Library/PT 150/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

People usually think they know their own thoughts directly and without error, while they only guess at others' thoughts. But studies show young children can have the same thoughts as adults yet fail to describe them, so some psychologists say we also infer our own thoughts. They argue that thoughts are hidden and we learn about them from quick internal clues (like brief feelings) and from fast mental inferences; with practice these inferences become so automatic we forget we made them, which makes it feel as if we directly see our thoughts even though we are really inferring them.

Logic Breakdown

Locate the third paragraph where the author discusses the underlined claim; determine whether the author (and the psychologists he describes) endorse or reject that claim—choose the answer that reflects the author's rejection of the external-behavior-only account.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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10.

Based on the passage, the author is most likely to believe which one of the following about the view that "we base our inferences about what we ourselves are thinking solely on observations of our own external behavior" (first sentence of third paragraph)?

Correct Answer
E
The author treats the view as untenable. Support from the passage: "In claiming that we have only inferential access to our thoughts, the psychologists come perilously close to claiming that \"we base our inferences about what we ourselves are thinking solely on observations of our own external behavior.\" But, in fact, their arguments do not commit them to this claim; the psychologists suggest that we are somehow able to base our inferences about what we are thinking on internal cognitive activity that is not itself thought—e.g., fleeting and instantaneous sensations and emotions." These sentences show that the psychologists (and thus the author) do not accept the external-behavior-only account and instead appeal to internal cognitive cues, implying the external-only view is not intellectually defensible.
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