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
Look for in Passage B an auxiliary/external factor introduced to explain a failed prediction (an unexpected influence on a planet's orbit) and match it to Passage A's description of a "disturbing force."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage22.In passage B, which one of the following most clearly illustrates a disturbing force , as described in the middle of the second paragraph of passage A?
Correct Answer
C
Passage A explains that predictions rely on auxiliary premises including the "absence of disturbing forces." Passage B describes astronomers revising the auxiliary assumption that "no planets existed in the vicinity of Uranus," concluding there "must be another planet close enough to Uranus to produce the observed orbit," and then that scientists "discovered the planet Neptune in the precise place it would have to be to bring their calculations into alignment with their observations." Neptune is the additional body whose gravitational influence explains the failed prediction, so it is the disturbing force.
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