Reading comp PrepTest 120 · Section 2 · Question 22
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Science
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- Old Theory with Question/New Theory with Answer
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Old Theory - Parasites evolve to be benign towards host so they can get passed on and survive
- Question - Why do pathogens (a type of parasite) incapacitate/overwhelm hosts?
- New Theory/Answer - Pathogens reproduce so extensively they can get passed on even with the host being incapacitated/dying
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Implication of New Theory; Example - Rhinovirus
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Implication - Virulence (capacity to incapacitate) is a function of transmission
- Example - Rhinovirus - Needs proximity to be transmitted, so not likely to be very virulent
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Opposite example (still supporting New Theory) - Vector pathogens
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Vector - Transmitted by an organism
- Example - Mosquito - If pathogen transmitted by mosquito, then high virulence is good (more pathogen gets picked up by mosquito)
Paragraph 4
- Paragraph note
- Generalization; Exception to above trends
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Medical literature generalization - Vector pathogens more virulent than direct transmission pathogens (supports above)
- Exceptions - Examples - Diphtheria/Tuberculosis - Directly transmitted, but can live outside body (sit and wait), so are very virulent
- Superlative - “Among most dangerous”
Main Point: A new theory on why pathogens incapacitate their victims suggests that virulence and mode of transmission are directly related for pathogens, with vector pathogens more virulent than pathogens that are directly transmitted, though there are exceptions of virulent directly transmitted pathogens that can survive outside of a host.
Key Lines?Lines 1-4 - A puzzling phenomenon
Lines 4-7 - The Old Theory
Lines 10-16 - Answer/Explanation/New Theory
Lines 19-22 - Implication of New Theory
Line 22 - An example is introduced
Lines 31-33 - Comparison
Line 33 - Another example is introduced
Lines 44-46 - Generalization supporting New Theory
Lines 49-51 - Exceptions to the general rule (Examples)
Meta-Structure?Old Theory/New Theory - The passage starts with a puzzling phenomenon - some parasites (pathogens) incapacitate/kill their hosts. This makes it appear as if we’re headed for a Phenomenon/Explanation or Question/Answer passage (see note below), but the second sentence discusses how this phenomenon doesn’t line up with the existing theory of host-parasite relations, which pulls us into the Old Theory/New Theory Meta-Structure. The Author does present a New Theory, starting in Line 10, and the rest of the passage explores the implications of it, including examples that align with it as well as some exceptions. When dealing with an Old Theory/New Theory passage, the Author’s view of the new theory is generally the main point. Here, the Author says that some biologists “have suggested” the New Theory, which doesn’t commit her to agreeing with it. She does bring up examples that conform to it, though, and even when introducing exceptions to it, she starts by saying that the facts (“medical literature”) “generally support[]” it, so we should characterize her viewpoint as slightly positive but not entirely sold on it. We should expect the main point to be more about presenting this new theory than advocating for it, and we should be sure to note the exceptions as well as the implications/support, leading us to the main point above.
Phenomenon/Explanation (Question/Answer) - The new theory here is meant to explain a phenomenon that the old theory didn’t have an explanation/answer for. The discussion around this is the same as for the Old Theory/New Theory Meta-Structure (after all, scientific theories are meant to answer questions about unexplained phenomena), and we note these here because answers might use language associated with these Meta-Structures.
Examples - The passage presents an example in each of Paragraphs 2-4 to highlight what it’s talking about, which is great because otherwise the science in this passage would be difficult! It can also be helpful, in a passage such as this one, to try to frame the examples in a common way. Here, we’d say:
- Paragraph 2 - Rhinovirus - Direct transmission/Low virulence
- Paragraph 3 - Mosquito/Vector - Vector transmission/High virulence
- Paragraph 4 - Exception/Diphtheria and Tuberculosis - Direct transmission/High virulence
Note that we defined each example by three parts - a key term or terms in it (to make it easy to find), the mode of transmission, and the level of virulence. This will allow us to compare them and find the relevant one for any given question. It also reflects the main point of the passage, which relates virulence to mode of transmission.
Last Thoughts?This passage has a lot of unfamiliar terminology to keep straight (pathogen, parasite, virulence, vector, etc…), so it’s important to note any definitions with which you’re unfamiliar. In particular, one set of words here falls into a common pattern on how the LSAT will trap you - two unfamiliar words that are similar. Pathogen and parasite here are both familiar in the words themselves (long p-words) and in how most people would commonly define them. As such, it’s particularly important to be sure that you understand the difference - pathogens are a type of parasite that causes diseases, and parasites can evolve to be benign.
Also, when dealing with an Old Theory/New Theory passage, it’s important to identify whether the new theory replaces or supplements the old theory. That old theory does explain the relationship between most parasites and their hosts, which do develop in benign ways. It’s a subset of these parasites - pathogens - which can’t be explained by the old theory and which is explained by the new theory. So, in this case, the new theory supplements the old theory by explaining a phenomenon that it can’t - that of pathogens. The old theory’s explanation of other parasites, on the other hand, still holds.
Question prompt
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: B
The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.
Question Type
Strategy Overview
Answer Anticipation
Answer choices
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AThe most dangerous pathogens Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A is not credited
(A) (Lines 54-59) While these two pathogens are noted as being among the most dangerous of all pathogens, it’s because they can survive outside of a host for “weeks or months,” and so, if anything, we can infer that some of the most dangerous pathogens are those with the longest life spans outside a host.
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BThose pathogens with the Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B matches the stem
(B) (Lines 54-59) This answer fixes both of the problems we had with (B), and it reflects the information from Paragraph 4. These “sit and wait” pathogens are said to be “among the most dangerous” because they can survive for a long time outside of the body. From this, we can infer that the pathogens that live the longest outside of the body are among the most dangerous. This answer gets the relationship between endurance and danger correct, and it doesn’t overshoot the superlative (“among the most dangerous,” not the most dangerous), so it’s the correct answer.
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CThose pathogens transported by Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C is not credited
(C) (Lines 49-50, Lines 54-59) Diphtheria, tuberculosis, and other “sit and wait” pathogens are directly transmitted and are said to be among the most dangerous. So we can’t infer that vector-borne pathogens are always the most dangerous, as the examples in question show that not to be the case.
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DThe least dangerous pathogens Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D is not credited
(D) (Lines 54-59) This answer establishes essentially the same relationship as (A) - an inverse relationship between longevity outside of the body and dangerousness. But we know from the last sentence that these two pathogens are examples of a direct relationship between longevity outside of the body and dangerousness, so this answer is contradicted by the passage.
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EThose pathogens transmitted directly Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E is not credited
(E) (Lines 49-50, Lines 54-59) Diphtheria, tuberculosis, and other “sit and wait” pathogens are directly transmitted and are said to be among the most dangerous. So the passage contradicts the view that directly transmitted pathogens are always least dangerous.
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Discussion
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Why E is incorrect? 2 replies
Started by Newt
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Please explain answer-choice B 5 replies
Started by Mazen
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B vs. E 1 reply
Started by ginakd