There is a sentence that is missing in the paragraph below. Look at the paragraph and
decide where (option 1, 2, 3, or 4) the following sentence would best
fit.
Sentence: Comprehending a wide range of emotions, Renaissance music
nevertheless portrayed all emotions in a balanced and moderate fashion.
Paragraph:
A volume of translated Italian madrigals were published in London during the year of
1588. This sudden public interest facilitated a surge of English Madrigal writing as
well as a spurt of other secular music writing and publication. ___(1)___. This music
boom lasted for thirty years and was as much a golden age of music as British literature
was with Shakespeare and Queen Elizabeth I. ___(2)___. The rebirth in both literature
and music originated in Italy and migrated to England; the English madrigal became more
humorous and lighter in England as compared to Italy. Renaissance music was mostly
polyphonic in texture. ___(3)___. Extreme use of and contrasts in dynamics, rhythm, and
tone colour do not occur. ___(4)___. The rhythms in Renaissance music tend to have a
smooth, soft flow instead of a sharp, well-defined pulse of accents.
The passage given below is followed by four alternate summaries. Choose the option that
best captures the essence of the passage.
Cartographers design and create
maps to communicate information about phenomena located somewhere on our planet. In the
past, cartographers did not worry too much about who was going to read their maps.
Although some simple "usability" research was done—like comparing whether circle or bar
symbols worked best—cartographers knew how to make maps. This has changed now, however,
due to all kinds of societal and technological developments. Today, map readers are more
demanding—mostly because of the tools they use to read maps. Cartographers, who are also
influenced by these trends, are now more interested in seeing if their products are
efficient, effective, and appreciated.
Five jumbled up sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5), related to a topic, are given
below. Four of them can be put together to form a coherent paragraph. Identify the odd
sentence and key in the number of that sentence as your answer.
1. Animals
have an interest in fulfilling their basic needs, but also in avoiding suffering, and
thus we ought to extend moral consideration.
2. Singer viewed himself as a
utilitarian, and presents a direct moral theory concerning animal rights, in contrast to
indirect positions, such as welfarist views.
3. He argued for extending moral
consideration to animals because, similar to humans, animals have certain significant
interests.
4. The event that publicly announced animal rights as a legitimate
issue within contemporary philosophy was Peter Singer's Animal Liberation text in
1975.
5. As such, we ought to view their interests alongside and equal to human
interests, which results in humans having direct moral duties towards animals.
The passage below is accompanied by four questions. Based on the passage,
choose the best answer for each question.
Landing in Australia, the British
colonists weren't much impressed with the small-bodied, slender-snooted marsupials called
bandicoots. "Their muzzle, which is much too long, gives them an air exceedingly stupid,"
one naturalist noted in 1805. They nicknamed one type the "zebra rat" because of its
black-striped rump.
Silly-looking or not, though, the zebra rat—the smallest
bandicoot, more commonly known today as the western barred bandicoot—exhibited a genius for
survival in the harsh outback, where its ancestors had persisted for some 26 million years.
Its births were triggered by rainfall in the bone-dry desert. It carried its
breath-mint-size babies in a backward-facing pouch so mothers could forage for food and dig
shallow, camouflaged shelters.
Still, these adaptations did not prepare the
western barred bandicoot for the colonial-era transformation of its ecosystem, particularly
the onslaught of imported British animals, from cattle and rabbits that damaged delicate
desert vegetation to ravenous house cats that soon developed a taste for bandicoots. Several
of the dozen-odd bandicoot species went extinct, and by the 1940s the western barred
bandicoot, whose original range stretched across much of the continent, persisted only on
two predator-free islands in Shark Bay, off Australia's western coast.
"Our
isolated fauna had simply not been exposed to these predators," says Reece Pedler, an
ecologist with the Wild Deserts conservation program.
Now Wild Deserts is using
descendants of those few thousand island survivors, called Shark Bay bandicoots, in a new
effort to seed a mainland bandicoot revival. They've imported 20 bandicoots to a preserve on
the edge of the Strzelecki Desert, in the remote interior of New South Wales. This sanctuary
is a challenging place, desolate much of the year, with one of the world's most mercurial
rainfall patterns—relentless droughts followed by sudden drenching floods.
The
imported bandicoots occupy two fenced "exclosures," cleared of invasive rabbits (courtesy of
Pedler's sheepdog) and of feral cats (which slunk off once the rabbits disappeared). A third
fenced area contains the program's Wild Training Zone, where two other rare marsupials
(bilbies, a larger type of bandicoot, and mulgaras, a somewhat fearsome fuzzball known for
sucking the brains out of prey) currently share terrain with controlled numbers of cats,
learning to evade them. It's unclear whether the Shark Bay bandicoots, which are perhaps
even more predator-naive than their now-extinct mainland bandicoot kin, will be able to make
that kind of breakthrough.
For now, though, a recent surge of rainfall has led to
a bandicoot joey boom, raising the Wild Deserts population to about 100, with other
sanctuaries adding to that number. There are also signs of rebirth in the landscape itself.
With their constant digging, the bandicoots trap moisture and allow for seed germination so
the cattle-damaged desert can restore itself.
They have a new nickname—a
flattering one, this time. "We call them ecosystem engineers," Pedler says.
According to the text, the western barred bandicoots now have a flattering name because they have
Which one of the following options does NOT represent the characteristics of the western barred bandicoot?
The text uses the word 'exclosures' because Wild Deserts has adopted a measure of
Which one of the following statements provides a gist of this passage?
There is a sentence that is missing in the paragraph below. Look at the paragraph and
decide where (option 1, 2, 3, or 4) the following sentence would best
fit.
Sentence: The brain isn't organized the way you might set up your home
office or bathroom medicine cabinet.
Paragraph: ___(1)___. You can't just
put things anywhere you want to. The evolved architecture of the brain is haphazard and
disjointed, and incorporates multiple systems, each of which has a mind of its own.
___(2)___. Evolution doesn't design things and it doesn't build systems—it
settles on systems that, historically, conveyed a survival benefit. There is no
overarching, grand planner engineering the systems so that they work harmoniously
together. ___(3)___. The brain is more like a big, old house with piecemeal renovations
done on every floor, and less like new construction. ___(4)___.
The passage below is accompanied by four questions. Based on the passage,
choose the best answer for each question.
Oftentimes, when economists cross
borders, they are less interested in learning from others than in invading their garden
plots. Gary Becker, for instance, pioneered the idea of human capital. To do so, he famously
tackled topics like crime and domesticity, applying methods honed in the study of markets to
domains of nonmarket life. He projected economics outward into new realms: for example, by
revealing the extent to which humans calculate marginal utilities when choosing their
spouses or stealing from neighbors. At the same time, he did not let other ways of thinking
enter his own economic realm: for example, he did not borrow from anthropology or history or
let observations of nonmarket economics inform his homo economicus. Becker was a picture of
the imperial economist in the heyday of the discipline's bravura.
Times have
changed for the once almighty discipline. Economics has been taken to task, within and
beyond its ramparts. Some economists have reached out, imported, borrowed, and
collaborated—been less imperial, more open. Consider Thomas Piketty and his outreach to
historians. The booming field of behavioral economics—the fusion of economics and social
psychology—is another case. Having spawned active subfields, like judgment, decision-making
and a turn to experimentation, the field aims to go beyond the caricature of Rational Man to
explain how humans make decisions….
It is important to underscore how this flips
the way we think about economics. For generations, economists have presumed that people have
interests—"preferences," in the neoclassical argot—that get revealed in the course of
peoples' choices. Interests come before actions and determine them. If you are hungry, you
buy lunch; if you are cold, you get a sweater. If you only have so much money and can't
afford to deal with both your growling stomach and your shivering, which need you choose to
meet using your scarce savings reveals your preference.
Psychologists take one
look at this simple formulation and shake their heads. Increasingly, even some mainstream
economists have to admit that homo economicus doesn't always behave like the textbook
maximizer; irrational behavior can't simply be waved away as extra-economic expressions of
passions over interests, and thus the domain of other disciplines…. This is one place where
the humanist can help the economist. If narrative economics is going to help us understand
how rivals duke it out, who wins and who loses, we are going to need much more than lessons
from epidemiological studies of viruses or intracranial stimuli.
Above all, we
need politics and institutions. Shiller [the Nobel prize winning economist] connects
perceptions of narratives to changes in behavior and thence to social outcomes. He completes
a circle that was key to behavioral economics and brings in storytelling to make sense of
how perceptions get framed. This cycle (perception to behavior to society) was once mediated
or dominated by institutions: the political parties, lobby groups, and media organizations
that played a vital role in legitimating, representing, and excluding interests. Yet
institutions have been stripped from Shiller's account, to reveal a bare dynamic of emotions
and economics, without the intermediating place of politics.
In the first paragraph the author is making the point that economists like Becker
"Times have changed for the once almighty discipline." We can infer from this statement and the associated paragraph that the author is being
The author critiques Schiller's approach to behavioural economics for
We can infer from the passage that the term ''homo economicus" refers to someone who
The passage given below is followed by four alternate summaries. Choose the option that
best captures the essence of the passage.
Certain codes may, of course, be so
widely distributed in a specific language community or culture, and be learned at so
early an age, that they appear not to be constructed – the effect of an articulation
between sign and referent – but to be 'naturally' given. Simple visual signs appear to
have achieved a 'near-universality' in this sense: though evidence remains that even
apparently 'natural' visual codes are culture specific. However, this does not mean that
no codes have intervened; rather, that the codes have been profoundly naturalized. The
operation of naturalized codes reveals not the transparency and 'naturalness' of
language but the depth, the habituation and the near-universality of the codes in use.
They produce apparently 'natural' recognitions. This has the (ideological) effect of
concealing the practices of coding which are present.
The passage below is accompanied by four questions. Based on the passage,
choose the best answer for each question.
. . . [T]he idea of craftsmanship is
not simply nostalgic. . . . Crafts require distinct skills, an all-round approach to work
that involves the whole product, rather than individual parts, and an attitude that
necessitates devotion to the job and a focus on the communal interest. The concept of craft
emphasises the human touch and individual judgment.
Essentially, the crafts
concept seems to run against the preponderant ethos of management studies which, as the
academics note, have long prioritised efficiency and consistency. . . . Craft skills were
portrayed as being primitive and traditionalist.
The contrast between artisanship
and efficiency first came to the fore in the 19th century when British
manufacturers suddenly faced competition from across the Atlantic as firms developed the
"American system" using standardised parts. . . . the worldwide success of the Singer sewing
machine showed the potential of a mass-produced device. This process created its own
reaction, first in the form of the Arts and Crafts movement of the late 19th
century, and then again in the "small is beautiful" movement of the 1970s. A third crafts
movement is emerging as people become aware of the environmental impact of conventional
industry.
There are two potential markets for those who practise crafts. The
first stems from the existence of consumers who are willing to pay a premium price for goods
that are deemed to be of extra quality. . . . The second market lies in those consumers who
wish to use their purchases to support local workers, or to reduce their environmental
impact by taking goods to craftspeople to be mended, or recycled.
For workers,
the appeal of craftsmanship is that it allows them the autonomy to make creative choices,
and thus makes a job far more satisfying. In that sense, it could offer hope for the overall
labour market. Let the machines automate dull and repetitive tasks and let workers focus
purely on their skills, judgment and imagination. As a current example, the academics cite
the "agile" manifesto in the software sector, an industry at the heart of technological
change. The pioneers behind the original agile manifesto promised to prioritise "individuals
and interactions over processes and tools". By bringing together experts from different
teams, agile working is designed to improve creativity.
But the broader question
is whether crafts can create a lot more jobs than they do today. Demand for crafted products
may rise but will it be easy to retrain workers in sectors that might get automated (such as
truck drivers) to take advantage? In a world where products and services often have to pass
through regulatory hoops, large companies will usually have the
advantage.
History also suggests that the link between crafts and creativity is
not automatic. Medieval craft guilds were monopolies which resisted new entrants. They were
also highly hierarchical with young men required to spend long periods as apprentices and
journeymen before they could set up on their own; by that time the innovative spirit may
have been knocked out of them. Craft workers can thrive in the modern era, but only if they
don't get too organised.
We can infer from the passage that medieval crafts guilds resembled mass production in that both
The most recent revival in interest in the crafts is a result of the emergence of all of the following EXCEPT:
The author questions the ability of crafts to create substantial employment opportunities presently because
Which one of the following statements is NOT inconsistent with the views stated in the passage?
The passage below is accompanied by four questions. Based on the passage,
choose the best answer for each question.
In the summer of 2022, subscribers to
the US streaming service HBO MAX were alarmed to discover that dozens of the platform's
offerings – from the Covid-themed heist thriller Locked Down to the recent remake of The
Witches – had been quietly removed from the service . . . The news seemed like vindication
to those who had long warned that streaming was more about controlling access to the
cultural commons than expanding it, as did reports (since denied by the show's creators)
that Netflix had begun editing old episodes of Stranger Things to retroactively improve
their visual effects.
What's less clear is whether the commonly prescribed cure
for these cultural ills – a return to the material pleasures of physical media – is the
right one. While the makers of Blu-ray discs claim they have a shelf life of 100 years, such
statistics remain largely theoretical until they come to pass, and are dependent on storage
conditions, not to mention the continued availability of playback equipment. The humble DVD
has already proved far less resilient, with many early releases already beginning to
deteriorate in quality Digital movie purchases provide even less security. Any film "bought"
on iTunes could disappear if you move to another territory with a different rights agreement
and try to redownload it. It's a bold new frontier in the commodification of art: the birth
of the product recall. After a man took to Twitter to bemoan losing access to Cars 2 after
moving from Canada to Australia, Apple clarified that users who downloaded films to their
devices would retain permanent access to those downloads, even if they relocated to a
hemisphere where the [content was] subject to a different set of rights agreements. Thanks
to the company's ironclad digital rights management technology, however, such files cannot
be moved or backed up, locking you into watching with your Apple account.
Anyone
who does manage to acquire Digital Rights Management free (DRM-free) copies of their
favourite films must nonetheless grapple with ever-changing file format standards, not to
mention data decay – the gradual process by which electronic information slowly but surely
corrupts. Only the regular migration of files from hard drive to hard drive can delay the
inevitable, in a sisyphean battle against the ravages of digital time.
In a
sense, none of this is new. Charlie Chaplin burned the negative of his 1926 film A Woman of
the Sea as a tax write-off. Many more films have been lost through accident, negligence or
plain indifference. During a heatwave in July 1937, a Fox film vault in New Jersey burned
down, destroying a majority of the silent films produced by the studio.
Back
then, at least, cinema was defined by its ephemerality: the sense that a film was as good as
gone once it left your local cinema. Today, with film studios keen to stress the breadth of
their back catalogues (or to put in Hollywood terms, the value of their IPs), audiences may
start to wonder why those same studios seem happy to set the vault alight themselves if
it'll help next quarter's numbers.
Which of the following statements is suggested by the sentence "Back then, at least, cinema was defined by its ephemerality: the sense that a film was as good as gone once it left your local cinema"?
"Netflix had begun editing old episodes of Stranger Things to retroactively improve their visual effects." What is the purpose of this example used in the passage?
Which one of the following statements, if true, would best invalidate the main argument of the passage?
Which one of the following statements about art best captures the arguments made in the passage?
The passage given below is followed by four alternate summaries. Choose the option that
best captures the essence of the passage.
Scientific research shows that many
animals are very intelligent and have sensory and motor abilities that dwarf ours. Dogs
are able to detect diseases such as cancer and diabetes and warn humans of impending
heart attacks and strokes. Elephants, whales, hippopotamuses, giraffes, and alligators
use low-frequency sounds to communicate over long distances, often miles. Many animals
also display wide-ranging emotions, including joy, happiness, empathy, compassion,
grief, and even resentment and embarrassment. It's not surprising that animals share
many emotions with us because we also share brain structures, located in the limbic
system, that are the seat of our emotions.
Five jumbled up sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5), related to a topic, are given
below. Four of them can be put together to form a coherent paragraph. Identify the odd
sentence and key in the number of that sentence as your answer.
1. Urbanites
also have more and better options for getting around: Uber is ubiquitous; easy-to-rent
dockless bicycles are spreading; battery-powered scooters will be next.
2. When
more people use buses or trains the service usually improves because public-transport
agencies run more buses and trains.
3. Worsening services on public transport,
terrorist attacks in some urban metros and a rise in fares have been blamed for this
trend.
4. It seems more likely that public transport is being squeezed
structurally as people's need to travel is diminishing as a result of smartphones,
video-conferencing, online shopping and so on.
5. There has been a puzzling
decline in the use of urban public transport in many countries in the west, despite the
growth in urban populations and rising employment.
There is a sentence that is missing in the paragraph below. Look at the paragraph and
decide where (option 1, 2, 3, or 4) the following sentence would best
fit.
Sentence: Understanding central Asia's role helps developments make more
sense not only across Asia but in Europe, the Americas and Africa.
Paragraph:
The nations of the Silk Roads are sometimes called 'developing countries', but they are
actually some of the world's most highly developed countries, the very crossroads of
civilization, in advanced states of disrepair. ___(1)___. These countries lie at the
centre of global affairs: they have since the beginning of history. Running across the
spine of Asia, they form a web of connections fanning out in every direction, routes
along which pilgrims and warriors, nomads and merchants have travelled, goods and
produce have been bought and sold, and ideas exchanged, adapted and refined. ___(2)___
.They have carried not only prosperity, but also death and violence, disease and
disaster. ___(3)___. The Silk Roads are the world's central nervous system, connecting
otherwise far-flung peoples and places…. ___(4)___. It allows us to see patterns and
links, causes and effects that remain invisible if one looks only at Europe, or North
America.
Copyrights © All Rights Reserved by 2IIM.com - A Fermat Education Initiative.
Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions
CAT® (Common Admission Test) is a registered trademark of the Indian Institutes of Management. This website is not endorsed or approved by IIMs.
2IIM Online CAT Coaching
A Fermat Education Initiative,
58/16, Indira Gandhi Street,
Kaveri Rangan Nagar, Saligramam, Chennai 600 093
Mobile: (91) 99626 48484 / 94459 38484
WhatsApp: WhatsApp Now
Email: info@2iim.com