- Mon Apr 15, 2019 4:45 pm
#64131
I think "the thousands of computers working simultaneously" is comparable to the large mass of ants, or to the large-scale climate trends, hasan66, rather than to the individual ants or isolated climate variables. It's about the groups, not the individual members of the group. However, for those folks who are drawn to answer A for that reason, consider these two aspects of the computers compared to the climate trends: first, the computers are NOT naturally occurring, but are programmed to do something fixed and predictable. We can determine every aspect of their behavior, because we decide what that behavior will be. The climate variables, like the ants, are somewhat unpredictable. In this way, the collection of computers in answer A is not analogous to the climate trends mentioned in the question.
Second, the behavior of the climate is the problem that we are studying, while the computers are the solution to that problem, or the tool with which we study that problem. We aren't trying to figure out how the computers behave when connected in a group - we are using the computers to help us predict and understand the behavior of the climate, or the ants.
In short, the computers are not analogous to anything else in the passage. We need the thing in Passage B that is a large-scale complex system to be studied using parallel computing. That's why answer A is incorrect - the computers aren't the system to be studied, but the tool used to study that system. The mass of ants is the analogous complex system.
Adam M. Tyson
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