal art rules. Early on he worked for Brancusi and noticed that most sculpture used shadows because shiny, non-rusting metals were not available; later, after meeting Buckminster Fuller, he used a new chrome-nickel steel to make sculptures that behaved like perfectly still water—almost invisible until they showed reflections and distorted images of their surroundings. This new idea brought him recognition and he continued to explore new directions.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the phrase 'nonoxidizing' — the author is contrasting gold's ability to retain positive-light reflections with other metals that oxidize and thus lose their reflectivity over time.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.In saying that "no metals, other than the expensive, nonoxidizing gold, could be relied upon to give off positive-light reflections " (last sentence of the second paragraph), the author draws a distinction between
Correct Answer
C
'no metals, other than the expensive, nonoxidizing gold, could be relied upon to give off positive-light reflections.' The passage contrasts metals that lose their reflective property (because they oxidize) with gold, which is nonoxidizing and therefore does not similarly lose reflectivity over time. Option C accurately restates that distinction.
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