BLTN
Yet, in the case 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 there is no repetition. I would agree that all of the numbers could be the mode but I challenge that the Mean= Mode.
What you're saying makes perfect logical sense, but mathematicians have defined the mode differently, perhaps a bit counterintuitively. By definition, a list only has a mode at all if some value in the list occurs more often than some other value in the list. So when every value in a list occurs once, or occurs equally often, the list is said to have no mode. So these lists have no mode:
1, 2, 3, 4, 5
100, 100, 100, 300, 300, 300, 500, 500, 500
because in each, no value appears more often than any other. These lists, on the other hand, have at least one mode:
1, 1, 1, 1, 4, 5 --> the mode is 1
15, 15, 25, 25, 35 --> this list has two modes, 15 and 25
edit: the GMAT is not at all interested in testing strange technicalities about mathematical definitions though, so if you didn't know about any of this, it would never affect your score at all.