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
Unlock Full Passage11.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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