Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Popper said science should try to disprove theories because one clear counterexample can show a theory is wrong, so positive examples don’t prove much. But in real experiments a failed prediction could be caused by many other assumptions or equipment problems, so a single failed test usually doesn’t prove the theory false. History shows both outcomes: the weird motion of Uranus was explained by finding Neptune (saving Newton’s laws), while Mercury’s odd orbit couldn’t be fixed that way and was later explained by Einstein, which replaced Newton’s account.
Logic Breakdown
Find the claim in Passage A (Popper's view about negative evidence/falsification) and then locate the historical episode in Passage B that exemplifies that claim (an observation leading to rejection of a theory).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage21.Which one of the following is mentioned in passage A and illustrated in passage B?
Correct Answer
C
Passage A emphasizes that negative evidence can serve as disproof (e.g., "a single black swan disproves the hypothesis" and Popper maintains that "negative evidence is tantamount to disproof"). Passage B provides a concrete example of a theory being rejected on the basis of observational evidence: calculations based on Einstein's theory "led to the rejection of Newton's theory of gravity and to increased confidence in Einstein's theory." These paired statements show that Passage A's idea of 'disproving a theory' is both mentioned in A and illustrated in B.
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