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
Compare the passages' tones: locate evaluative language in Passage B that criticizes other writers' methods and contrast that with Passage A's descriptive, empirical reporting.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.Passage B differs from passage A in that passage B is more
Correct Answer
B
Passage B adopts a critical stance toward other writers' approaches: 'But these arguments are circular: conscious intention is ruled out a priori and then its absence taken as evidence that animal communication is fundamentally different from human language.' It further says recent research 'calls into question' the assumptions underlying those positions. By contrast, Passage A largely reports empirical observations without explicitly attacking other scholars' methods (e.g., 'The male Physalaemus frog calls because calling causes females to approach and other males to retreat, but there is no evidence that he does so because he attributes knowledge or desire to other frogs.'). These quotations show Passage B is disapproving of others' approaches, while Passage A is more descriptive.
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