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 passage discussion of how expertise changes perception. Key sentence: "Greater expertise appears to change not only our knowledge of the area as a whole, but our very perception of entities in that area. It appears to us that we become able to see and to grasp these entities and their relations directly, whereas before we could only make inferences about them." Use this to match the answer that describes a changed way of understanding relations (D).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage12.According to the passage, one's gaining greater expertise in a field appears to result in
Correct Answer
D
The passage explicitly says expertise changes "our very perception of entities in that area" and makes us able to "see and to grasp these entities and their relations directly, whereas before we could only make inferences about them." This describes a substantively different way of understanding relations within the field, which is what D states.
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