Library/PT 157/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Both passages discuss prediction markets. Passage A says markets turn many people’s opinions into one number quickly and often accurately because participants risk real money; examples (the Iowa Electronic Markets and an experiment) show markets learn fast and reward correct guesses. Passage B disagrees that markets are perfect, noting a case where a market long favored the eventual loser and arguing that these markets mostly reflect current majority opinion—like a paid poll that is more serious but still can be wrong.

Logic Breakdown

Note the authors' opposing stances: Passage A attributes near-cognitive, predictive power to markets; Passage B denies that and says markets merely reflect majority opinion. Choose the title pair where the first affirms a thing's 'thinking/predictive' capacity and the second directly denies that capacity.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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11.

The relationship between which one of the following pairs of essays, based on what can be inferred from their titles, is most analogous to the relationship between passage A and passage B, respectively?

Correct Answer
E
Passage A ascribes a kind of cognitive/predictive capacity to markets: 'Markets, such as stock exchanges, distill the collective wisdom of millions of individuals into a single number, and they do so with amazing efficiency.' and 'Markets are highly efficient, in the sense that the market as a whole learns—lightning fast and very accurately—what informed people know.' Passage B rejects that characterization: 'Markets are not infallible.' and 'I suggest they merely reflect the majority opinion at a given moment.' Option E ('Computers as Thinking Machines' and 'Computers Don't Think: They Execute Programs') mirrors this same pro/anti relationship. The first title attributes 'thinking' to computers (parallel to Passage A attributing intelligence/predictive power to markets); the second title denies that attribute and reduces computers to mere executors of programs (parallel to Passage B's claim that markets merely aggregate opinion). Thus E best matches the passages' relationship.
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