- Mon Nov 15, 2021 5:22 pm
#92096
To be honest, annabelle.swift, I don't know! The passage never really tells us what those physical systems are...but it doesn't have to. The fact that they are talking about physical systems (as opposed to, I suppose, theoretical ones?) is established in the first paragraph: "But physicists John Sommerer and Edward Ott have conceived of a physical system in which even the least change in the starting conditions—no matter how small, inadvertent, or undetectable—can alter results radically. " All the subsequent references to "systems" refer back to that original statement. Everything they are talking about applies to these physical systems, whatever they may be.
The best way to find the correct answer here is, as usual, to prephrase. Once you are done reading the passage you should always pause and ask yourself what the Main Point was. What does this author want us to believe? You should probably have come up with something like "these guys have an idea that, if they are right, could mean that valid scientific results might not always be capable of replication, which is a big deal." It's not about all results being that way, or even many, but just that some of them might be, and that makes answer B a great match.
Adam M. Tyson
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