<p>50 (10 cha</p>
<p>chinnu i got those :D
does anyone remember the historian answers? i cant remember anything</p>
<p>"I picked baffled. Sardonic means bitterly mocking. If you could pick that then you could pick condescending just as well."</p>
<p>It's sardonic because the author mocks phsycics (sp I know) for thinking that they can see th future. If they can see the future then why don't they make millions in the stock market and are stuck on lame tv shows. Very biting and sarcastic, not really condescending or baffling.</p>
<p>chinnu...i got all those =)</p>
<p>yeah chinu same exact answers I hope we're right!!</p>
<p>Where did he use citation? I thought both of the footnote things were ancedotes.</p>
<p>Okay, really important question: does anyone recall which letter z=2 was of the answer choices? That's the only math question I'm not certain about, and it's really bugging me >_< :ooooo</p>
<p>Citation was used in the Nobel Prize winner reference. He did not accuse anyone of anything -- accusing Ptolemy (the only thing that you might take as such) of being misguided would be breaking the very objectivity that pervades science.</p>
<p>for the historian:
minority were skeptical
people were vulnerable to persuasion</p>
<p>there was one question with answer choice having dubious and scholarly detachment i remember not putting that choice any1 remember the question and the answer</p>
<p>he cited a professor at the bottom of one of the paragraphs, i remember checking for it, and it was there.</p>
<p>chinnu was the answer for that
questionable future help or something to that effect?</p>
<p>for the sinking ship CR what was the pourpose of the last paragraph?</p>
<p>Also the question with looking at the sea from a balcony (something like that)</p>
<p>For the one about ptolemy and copernicus</p>
<p>I got E) which was that Ptolemy and Copernicus both made contributions to the theory of space. I didn't get A) because the passage said that Ptolemy's theory was creative.</p>
<p>I think he used accusation. He accused the scientific community in general for being so cut and dry in their approach then showed that by comparing it to art. He wanted scientists to be able to stand out on their own, but showed how they really never could.</p>
<p>Maybe that wasn't accusation, but it certainly seemed like it to me. I don't think he necessarily CITED the Nobel Prize winner...just quoted him. Does that count as a citation?</p>
<p>the answer amber said which one was NOT correct, so it is definitely A</p>
<p>no, he did NOT use accusation - no way!! i used elimination as well, accusation is definitely the wrong one..he accepted the fact that the work of a scientist merges with the scientific community</p>
<p>anyone here DID NOT omit any of the questions?</p>
<p>What was choice A? Wasn't it [Ptolemy's idea was creative] which is true, not false?</p>
<p>amb3r, I almost did the same thing. Then, I realized that it said EXCEPT.</p>
<p>No I don't think he used accusation polka, he because he quoted the one guy and he referred to another scientists work the paragraph before.</p>
<p>pay attention to the EXCEPT people...also, to the question above, i didnt omit any...</p>
<p>I didn't omit any questions, harvard.</p>