Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Companies and many university scientists support patents because patents help them get funding and make money. Other researchers worry that patents or contracts could block access to important research materials (like genes, cell lines, or modified animals) or make research too expensive, which might hurt basic science. The passage points out that even before patents some scientists kept materials private, and that a patent doesn’t automatically mean owners will stop noncommercial research—lawsuits are costly and courts often allow research exceptions. It also says patents can encourage more research by giving inventors money and control over how their discoveries are used.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the passage's discussion of enforcement against basic, noncommercial researchers. Relevant quoted sentences: "In reality, whether a patent could or would be enforced against a researcher, particularly one conducting basic and noncommercial research, is questionable." "First, patent litigation is an expensive endeavor and one usually initiated only to protect a market position occupied by the patent holder or an exclusive patent licensee." "Second, there has been a tradition among judges deciding patent cases to respect a completely noncommercial research exception to patent infringement."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage10.With which one of the following statements would the author be most likely to agree?
Correct Answer
C
Choice C restates the author's point that the high cost of patent litigation (and the judicial tradition of a noncommercial-research exception) makes enforcement against basic researchers unlikely, so litigation costs function as an effective check on patent holders who might otherwise try to block such research. Supported by the quoted sentences above.
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