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
Determine each passage's primary rhetorical goal: Passage A argues in favor of markets' forecasting value; Passage B undercuts or tempers claims about markets' infallibility—match those aims to the answer choices.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage9.The purpose of passage A and the purpose of passage B, respectively, are to
Correct Answer
E
Passage A advocates 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.' It also cites supportive evidence: 'Iowa Electronic Markets has predicted the outcomes of certain elections better than 75 percent of the polls did.' Passage B deflates enthusiasm for markets: it begins with 'Markets are not infallible.' and says 'I suggest they merely reflect the majority opinion at a given moment.' and 'That does not imbue them with any special omniscience.' Together these show A advocates and B deflates, so 'advocate and deflate' is the best description.
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