Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages say sports are more than just contests: they are public performances that need spectators who know the rules and can spot real skill, while audiences for the arts are often confused by constant experimentation and end up valuing novelty or shock. Gumbrecht (Passage B) adds that many sporting moments can be genuinely beautiful—great plays look both carefully planned and effortlessly natural, which fits Kant's idea that things we call beautiful seem to have a purpose.
Logic Breakdown
Find a claim that both passages make—scan for shared defenses of spectator sports against critics and statements that sports can have aesthetic value.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.The authors of the passages would be most likely to agree that
Correct Answer
B
Both authors defend sports against disparaging cultural commentators. Passage A states, 'Far from destroying the value of sports, as some cultural critics have argued, the attendance of spectators is often necessary to a sporting event.' Passage B reports that Gumbrecht 'laments that most contemporary academic analyses of 'sport' as a cultural phenomenon tend to be socially patronizing, dismissive of sports fans...' and that 'watching a well-played sporting event might be a legitimate aesthetic experience as well.' Together these passages show the authors would agree that spectator sports are sometimes disparaged unfairly.
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