Library/PT 155/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Both passages ask whether language controls thought. Passage A says Whorf was wrong to claim language stops certain thoughts; instead language mainly pushes speakers to notice some things (for example, grammatical gender makes Germans and Spanish speakers describe the same objects in different ways). Passage B shows people without number words have a rough, nonverbal sense of quantity but not a clear idea of exact equality, so learning number words might create, broaden, or simply draw attention to the idea of exact numbers.

Logic Breakdown

Compare each passage's diction and level of technical detail: colloquial, evaluative language suggests a general audience; formal descriptions of studies and hypotheses indicate an academic audience.

Passage Stimulus

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26.

Given the style and tone of each passage, which one of the following is most likely to be true?

Correct Answer
A
Passage A uses colorful, accessible, and evaluative language suited to a general audience (e.g., "seduced a whole generation into believing that our mother tongue restricts what we are able to think," and "there had never actually been any evidence to support his fantastic claims"). Passage B, by contrast, is framed around empirical studies and technical discussion of experimental tasks and competing hypotheses (e.g., "Studies involving Pirahã and Mundurukú Indian subjects... give evidence regarding the role of language in the development of numerical reasoning," and "tested on a variety of numerical tasks—naming the number of items in a stimulus set, constructing sets of equivalent number..."; it also explicitly lays out "strong Whorfian hypothesis," "weaker Whorfian hypothesis," and "non-Whorfian hypothesis"). The difference in register and focus indicates that A is written for a general audience while B addresses a more academic readership.
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