GEN 499 Week 4 Quiz | Assignment Help | Ashford University(2020)
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- 09 Sep 2020
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GEN 499 Week 4 Quiz | Assignment Help | Ashford University(2020)
GEN 499 Week 4 Quiz
Question 1
Mrs. Orlof teaches two
history classes, one in the morning and one in the afternoon. Yesterday she
gave the same test to both classes. Anyone who failed the test must take a
retest. Since a greater percentage of students who took the morning test failed
the test than students who took the afternoon test, more of Orlof’s morning
history students than afternoon history students will have to take the retest.
The conclusion above is
not necessarily valid because:
o
more students may have taken the test in
the afternoon than in the morning.
o
some of the students who passed the
afternoon test may have received information about the test from morning
students.
o
some students may have been absent from
both classes.
o
more students in the morning class may
have passed the test than failed the test.
Question 2
All sages provide both
wisdom and inspiration. Since Dasha’s speech contained wisdom and greatly
inspired her audience, Dasha is a sage.
Which one of the
following points out the flaw in the argument above?
o
Just because Dasha is a sage doesn’t
mean that she is always wise and inspirational.
o
Just because Dasha’s speech provided
wisdom and inspiration doesn’t mean that it provided more wisdom than
inspiration.
o
Just because Dasha satisfied two
requirements of being a sage doesn’t necessarily mean that she satisfies all
the requirements of being a sage.
o
Just because Dasha provided wisdom and
inspiration in a speech doesn’t mean that all sages use speeches to provide
wisdom and inspiration.
Question 3
Catherine goes to her
local movie theater only to see romantic comedies. Since Catherine did not go
to the movies yesterday, there is not a romantic comedy playing at her local
theater.
The reasoning above is
flawed because the evidence:
o
does not suggest that Catherine goes to
see every romantic comedy that plays at her local movie theater.
o
implies that Catherine is uninterested
in most types of movies.
o
does not indicate whether Catherine
watches only romantic comedies at home.
o
suggests that Catherine’s local movie
theater hardly ever shows romantic comedies.
Question 4
The average height of
members of the high school basketball team is six feet, three inches. Jerry is
on the high school basketball team, so Jerry must be taller than six feet.
The argument above is
flawed because it confuses
o
an average for the individuals that make
up that average.
o
people who are six feet three inches
tall for people who are exactly six feet tall
o
the members of one team with the members
of another team
o
Jerry with other members of the team
Question 5
People have claimed
that Jamie’s paintings have given them the blues. Clearly this cannot be
entirely correct, since many of Jamie’s paintings contain no blue at all.
The argument above is
flawed because the author:
o
is not a noted painting expert.
o
relies on contradictory facts.
o
misinterprets a key term.
o
provides no evidence.
Question 6
Reporter: A new
campaign finance reform bill being considered by Congress would limit the
amount of campaign contributions that political candidates can receive.
However, a survey of candidates running for mayor, governor, and senate seats
shows that not one of them favors the bill. Clearly, there is no desire among
politicians to limit campaign contributions.
Which one of the
following points out the flaw in the reporter’s argument above?
o
The views of candidates currently
running for office do not necessarily represent the views of all politicians.
o
The reporter wrongly assumes that no
politician has ever supported a bill intended to limit campaign contributions.
o
The evidence provided by the reporter
suggests that most politicians are in favor of the new bill.
o
The reporter doesn’t indicate the amount
that the new bill would limit campaign contributions.
Question 7
The untimely death of
Professor Hathaway halted his groundbreaking research into the uses of solar
power. It therefore appears that Hathaway’s research will not result in
practical applications.
Which one of the
following, if true, most seriously weakens the argument?
o
Researchers at other universities are
conducting research into the potential applications of solar power.
o
Officials at Professor Hathaway’s
university have refused requests to make Professor Hathaway’s research public.
o
Not all professors at Professor
Hathaway’s university knew that he was conducting research into the uses of
solar power.
o
Professor Hathaway’s research can be
used by other scientists to create useful applications.
Question 8
Some politicians claim
to support the environment in speeches they make around the country. However,
to get to those speeches they ride in gas guzzling, pollution creating private
planes. They therefore clearly don’t believe a word of what they say and are
actually making the environmental problem worse.
Which one of the
following, if true, would best weaken the argument above?
o
Improvements to the environment brought
about through the politicians’ public support of environmental regulations more
than offset the damage done to the environment by the politicians’ private
planes.
o
A majority of voters surveyed agree that
politicians sometimes make society’s problems worse.
o
Most people who hear the politicians’
speeches on the environment are unconvinced by their arguments.
o
Some of the politicians try to hide the
fact that they travel by private plane to their speeches around the country.
Question 9
Aron: The two double A
batteries in my CD player are dead, so the CD player doesn’t work. My
television remote control, which also uses two double A batteries, works fine.
So if I move the two batteries from my television remote control to my CD
player, the CD player will definitely work.
Aron’s argument is most
strengthened if which one of the following is true?
o
Double A batteries provide less energy
than either C batteries or D batteries.
o
Aron has used his television remote
control more times than he has used his CD player since inserting the current
batteries into each device.
o
The amount of energy required to power
the CD player is not greater than the amount of energy needed to power the
television remote control.
o
Aron inserted the current batteries in
his television remote control two months before he inserted the current
batteries in his CD player.
Question 10
Last season at City
Opera House, far more people attended opera X than opera Y. However, opera Y
generated far greater net profits for City Opera House than did opera X.
Each of the following
could directly explain the result indicated above EXCEPT:
o
a difference in the merchandise sales
associated with operas X and Y.
o
a difference in the subject matters of
operas X and Y.
o
a difference in the operating expenses
of operas X and Y.
o
a difference in the ticket prices of
operas X and Y.
Question 11
Surveys show that
people who use calorie information to decide which foods to eat consume on
average 100 calories less than they would if they didn’t check calorie
information before eating. Strangely though, people who use calorie information
in this way weigh more on average than people who don’t check calorie
information before eating.
Which one of the
following, if true, best explains the surprising statistic stated above?
o
People with a weight problem are most
likely to check calorie information before eating.
o
Some people who check calorie
information before eating don’t consume any fewer calories than they would if
they didn’t check.
o
People who usually check calorie
information before eating consume more calories if they stop checking.
o
There are fewer people who check calorie
information before eating than people who don’t check calorie information
before eating.
Question 12
Choose the pair of
words/phrases among the choices that exhibits the same logical relationship as
the words/phrases in the following pair.
building : blueprint
o
guitar : song
o
bridge : island
o
cake : recipe
o
ship : sea
Question 13
Choose the pair of
words/phrases among the choices that exhibits the same logical relationship as
the words/phrases in the following pair.
conductor : orchestra
o
director : cast
o
producer : movie
o
teacher : principal
o
skater : rink
Question 14
Choose the pair of
words/phrases among the choices that exhibits the same logical relationship as
the words/phrases in the following pair.
heavy : weight
o
color : size
o
hot : temperature
o
feather : scale
o dry :
Question 15
Barney: Last winter, I
slipped on the outside stairs of PineTree Café and broke my leg. My fall was
caused by ice on the stairs that the restaurant failed to remove. Since the
restaurant clearly did not provide a safe atmosphere for its customers, I am
justified in taking it to court.
Lydia: Unwarranted
lawsuits are sweeping the country—lawsuits that have no legal merit and are
brought simply to make lawyers and their clients rich. If this trend continues,
soon our legal system will be swamped to the point where it won’t be able to
administer justice to people who truly deserve it. You therefore should drop
your case against PineTree Café.
The speakers above
appear to disagree on which one of the following points?
o
The legal system will soon be unable to
administer justice to people who deserve it.
o
Many unwarranted lawsuits are sweeping
the country. Correct!
o
Barney’s lawsuit against Pinetree Café
is unwarranted.
o
Barney is likely to win his case against
Pinetree Café.
Question 16
Arthur: The solutions
to most mystery novels I read are not believable. However, my enjoyment of a
mystery novel depends only on its suspenseful mood and colorful characters.
Norton: Roughly 80% of
the mystery novels I read have believable solutions, which is good since I do
not enjoy mystery novels that don’t have believable solutions.
The speakers above:
o
disagree on whether an author’s
enjoyment in creating a mystery novel influences whether that novel will have a
believable solution.
o
disagree on whether a believable
solution is required for the enjoyment of a mystery novel.
o
agree that a suspenseful mood and
colorful characters add to the enjoyment of a mystery novel.
o
agree that most mystery novels do not
have believable solutions.
Question 17
Some drugs combat
obesity or alcohol addiction by turning off pleasure centers in the brain.
However, if the dosage is too high, there’s a risk that people taking them will
be plunged into depression.
The statements above,
if true, support which one of the following assertions?
o
Drugs that affect pleasure centers in
the brain are often taken at dosages considered to be too high.
o
The benefits of a medication may be at
least somewhat offset by its side effects.
o
All drugs, if taken at too high a
dosage, pose the risk that the people taking them will be plunged into
depression.
o
It is useless to try to treat obesity or
alcohol addiction through drugs.
Question 18
In a survey of 10 film
historians, half voted for Nosferatu as the greatest vampire film ever made,
and the other half voted for Dracula. However, when asked which lead vampire
character they considered more charismatic, all of the film critics chose Dracula
over Nosferatu.
Based on the
information above, it must be true that for some film critics, their feelings
about the charisma of the lead character:
o
is not the most important factor they
consider when comparing two films.
o
is the most important factor they
consider when comparing two films.
o
is the least important factor they
consider when comparing two films.
o
is the only factor they consider when
comparing two films.
Question 19
Only circus animals
with a clean bill of health will perform in today’s exhibition. A monkey, a
poodle, and a horse will perform in today’s exhibition. No circus animals with
a clean bill of health were prescribed medications this week.
If the statements above
are true, which one of the following must also be true on the basis of them?
o
Neither the monkey nor the horse
performing in today’s circus exhibition were prescribed medications this week.
o
No more than two circus animals have a
clean bill of health.
o
No circus animals were prescribed
medications this week.
o
The monkey, poodle, and horse are the
only animals performing in today’s circus exhibition.
Question 20
The president spoke to
19 congressmen from Texas to encourage them to vote for a bill. Since four of
the 19 congressmen went on to vote for the bill, it is clear that the president
persuaded those four to vote the way they did.
The argument above
assumes that:
o
the four Texas congressmen who voted for
the bill were against it before they spoke to the president.
o
the president did not try to influence
the votes of any congressmen outside of Texas.
o
the Texas congressmen who voted against
the bill were persuaded by someone other than the president to vote the way
they did.
o
the bill will not pass because a
majority of Texas congressmen did not vote for it.
Question 21
Detective: The robbery
at the mall was carried out by a mall employee acting alone roughly one hour
after the mall closed last Saturday night. The only employees present at the
mall at the time of the robbery were security guards Evans and Clark. Since the
mall’s surveillance system was disabled by the thief just before the robbery,
the thief must be Evans.
The argument above
would be valid if:
o
the mall’s surveillance system is
usually used 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
o
Evans and Clark are the mall’s only
security guards.
o
both Evans and Clark are capable of
disabling the mall’s surveillance system.
o
Clark is incapable of disabling the
mall’s surveillance system.
Question 22
A company can either
invest in employee training seminars or update its computer network. Since
updating the computer network would result in more measurable benefits, the
company would be best off updating its computer network.
The argument above
assumes that:
o
The benefit of the company investing in
employee training seminars cannot be measured at all.
o
The employee training seminars would
focus on teaching employees to use the updated computer network.
o
The more measurable a benefit, the
greater value that benefit has to a company.
o
Investing in employee training seminars
would yield negative results for the company.
Question 23
Sometimes people get
caught in a “downward spiral,” a case in which something leads to a result
which in turn leads to more of the original thing, bringing on more of the
result. As the process continues, the result continually gets worse and worse.
An example is when people turn to binge eating when depressed, which causes
them to put on weight and feel unhealthy, which then makes them more depressed,
leading to more overeating, and so on.
The author is mainly
concerned with:
o
convincing people not to overeat.
o
explaining the process of the “downward
spiral.”
o
showing how overeating can lead to
depression.
o
showing how some processes lead to
surprising results.
Question 24
The very large increase
in allergies over the last thirty years is due to the great success of
immunizations administered over this time period. Since immunizations have
nearly eliminated life-threatening diseases such as polio, the human immune
system increasingly targets other environmental substances in order to keep
working properly. Allergy symptoms such as runny nose and itchy eyes result
when the immune system attacks pollen that is breathed in from the air.
Which one of the
following best expresses the main point of the passage above?
o
The use of immunizations has led to an
increase in allergies.
o
Viruses that once caused polio now cause
allergies.
o
Immunizations have been very successful
in eliminating life-threatening diseases.
o
Immunizations often have surprising side
effects.
Question 25
Political science
professor: Many people insist that the Internet is revolutionizing the
political process. They argue that Internet debates and online political polls
and chat rooms give people greater access to political information. And they’re
right that online political chatter increases daily. But offering or reading
anonymous online opinions does not by itself make for active political
participation. In the past one would attend a rally, protest, or town meeting
to engage in real politics. Today, people sit passively in front of computer
screens under the illusion that they are connecting with their fellow citizens.
Which one of the
following best expresses the main idea of the professor’s argument?
o
Internet debates and online political
polls and chat rooms give people greater access to political information.
o
Political organizations of the past bear
no resemblance to the political organizations of today.
o
While the Internet has made more
political content available, meaningful political involvement has decreased.
o
The Internet has revolutionized the
political process because it has allowed many more political viewpoints to be
expressed.