GMAT - Critical Reasoning - Test 20

Read the passage and choose the option that best answer the question.

1. A marriage counselor noted that couples who have occasional violent arguments are less likely to divorce within the next six months than those who have frequent but less violent arguments. He concluded that frequent arguing is a major factor in the causation of severe marital disharmony.

The counselor?s conclusion is most weakened by which of the following observations?

A. Couples who have already come to the point of divorce argue continuously over small matters.
B. People who have recently divorced are more likely to argue violently when they meet.
C. Many people in happy marriages have occasional violent arguments.
D. Recently divorced people rarely cite frequent arguments as a cause of marital disharmony
E. A significant fraction of couples close to divorce do not talk to each other.

2. Which of the following is the most logical completion of the passage below? Many companies have been pushing for a three-week extension of daylight saving time, which would mean that the sun would continue to set an hour later during the fall months. The owners of a chain of convenience stores, for example, expect to gain $15 million a year in additional sales, mostly from people who tend to______

A. stay away from these stores after dark
B. stay outdoors during the fall months
C. spend more money in the fall
D. spend less money in the fall
E. shop at these stores when they are pressed for time

3. Statement of a United States copper mining company: Import quotas should be imposed on the less expensive copper mined outside the country to maintain the price of copper in this country; otherwise, our companies will not be able to stay in business. Response of a United States copper wire manufacturer: United States wire and cable manufacturers purchase about 70 percent of the copper mined in the United States. If the copper prices we pay are not at the international level, our sales will drop, and then the demand for United States copper will go down. If the factual information presented by both companies is accurate, the best assessment of the logical relationship between the two arguments is that the wire manufacturer's argument

A. is self-serving and irrelevant to the proposal of the mining company
B. is circular, presupposing what it seeks to prove about the proposal of the mining company
C. shows that the proposal of the mining company would have a negative effect on the mining company's own business
D. fails to give a reason why the proposal of the mining company should not be put into effect to alleviate the concern of the mining company for staying in business
E. establishes that even the mining company's business will prosper if the mining company's proposal is rejected

4. Advertiser: The revenue that newspapers and magazines earn by publishing advertisements allows publishers to keep the prices per copy of their publications much lower than would otherwise be possible. Therefore, consumers benefit economically from advertising. Consumer: But who pays for the advertising that pays for low-priced newspapers and magazines? We consumers do, because advertisers pass along advertising costs to us through the higher prices they charge for their products. Which of the following best describes how the consumer counters the advertiser's argument?

A. By alleging something that, if true, would weaken the plausibility of the advertiser's conclusion
B. By questioning the truth of the purportedly factual statement on which the advertiser's conclusion is based
C. By offering an interpretation of the advertiser's opening statement that, if accurate, shows that there is an implicit contradiction in it
D. By pointing out that the advertiser's point of view is biased
E. By arguing that the advertiser too narrowly restricts the discussion to the effects of advertising that are economic

5. Since the mayor's publicity campaign for Greenville's bus service began six months ago, morning automobile traffic into the midtown area of the city has decreased seven percent. During the same period, there has been an equivalent rise in the number of persons riding buses into the midtown area. Obviously, the mayor's publicity campaign has convinced many people to leave their cars at home and ride the bus to work. Which of the following, if true, casts the most serious doubt on the conclusion drawn above?

A. Fares for all bus routes in Greenville have risen an average of five percent during the past six months.
B. The mayor of Greenville rides the bus to City Hall in the city's midtown area.
C. Road reconstruction has greatly reduced the number of lanes available to commuters in major streets leading to the midtown area during the past six months.
D. The number of buses entering the midtown area of Greenville during the morning hours is exactly the same now as it was one year ago.
E. Surveys show that longtime bus riders are no more satisfied with the Greenville bus service than they were before the mayor's publicity campaign began.

6. In January there was a large drop in the number of new houses sold, because interest rates for mortgages were falling and many consumers were waiting to see how low the rates would go. This large sales drop was accompanied by a sharp rise in the average price of new houses sold. Which of the following, if true, best explains the sharp rise in the average price of new houses?

A. Sales of higher-priced houses were unaffected by the sales drop because their purchasers have fewer constraints limiting the total amount they pay.
B. Labor agreements of builders with construction unions are not due to expire until the next January.
C. The prices of new houses have been rising slowly over the past three years because there is an increasing shortage of housing.
D. There was a greater amount of moderate-priced housing available for resale by owners during January than in the preceding three months.
E. Interest rates for home mortgages are expected to rise sharply later in the year if predictions of increased business activity in general prove to be accurate.

7. Certain messenger molecules fight damage to the lungs from noxious air by telling the muscle cells encircling the lungs' airways to contract. This partially seals off the lungs. An asthma attack occurs when the messenger molecules are activated unnecessarily, in response to harmless things like pollen or household dust. Which of the following, if true, points to the most serious flaw of a plan to develop a medication that would prevent asthma attacks by blocking receipt of any messages sent by the messenger molecules referred to above?

A. Researchers do not yet know how the body produces the messenger molecules that trigger asthma attacks.
B. Researchers do not yet know what makes one person's messenger molecules more easily activated than another's.
C. Such a medication would not become available for several years, because of long lead times in both development and manufacture.
D. Such a medication would be unable to distinguish between messages triggered by pollen and household dust and messages triggered by noxious air.
E. Such a medication would be a preventative only and would be unable to alleviate an asthma attack once it had started.

8. Although parapsychology is often considered a pseudoscience, it is in fact a genuine scientific enterprise, for it uses scientific methods such as controlled experiments and statistical tests of clearly stated hypotheses to examine the questions it raises. The conclusion above is properly drawn if which of the following is assumed?

A. If a field of study can conclusively answer the questions it raises, then it is a genuine science.
B. Since parapsychology uses scientific methods, it will produce credible results.
C. Any enterprise that does not use controlled experiments and statistical tests is not genuine science.
D. Any field of study that employs scientific methods is a genuine scientific enterprise.
E. Since parapsychology raises clearly statable questions, they can be tested in controlled experiments.

9. The local board of education found that, because the current physics curriculum has little direct relevance to today's world, physics classes attracted few high school students. So to attract students to physics classes, the board proposed a curriculum that emphasizes principles of physics involved in producing and analyzing visual images. Which of the following, if true, provides the strongest reason to expect that the proposed curriculum will be successful in attracting students?

A. Several of the fundamental principles of physics are involved in producing and analyzing visual images.
B. Knowledge of physics is becoming increasingly important in understanding the technology used in today's world.
C. Equipment that a large producer of photographic equipment has donated to the high school could be used in the proposed curriculum.
D. The number of students interested in physics today is much lower than the number of students interested in physics 50 years ago.
E. In today's world the production and analysis of visual images is of major importance in communications, business, and recreation.

10. The pharmaceutical industry argues that because new drugs will not be developed unless heavy development costs can be recouped in later sales, the current 20 years of protection provided by patents should be extended in the case of newly developed drugs. However, in other industries new-product development continues despite high development costs, a fact that indicates that the extension is unnecessary. Which of the following, if true, most strongly supports the pharmaceutical industry's argument against the challenge made above?

A. No industries other than the pharmaceutical industry have asked for an extension of the 20-year limit on patent protection.
B. Clinical trials of new drugs, which occur after the patent is granted and before the new drug can be marketed, often now take as long as 10 years to complete.
C. There are several industries in which the ratio of research and development costs to revenues is higher than it is in the pharmaceutical industry.
D. An existing patent for a drug does not legally prevent pharmaceutical companies from bringing to market alternative drugs, provided they are sufficiently dissimilar to the patented drug.
E. Much recent industrial innovation has occurred in products?for example, in the computer and electronics industries?for which patent protection is often very ineffective.