Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Art experts spend a lot of time judging paintings but mostly ignore perfume, even though making a great scent is similar to making a painting: both mix natural and synthetic materials, build layers, and change over time, and both can create strong memories or emotions. A talented perfumer can craft complex, moving experiences just like a painter or composer. Today, however, big companies often replace rare ingredients with cheaper chemicals and hide those changes, treating perfume like a mass-market product instead of serious art, which helps explain why smells are undervalued.
Logic Breakdown
For a 'most strongly supports' question, scan the last paragraph for explicit claims about corporate behavior and profit motives, then test each answer against those sentences. I personally check each choice against the paragraph (2–10 seconds per choice).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage7.The last paragraph most strongly supports which one of the following statements?
Correct Answer
B
The last paragraph reports that 'The cynical bean counters in Paris and Zurich do not hesitate to tamper with old formulas, insisting on the substitution of cheap chemical compounds ... in an effort to increase profits' and concludes that 'fine perfume is now hopelessly entangled with the international cosmetic dollar.' These statements show companies alter formulas to boost profits, which can reduce or obscure actual quality—so profitability is not a reliable indicator of quality.
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