Library/PT 150/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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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

Look for the answer that matches the authors' cautious, evidence-limited stance: they propose that cooking may have driven anatomical changes but repeatedly hedge and call for further testing rather than claiming definitive proof.

Passage Stimulus

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23.

The authors would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements?

Correct Answer
E
The authors treat the cooking-adaptation idea as plausible but not conclusively proven. They note a key limitation—soft-tissue changes "are harder to reconstruct because they leave no fossil record"—and explicitly state that "Testing between the cooking and raw-meat models for understanding human digestive anatomy is therefore warranted." They also use hedged language when linking cooking to anatomical change (e.g., "Human tooth and jaw size show signs of decreasing approximately 100,000 years ago; we suggest that this was a consequence of eating cooked food"). Together these passages show the authors believe empirical evidence is not yet definitive, so they would agree with E.
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