Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages ask whether animal sounds are really like human language. Passage A says humans use language to change what others know or want and often speak because they notice other minds; animal sounds (like frog calls, monkey alarm calls, and bee dances) can change others’ behavior but usually seem automatic, not made to inform or help others. Passage B says many scientists treat animal signals as rigid reactions and argue animals can’t lie because lying requires a conscious intention; some philosophers call animal signals reflexes. But critics say that view is circular—people assume animals lack intention and then use that to prove they are different—and new research suggests the difference between animal communication and human language may be smaller than once thought.
Logic Breakdown
Find a sentence in Passage A that says animal communicative acts are inadvertent or lack conscious intent; that sentence will support Maritain's claim.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage17.Which one of the following assertions from passage A provides support for the view attributed to Maritain in the final sentence of the second paragraph of passage B?
Correct Answer
D
Passage A states that "such communication is—in contrast to human language—inadvertent, because most animals, with the possible exception of chimpanzees, cannot attribute mental states to others," and specifically that "there is no evidence that he does so because he attributes knowledge or desire to other frogs, or because he knows his calls will affect their knowledge and that this knowledge will, in turn, affect their behavior." These lines directly support Maritain's claim that animals lack conscious intention regarding their use of communicative signs.
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