Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Although cooking makes food easier to eat and might seem unlikely to change our bodies, the passage argues that cooking has shaped human digestive evolution. Today people generally cannot survive on raw food in the wild because many raw plants are hard to digest and raw meat is tough. Archaeological evidence shows fire and simple ovens were used long enough to influence evolution, so cooking likely let humans get more calories more easily. That change in diet helps explain smaller teeth and jaws and different gut features, so scientists should test whether cooking rather than a raw-meat diet best explains human digestive anatomy.
Logic Breakdown
Find where the authors link cooking to anatomical change (especially tooth/jaw reduction) and to an inability to subsist on raw diets; pick the choice that restates that claim.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage21.The authors would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements?
Correct Answer
A
The authors argue that cooking made humans dependent on foods that are 'digestible and easily chewed' and that cooking led to reductions in tooth and jaw size, producing an inability to survive on raw-food diets. Supporting sentences: 'These points suggest that humans are so evolutionarily constrained to eating foods that are digestible and easily chewed that cooking is normally obligatory.'; 'The principal effect of cooking considered to date has been a reduction in tooth and jaw size over evolutionary time.'; 'Selection for such efficiency, we suggest, led to an inability to survive on raw-food diets in the wild.' Choice A closely paraphrases this position: small teeth and jaws limit routine use of raw food.
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