Library/PT 156/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Dyson argues that science might not be able to detect paranormal events because they only happen when people are stressed and emotional, which controlled lab tests can't recreate; he even borrows a physics idea to suggest both scientific and paranormal views could be true but not seen at the same time. The reply rejects this: anecdotes are not proof, repeated controlled experiments find no psychic powers, and the physics idea doesn't apply—either mind-reading works or it doesn't, and tests say it doesn't.

Logic Breakdown

Focus on the sentence's tone and nearby language (e.g., 'ridiculous' and the immediately following criticism) to determine whether 'mysteriously disappear' is mocking Dyson or reporting evidence.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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8.

In the first sentence of passage B, the author says that paranormal powers "mysteriously disappear" when people are placed in controlled scientific conditions primarily in order to

Correct Answer
D
'Mysteriously disappear' is used sarcastically to mock Dyson's claim. Passage B opens by calling his plea 'ridiculous' ('Freeman Dyson makes a ridiculous plea...') and immediately follows with 'A scientist of Dyson's caliber should know that anecdotes do not make a science.' Those contextual cues show the phrase's primary purpose is ridicule.
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