<p>And what was the question for this:</p>
<p>Father’s reasons are incomplete</p>
<p>And I also remember that there was an answer from that passage with “humor.” Like how Vigil views the remarks made by the father. No?</p>
<p>And what was the question for this:</p>
<p>Father’s reasons are incomplete</p>
<p>And I also remember that there was an answer from that passage with “humor.” Like how Vigil views the remarks made by the father. No?</p>
<p>in the scientist passage, there is one question asking about their initial dream(like that?i do not remember clearly) ? I think it’s what we missed</p>
<p>OK-- I’m going to directly challenge one of the answers on the consolidated list. (hopefully someone sees this time; I posted it already but no one took note) </p>
<p>Copied from one of my previous posts (my answer was “faster travel” instead of “inexpensive motels” for the father/son passage, and here’s my full reasoning): </p>
<p>
</p>
<p>I’ll leave this open in case anyone wants to debate the correct answer with me. If no one can disprove this, then I say the list should be changed. :D</p>
<p>i think the answers to the cosmology passage are all wrong:</p>
<p>“Astronomers baffled b/c they are unable to predict observed celestial phenomena
Explain a problem that affected the development of the field”</p>
<p>i think one of the answers was that it ws because it was different than the poetic whatevers… i forgot completely but it had something to do with different from what they thought in ancient times.</p>
<p>instead of Explain a problem that affected the development of the field, i strongly believe that it was It gave way to another field… or something along those lines…</p>
<p>Fledgling,</p>
<p>Are you certain that the question had “in the context of the passage”? I believe it referenced the specific line…</p>
<p>@raytecz
“in the scientist passage, there is one question asking about their initial dream(like that?i do not remember clearly) ? I think it’s what we missed”</p>
<p>I vaguely remember this question. Can someone confirm the wording of the answer? I do remember in the passage, there was the word “impetus” which I remember made me choose the answer choice that was like “initial ______”</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>You are correct; the exact wording of the question was, “What would be a possible addition to the list mentioned in Line ___?” However, this does not imply that you should EXCLUSIVELY use that line to find the answer; in fact, in many of the CR practice passages that I used with my Blue Book, the correct answer was often found in the surrounding sentences. While “inexpensive motels” is consistent with the rest of the line, the entire surrounding paragraphs disprove that because, once again, the father was trying to AVOID making stops. They could not have been a reason he would choose the back routes.</p>
<p>@IAmABeast,</p>
<p>you’re going to have to give better explanations than those :p</p>
<p>iamabeast: the first answer is 100% correct. it asked why they were baffled and that’s the answer. the other one i’m pretty sure he may have miswritten it on the list but the answer is something that gave way to another specific science, they wouldnt have 2 answers like that cuz theyre too similar</p>
<p>i think the answers to the cosmology or possible scientist passage are somewhat wrong:</p>
<p>“Astronomers baffled b/c they are unable to predict observed celestial phenomena
Explain a problem that affected the development of the field”</p>
<p>i think one of the answers was that it ws because it was different than the poetic whatevers… i forgot completely but it had something to do with different from what they thought in ancient times.</p>
<p>instead of Explain a problem that affected the development of the field, i strongly believe that it was It gave way to another field… or something along those lines… </p>
<p>also one of the answers for the “something freedom” in the scientist one, i believe it was “stealthy progress” and many people agreed.</p>
<p>Fledgling,</p>
<p>But if it’s not “inexpensive motels,” what was your rationale for eliminating all of the other answer choices? I still think, though, that since “inexpensive motels” was the only answer choice that directly referenced money as did the other reasons of the list, that it has to be the correct answer.</p>
<p>@IAmABeast
It was “unaccustomed freedom” and it was in the virgil/earl passage, not the scientist one.</p>
<p>can anybody remember the question “impetus”?</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>The other choices included “less pollution”, “scenic views”, and another one I can’t recall. </p>
<p>Again, my argument was that “inexpensive motels” seems to make sense if you just look at that specific line (because, as supporters of the answer have argued, it is consistent with the notion of directly saving money); however, the question does NOT suggest that you should ONLY use that line to find the answer, and the paragraph in which the sentence is contained (as well as several others after that) says that the father tried looking for people to pick up because he did NOT want to make an overnight stop. </p>
<p>It’s all about the context…</p>
<p>okay… unaccustomed freedom VERSUS stealthy progress… lets get some opinions… cuz earlier some person also agreed with the progress one…</p>
<p>So what did you put as your answer, fledgling? And why did you choose it over “less pollution” and “scenic views,” etc.?</p>
<p>@ilovyouz,</p>
<p>“impetus” was in the passage, not the question/answer choices…I cannot recall the correct answer though…nor do I really remember the question
I believe the correct answer was something along the lines of “the scientists go back to the reason why they started.” Can anyone confirm this?</p>
<p>“Less pollution”… I didn’t remember seeing anything about pollution at all within the passage, so that was instantly ruled out. </p>
<p>“Scenic views”? That seemed rather… sentimental, haha, which was the opposite of what the question was asking for. </p>
<p>I ultimately chose “faster travel”, because although it does not directly involve saving money, it is consistent with the idea of economizing (hence, “less sentimental”), and since the father was trying to AVOID motels altogether, there is no way he could have used them as a reason for choosing the back route.</p>
<p>Fledgling, do you remember where they said they were going? Like did they have a particular destination/did they give off the impression they needed to get there quickly?</p>
<p>One of the answers on the list is incorrect, the one about the astronomers… the actual answer was about how the poetry couldn’t predict the celestial movements or something, not that they couldn’t predict the observed celestial phenomena.</p>