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Sajjad1994

Can you please post the explanation for the official answers to questions 1,2 and 3

Explanation

1. In saying that “no metals, other than the expensive, nonoxidizing gold, could be relied upon to give off positive-light reflections” (lines 25–27), the author draws a distinction between

Difficulty Level: 700

Explanation

The author seems to be drawing a distinction between materials that make use of negative light and materials that permanently give off positive-light reflections.

A. No. The passage states that gold can be relied upon generally, not only in certain applications.

B. No. All metals appear to be suited for sculpture, but only gold gives off positive-light reflections.

C. Yes. Brass and bronze can be made reflective (Noguchi polished them) but only nonoxidizing gold can be relied upon to give off positive-light reflections.

D. No. Bronze and brass are metals; nonmetals are neve discussed.

E. No. There is no evidence that gold was acceptable to both types of sculptors; all you know is that it is expensive. The experimental metal, chrome-nickel steel, is mentioned in the next paragraph.

Answer: C
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Sajjad1994

Can you please post the explanation for the official answers to questions 1,2 and 3

Explanation

2. The passage provides information sufficient to answer which one of the following questions?

Difficulty Level: 700

Explanation

Go back to the passage as needed to verify or disprove each choice.

A. No. This is not addressed anywhere in the passage.

B. No. Art forms other than sculpture are not addressed anywhere in the passage.

C. No. The passage discusses only his use of metal.

D. Yes. This is answered in the second sentence of the last paragraph.

E. No. This is not addressed anywhere in the passage.

Answer: D
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Sajjad1994

Can you please post the explanation for the official answers to questions 1,2 and 3

Explanation

3. The passage offers the strongest evidence that the author would agree with which one of the following statements?

Difficulty Level: 700+

Explanation

Go back to the passage as needed to verify or disprove each choice.

A. No. There’s no evidence that Brancusi or other sculptors sought to overcome the problems of negative light, only Noguchi.

B. No. Go back to the second sentence of the passage. He might have become a scientist, but there’s no information about his training.

C. No. Noguchi’s realization about negative light occurred while he was working for Brancusi, not Fuller.

D. Yes. According to the last paragraph, Noguchi was an idea-driven conceptual sculptor who evolved constantly.

E. No. Science is mentioned only in the second sentence of the first paragraph. In this passage, Noguchi is important mostly for his exploration of light.

Answer: D
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Navneet290
Sir, could you please provide an explanation for Q6?


Explanation

6. Which one of the following inferences about the portrait of Fuller does the passage most strongly support?

Difficulty Level: 750+

Explanation

The sculpture of Fuller is discussed in the third and fourth paragraphs. You know that it was a portrait of Fuller and that it was made with highly reflective material.

A. No. The third paragraph seems to suggest that Noguchi was the first to use this material for sculpture. Other sculptors are not mentioned in connection with the new material.

B. Yes. This choice is supported by the first sentence of the second paragraph.

C. No. There’s no description of either Fuller’s reaction to the sculpture or Noguchi’s reaction to Fuller’s response.

D. No. Noguchi offered to sculpt the portrait, but there’s no mention of it being a personal favor.

E. No. Brancusi’s art did depend on contrasts of light and shadow—see the end of the second paragraph.

Answer: B
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Could someone please explain question no. 5?
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Could someone please explain question no. 5?

Explanation

5. The passage most strongly supports which one of the following inferences?

Difficulty Level: 700-750

Explanation

Go back to the passage for each choice.

A. No. The passage makes no mention of whether Fuller himself had ever used the material.

B. No. The end of the third paragraph suggests that Noguchi used the material because of its reflective properties and its availability, not its commercial value.

C. No. This is a misinterpretation of the fourth paragraph; the sculpture doesn’t appear to have the shape and dimensions of surrounding objects.

D. No. You don’t know this. Perhaps it would reflect negative light and therefore be more like a traditional sculpture (see the end of the second paragraph).

E. Yes. This is supported by the fourth paragraph, the first sentence of which notes that Noguchi’s sculpture was an alternate model of traditional, negative-light sculptures. If the perception of the shape and dimensions of Noguchi’s sculpture depends on its reflections of the shapes in its surrounding environment, then this wouldn’t be the case for traditional, negative-light
sculpture.

Answer: E
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­3. The passage offers the strongest evidence that the author would agree with which one of the following statements?

(A) Noguchi’s work in Paris contributed significantly to the art of sculpture in that it embodied solutions to problems that other sculptors, including Brancusi, had sought unsuccessfully to overcome. - No. There is no mention of problems that other couldn't solve and he could. 

(B) Noguchi’s scientific approach to designing sculptures and to selecting materials for sculptures is especially remarkable in that he had no formal scientific training. - No. The passage implies otherwise. 

(C) Despite the fact that Brancusi was a sculptor and Fuller was not, Fuller played a more pivotal role than did Brancusi in Noguchi’s realization of the importance of negative light to the work of previous sculptors. - No.

(D) Noguchi was more interested in addressing fundamental aesthetic questions than in maintaining a consistent artistic style. - True. He was not interested in just doing the incremental work. He was questioning "artist
who repeatedly veered off at wide angles from the
well-known courses followed by conventionally
talented artists of both the traditional and modern
schools. " 

(E) Noguchi’s work is of special interest for what it reveals not only about the value of scientific thinking in the arts but also about the value of aesthetic approaches to scientific inquiry. - The part "value of aesthetic approaches to scientific inquiry" is off. 
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4. In which one of the following is the relation between the two people most analogous to the relation between Ford and Noguchi as indicated by the passage?

The key to understanding here is that the relation is between Ford and N and not between Fuller and N. Ford created material for automotive and N used it for sculptures. 

(A) A building-materials dealer decides to market a new type of especially durable simulatedwood flooring material after learning that a famous architect has praised the material. - No. We need an analogy wherein a product was originally created for purpose A but used by someone for purpose B. 

(B) An expert skier begins experimenting with the use of a new type of material in the soles of ski boots after a shoe manufacturer suggests that that material might be appropriate for that use. - No. We need an analogy wherein a product was originally created for purpose A but used by someone for purpose

(C) A producer of shipping containers begins using a new type of strapping material, which a rock-climbing expert soon finds useful as an especially strong and reliable component of safety ropes for climbing. - ok. Shipping container companies may have started using it for shipping purposes, but the rock climbing expert found use for rock climbing.

(D) A consultant to a book editor suggests the use of a new type of software for typesetting, and after researching the software the editor decides not to adopt it but finds a better alternative as a result of the research. - No

(E) A friend of a landscaping expert advises the use of a certain material for the creation of retaining walls and, as a result, the landscaper explores the use of several similar materials.­ - No­
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Sajjad1994 Could you also please provide solution for question 7 -
"Which one of the following would, if true, most weaken the author’s position in the passage?"

I am not sure what needs to be considered as an author's position and how can we establish that the below option will weaken it -

(A) Between 1927 and 1929, Brancusi experimented with the use of highly reflective material for the creation of positive-light sculptures.
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For 7th question :

Summary of the passage : The author in the passage has put emphasis on how Naguchi intutively asked and answered deeply original questions.

Choice A only proves this statement false, by bringing in a possibility that Naguchi's idea of reflective metal in sculptures is not original.
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Why is C incorrect? The passage discussed his use of chromonickel steel
Sajjad1994
reginaald
Sajjad1994

Can you please post the explanation for the official answers to questions 1,2 and 3

Explanation

2. The passage provides information sufficient to answer which one of the following questions?

Difficulty Level: 700

Explanation

Go back to the passage as needed to verify or disprove each choice.

A. No. This is not addressed anywhere in the passage.

B. No. Art forms other than sculpture are not addressed anywhere in the passage.

C. No. The passage discusses only his use of metal.

D. Yes. This is answered in the second sentence of the last paragraph.

E. No. This is not addressed anywhere in the passage.

Answer: D
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Bixy34
Why is C incorrect? The passage discussed his use of chromonickel steel

Hi Bixy34

C is incorrect because it asks about materials other than metal used by Noguchi postBrancusi. The only nonmetallic material mentioned in the passage (stone) is used while Noguchi was with Brancusi, so you have no idea what, if any, nonmetallic materials Noguchi used a*er this association ended.
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