Hi Nusheena, Casey, and Nashville!
Passage A discusses scientific research--check out line 11 "new research suggests" and lines 17-30 "In the 1990s, psychologists compared associations that speakers of German and Spanish make....". The entire second half of the passage discusses the study comparing German and Spanish speakers and the difference in associations they make for inanimate objects. That's science!
Answer choice (C) states "Do differences among languages result from different ways of thinking about the world?" but this actually reverses the relationship discussed in the passages. The passages mainly talk about how differences in language can affect how speakers think about the world (the Whorfian hypothesis is that our language restricts how we think; gendered nouns may make people associate gendered characteristics with inanimate objects; learning number words may create concepts of exact numerical equality, etc.). Answer choice (C) gets this backwards by suggesting that the passages are discussing whether different ways of thinking about the world cause differences among languages. Neither passage posits that different ways of thinking about the world cause differences among languages; rather they discuss how differences among languages may cause different ways of thinking.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey