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 the assumptions of passages A and B about whether concepts can exist without linguistic labels; find the principle unique to B that having a concept despite no lexical expression implies the concept is language-independent.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage27.Which one of the following principles underlies the argument in passage B, but not that in passage A?
Correct Answer
B
Passage B states that, despite lacking verbal counting systems, the subjects 'possess an innate imprecise nonverbal concept of number' and that 'these reports support a non-Whorfian, language-independent view of the origins of our concept of number.' Those sentences express the principle that if a speaker possesses a concept for which the speaker's language lacks an expression, that suggests the concept was not created by the language.
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