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GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - GMAT MCQ


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30 Questions MCQ Test - GMAT Full Mock Test- 4

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GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 1

Though without understanding a word of what is being said, savvy communicators can follow a conversation in a foreign language by interpreting tone of voice and body language.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 1

C and D unnecessarily add ‘the person’. It is unclear to whom ‘the person’ refers.
A incorrectly adds ‘though’. B is shorter and simpler than E. Choice B is the correct answer.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 2

Wretched and increasing mendicants are requesting money on the streets, money that seems to be hard to come by in the deteriorating economy.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 2

This question involves determining whether words are modifying adjectives or nouns. What does wretched describe? The mendicants. The word ‘mendicants’ is a noun, so wretched stays as an adjective. That eliminates choices D and E. What does increasing refer to? It refers to the word ‘prevalent’, an adjective. Therefore you need an adverb to modify the adjective. Eliminate A and B. Choice C is the correct answer. In addition, the relative pronoun ‘that’ is correctly placed in C, next to the word to which it refers, ‘money’.

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GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 3

The new Xerox machine does more than simply copying documents; it can resize,lighten, and collate.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 3

This is a question of parallel structure. It can resize documents, lighten documents, collate documents and copy (or copying) documents. The form copy needs to be used, because this form is consistent with the rest of the sentence. That eliminates choices A, B and C. Choice D is incorrect as it changes the subject of the sentence to the functions of the machine, rather than the machine itself. The word ‘simply’ is in the wrong place in the sentence. The tense is also incorrect.Choice E is the correct answer.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 4

Because both parents worked full-time, they had a nanny who not only watchedthe children and also cleaned the house should it be messy.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 4

This question once again deals with idioms. In this case, the idiom you want is ‘not only x but also y’. The ‘not only’ adds a degree of emphasis that the simple conjunction ‘and’ cannot transmit. That leaves us with choices B and D as possible answers. D is shorter and simpler than B. ‘Was’ rather than ‘were’ should be used.Choice D is clearly the correct answer.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 5

Surprisingly obedient, the Smiths have a cat that follows simple instructions like“come” or “sit”, words to which usually only dogs respond.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 5

​This question involves a dangling modifier. Who or what is obedient? The cat or the Smiths? The cat. Therefore the word ‘cat’ should come after the word ‘the’.That leaves us with choices C, D and E. The clause containing ‘dogs respond’ uses the simple present tense. Therefore we want a similar form for the cat. Dogs respond, and the cat follows. Choice C is the correct answer.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 6

Actors on Broadway have the difficult task of being singers who must also performas dancers.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 6

Choices B, C, D and E incorrectly use the singular ‘dancer’. Choices D and E also incorrectly uses the singular ‘a singer’ to refer to the plural ‘actors’. Choice A is the correct answer.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 7

Regardless of the amount of dairy food they consume in adulthood, people whoconsumed little dairy food in childhood seem to be prone to bone fractures, adisadvantage that suggests a need for higher calcium consumption in childhood.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 7

'And have’, ‘and to have’ and ‘and they have’ in B, C, D, and E are unnecessary.Choice A is, therefore, the correct answer.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 8

The defending attorney weakened the prosecution’s arguments so much that, atthe end of the trial, the jury doubted that the victim had even existed.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 8

This question involves parallel structure. The attorney weakened something and the jury doubted something. A has this structure. B uses the wrong tense. C is too wordy. D and E are not parallel. Choice A can be the only possible answer.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 9

If the draft is not re-instated, less people will join the army in the coming 10 years than did in any other 10-year period in our nation’s history.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 9

The first thing you have to determine is whether you have less people or fewer people. People are countable. Fewer is correct. The next thing you have to examine is whether to use ‘as’ or ‘than’. This sentence is comparative. Fewer people did this than did that. As implies similarity. Choice E is the correct answer.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 10

Germany’s most infamous leader, Hitler’s policies were responsible for the slaughterof 6 million Jews.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 10

This question involves a dangling modifier. Were the policies Germany’s most infamous leader? No. Then they should not go first in the second part of the sentence. That eliminates choices A, B and C. Choice E is not as efficient as D.Choice D is the correct answer.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 11

No school policies forbid a teacher from scolding a student or to call the student’sparents based only on another child’s accusations.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 11

You forbid something or someone to do something. ‘Forbid from’ and ‘forbid that’ are idiomatically incorrect. Choices D and E use the passive voice and are wordy. Choice B is the correct answer.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 12

The miners were reluctant to embrace the company’s new unionization policybecause they thought it was merely meant to be a publicity stunt with no commitment to contract negotiation and eventually salary increases.

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 12

Should it be ‘eventual’ or ‘eventually’? The word modifies a noun, ‘salary increases’. Therefore you need an adjective. Eliminate A and B. D changes the meaning and implies that there was a commitment. The ‘one’ in E is not correct. It implies that a commitment would also be a publicity stunt. ‘Was’ in E is incorrect as the subject of the verb is plural. ‘A commitment’ would therefore also have to be changed to ‘commitments’. Choice C is the correct answer.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 13

The fall of the Berlin Wall represented a political victory of the free market against a centrally planned economy.
Though highly interventionist and dependent on international defense and industrial subsidy, West Germany was a model of economic expansion in the post-war era.
East Germany, while relatively successful in comparison with other Eastern Bloc nations, was far behind West Germany with regard to the buying power of its people. It was hard to avoid obvious comparisons such as the fact that 1 in 4 East Germans did not even have an indoor toilet. Western German authorities were therefore committed to rapid integration of the two Germanys without resorting to massive controls on internal migration, external capital controls, or continuation of a large state-owned industrial sector.
Other nations were already wary of a united Germany.
France, a perpetual competitor, saw Germany’s size advantage increase overnight. In Gross Domestic Product (“GDP”) alone, an historical size advantage of 23% jumped to nearly 30%, with stronger growth promised when East Germany was fully integrated.
Within Germany, there should have been no doubt that integration would be costly. The question was whether the government was up to the task. In Italy, for example, the central government has invested tremendous resources in promoting the economy of its underperforming Southern region. In contrast, in the United States, the local population bears the burden of varying economic performance. For example, the American South is allowed to exist with much higher rates of poverty and lower education than the rest of the nation.
Rather than allow East Germany to fall into total disrepair, with millions fleeing to the West and a long-term negative impact on national GDP growth, West German authorities decided to try to spend their way out of the crisis, creating almost overnight an infrastructure in East Germany to provide a standard of living comparable to that in West Germany. The goal was to take an under-performing country and raise it to “first world” standards in only a few years. This goal would have been preposterous had not West Germany possessed the resources to accomplish the task.

Q.The author mentions the United States most probably in order to

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 13

The question asks us to identify the reason that the author mentions the United States in the passage. In the third paragraph, the author asks whether West Germany was "up to the task" of re-unification. This is followed by the example of Italy as a government that does spend the necessary resources to help its underperforming regions. Then, the author mentions the United States as a counterexample with negative overtones: "In contrast, in the United States, the local population bears the burden of varying economic performance. For example, the American South is allowed to exist with much higher rates of poverty and lower education than the rest of the nation." [Emphasis added.] The use of the word "allowed" suggests that the author does not approve of the situation in the United States. Further, the very next paragraph begins . . ."Rather than allow East Germany to fall into total disrepair . . . " as if to further contrast the German government with that of the United States.
(A) The passage in general does not argue against any commonly held beliefs, including the specific example about the United States. 
(B) CORRECT.  This choice echoes our above analysis: the author views the situation cited as "undesirable."
(C) The author disapproves of the cited example, so he would not offer it as a possible advantageous solution to Germany's reunification.
(D) The passage does not call the principle into question; rather, the author indicates disapproval of this particular approach.
(E) The author disapproves of the cited example; he would not offer it as a positive lesson. 

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 14

The fall of the Berlin Wall represented a political victory of the free market against a centrally planned economy.
Though highly interventionist and dependent on international defense and industrial subsidy, West Germany was a model of economic expansion in the post-war era.
East Germany, while relatively successful in comparison with other Eastern Bloc nations, was far behind West Germany with regard to the buying power of its people. It was hard to avoid obvious comparisons such as the fact that 1 in 4 East Germans did not even have an indoor toilet. Western German authorities were therefore committed to rapid integration of the two Germanys without resorting to massive controls on internal migration, external capital controls, or continuation of a large state-owned industrial sector.
Other nations were already wary of a united Germany.
France, a perpetual competitor, saw Germany’s size advantage increase overnight. In Gross Domestic Product (“GDP”) alone, an historical size advantage of 23% jumped to nearly 30%, with stronger growth promised when East Germany was fully integrated.
Within Germany, there should have been no doubt that integration would be costly. The question was whether the government was up to the task. In Italy, for example, the central government has invested tremendous resources in promoting the economy of its underperforming Southern region. In contrast, in the United States, the local population bears the burden of varying economic performance. For example, the American South is allowed to exist with much higher rates of poverty and lower education than the rest of the nation.
Rather than allow East Germany to fall into total disrepair, with millions fleeing to the West and a long-term negative impact on national GDP growth, West German authorities decided to try to spend their way out of the crisis, creating almost overnight an infrastructure in East Germany to provide a standard of living comparable to that in West Germany. The goal was to take an under-performing country and raise it to “first world” standards in only a few years. This goal would have been preposterous had not West Germany possessed the resources to accomplish the task.

Q.Which of the following best describes the way the first paragraph functions in the context of the passage?

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 14

The question asks us to identify the purpose of the first paragraph: what role does it play in the context of the passage as a whole? The first paragraph presents historical information about the relationship between East and West Germany. This information is given as background to the subsequent paragraphs. We need to find an answer choice that is consistent with this analysis.  
(A) The relationship between East and West Germany is not merely one example of a much larger general theory; the passage is about this specific circumstance.
(B) The passage does not seek to alter or revise a commonly held view, either in the first paragraph or elsewhere.
(C) CORRECT.  The first paragraph presents the background information necessary to understand the claims made in the rest of the passage.
(D) The first paragraph does not raise questions; it provides facts as to the relationship between East and West Germany at a specific point in time.
(E) The first paragraph does not provide two opposing points of view.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 15

The fall of the Berlin Wall represented a political victory of the free market against a centrally planned economy.
Though highly interventionist and dependent on international defense and industrial subsidy, West Germany was a model of economic expansion in the post-war era.
East Germany, while relatively successful in comparison with other Eastern Bloc nations, was far behind West Germany with regard to the buying power of its people. It was hard to avoid obvious comparisons such as the fact that 1 in 4 East Germans did not even have an indoor toilet. Western German authorities were therefore committed to rapid integration of the two Germanys without resorting to massive controls on internal migration, external capital controls, or continuation of a large state-owned industrial sector.
Other nations were already wary of a united Germany.
France, a perpetual competitor, saw Germany’s size advantage increase overnight. In Gross Domestic Product (“GDP”) alone, an historical size advantage of 23% jumped to nearly 30%, with stronger growth promised when East Germany was fully integrated.
Within Germany, there should have been no doubt that integration would be costly. The question was whether the government was up to the task. In Italy, for example, the central government has invested tremendous resources in promoting the economy of its underperforming Southern region. In contrast, in the United States, the local population bears the burden of varying economic performance. For example, the American South is allowed to exist with much higher rates of poverty and lower education than the rest of the nation.
Rather than allow East Germany to fall into total disrepair, with millions fleeing to the West and a long-term negative impact on national GDP growth, West German authorities decided to try to spend their way out of the crisis, creating almost overnight an infrastructure in East Germany to provide a standard of living comparable to that in West Germany. The goal was to take an under-performing country and raise it to “first world” standards in only a few years. This goal would have been preposterous had not West Germany possessed the resources to accomplish the task.

Q.The passage suggests which of the following about the relationship between West Germany and France?

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 15

The question asks us to infer something from the passage regarding the relationship between West Germany and France.  The passage notes that countries were "wary of a united Germany" and next mentions that France, "a perpetual competitor, saw Germany’s size advantage increase overnight." We need to find an answer choice that can be deduced from this information alone; we cannot conclude too much.   If France is wary of Germany's impending larger size, then France must also be worried that it will be negatively impacted by the change.
(A) The above information tells us nothing about the relative stabilities of the two economies.
(B) The above information does not tell us the entire history of the relative GDPs of the two countries.  "Always" is too extreme.
(C) The above information does not mention either population or international trade with respect to the two countries' economies.
(D) CORRECT.  If France does not view its relative economic position as immutable, or unable to be changed, then it is sensible for the country to worry that it might be negatively impacted by the changes in Germany. 
(E) The passage does not state or imply that West Germany specifically planned to bolster its position over that of France.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 16

In April 1841, medical missionary Reverend Peter Parker, M.D., addressed an enthusiastic audience gathered at a special meeting of the Boston Medical Association. His subject was “the condition and prospects of the hospitals of China.” He described his own work at the hospital he had established in the foreign factory district outside the city walls of Canton where he offered free treatment for both rich and poor. At P’u Ai I Yuan (Hospital of Universal Love, as it was known in Chinese) Parker and his colleagues used western surgical techniques as a means to facilitate religious conversion. Medicine, Parker believed, could be the “handmaid of religious truth,” and he held regular religious services for his patients.
While he had, at best, modest success attracting converts to Christianity, the hospital had fostered tremendous goodwill among the Chinese. It was a bright spot amid the gloomy period of Western-Chinese tension that led to the outbreak of the Opium Wars between Great Britain and China. Forced to flee Canton because of these rising hostilities, Parker returned to the United States to raise money and interest in his operations. In the spring of 1841, he spoke to many religious societies, a few medical bodies, and even the United States Congress, where he preached to members of the House and Senate and lobbied legislators on the need for diplomatic relations with China.
In his talks, Parker described the state of medical and surgical knowledge—or, rather, scientific ignorance—in China. Despite the surgical feats of legendary ancient doctors such as Hua T’o of the third century A.D., surgery did not develop to any great extent in China. Some accounts attribute this to Confucian precepts about the integrity of the body and proscriptions against any form of mutilation or dismemberment; others emphasize the pharmacological tendencies within traditional Chinese medicine and a preference for moxas and other caustic plasters.
Whatever the cause, it was undoubtedly the case that Parker’s surgical practice tapped into a huge unmet need.
Almost as soon as he opened his Ophthalmic Hospital in Canton, as it was known in English, he acquired a reputation as a surgeon of such skill that the hospital quickly became a general hospital. Parker and his small staff handled thousands of cases each year, treating more than fifty thousand cases by the 1850s. His hospital became the model for other medical missions, and Parker and his British colleagues formed the Medical Missionary Society of China to coordinate the efforts of all the western hospitals springing up in the trading ports of Asia. Parker earned his reputation performing operations to remove tumors and cataracts—forms of surgery with relatively good odds of success and ones that could be accomplished quickly, important in an era without anesthetics. Because of the absence of surgery in China, a large number of patients were afflicted with mature tumors (typically five to thirty-five years old) of a size seldom seen in Europe or the United States. Parker was able to help these patients in ways previously thought impossible in China. He has thus been credited with bringing Western medicine to the most populous country on Earth.

Q. The author mentions Hua T’o in the third paragraph most probably in order to

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 16

Hua T'o is mentioned in the following context: "In his talks, Parker described the state of medical and surgical knowledge--or, rather, scientific ignorance--in China. Despite the surgical feats of legendary ancient doctors such as Hua T'o of the third century A.D., surgery did not develop to any great extent in China."
(A) CORRECT. The fact that, by the nineteenth century, Chinese surgical knowledge had not developed beyond that of an "ancient" doctor underscores the need to modernize nineteenth century Chinese medicine.
(B) Hua T’o is the only Chinese medical figure mentioned in the passage, so the author does not mention him to trace the history of such figures.
(C) The topic sentence of the second paragraph concerns the lack of medical and surgical knowledge, not the lack of leading physicians in nineteenth century China.
(D) While the author recognizes Hua T’o’s achievements, citing “the surgical feats of legendary ancient doctors,” the overall context reveals that the point was not to celebrate such achievements, but to indicate how little had been achieved since.
(E) The author does not defend Chinese medicine against criticism; in fact, the author uses the example of Hua T’o to support Parker’s opinion about the state of scientific ignorance in China in the nineteenth century.  

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 17

In April 1841, medical missionary Reverend Peter Parker, M.D., addressed an enthusiastic audience gathered at a special meeting of the Boston Medical Association. His subject was “the condition and prospects of the hospitals of China.” He described his own work at the hospital he had established in the foreign factory district outside the city walls of Canton where he offered free treatment for both rich and poor. At P’u Ai I Yuan (Hospital of Universal Love, as it was known in Chinese) Parker and his colleagues used western surgical techniques as a means to facilitate religious conversion. Medicine, Parker believed, could be the “handmaid of religious truth,” and he held regular religious services for his patients.
While he had, at best, modest success attracting converts to Christianity, the hospital had fostered tremendous goodwill among the Chinese. It was a bright spot amid the gloomy period of Western-Chinese tension that led to the outbreak of the Opium Wars between Great Britain and China. Forced to flee Canton because of these rising hostilities, Parker returned to the United States to raise money and interest in his operations. In the spring of 1841, he spoke to many religious societies, a few medical bodies, and even the United States Congress, where he preached to members of the House and Senate and lobbied legislators on the need for diplomatic relations with China.
In his talks, Parker described the state of medical and surgical knowledge—or, rather, scientific ignorance—in China. Despite the surgical feats of legendary ancient doctors such as Hua T’o of the third century A.D., surgery did not develop to any great extent in China. Some accounts attribute this to Confucian precepts about the integrity of the body and proscriptions against any form of mutilation or dismemberment; others emphasize the pharmacological tendencies within traditional Chinese medicine and a preference for moxas and other caustic plasters.
Whatever the cause, it was undoubtedly the case that Parker’s surgical practice tapped into a huge unmet need.
Almost as soon as he opened his Ophthalmic Hospital in Canton, as it was known in English, he acquired a reputation as a surgeon of such skill that the hospital quickly became a general hospital. Parker and his small staff handled thousands of cases each year, treating more than fifty thousand cases by the 1850s. His hospital became the model for other medical missions, and Parker and his British colleagues formed the Medical Missionary Society of China to coordinate the efforts of all the western hospitals springing up in the trading ports of Asia. Parker earned his reputation performing operations to remove tumors and cataracts—forms of surgery with relatively good odds of success and ones that could be accomplished quickly, important in an era without anesthetics. Because of the absence of surgery in China, a large number of patients were afflicted with mature tumors (typically five to thirty-five years old) of a size seldom seen in Europe or the United States. Parker was able to help these patients in ways previously thought impossible in China. He has thus been credited with bringing Western medicine to the most populous country on Earth.

Q. According to the passage, all of the following are true of Peter Parker EXCEPT

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 17

his question asks which of the statements about Peter Parker is not true. Four of the statement can be verified in the text, allowing us to select the correct answer by process of elimination. 
(A) In the last paragraph, the passage states that Parker "acquired a reputation as a surgeon of such skill that the hospital quickly became a general hospital."
(B) In the first paragraph, the passage states that Parker "offered free treatment for both rich and poor,” so he must have believe that all deserved quality medical treatment. 
(C) CORRECT. While Parker did not feel that that nineteenth century Chinese medical practices were advanced, the passage never mentions an emotion similar to "disdain" in describing Parker's feelings towards these practices.
(D) In the second paragraph, the passage states that Parker "returned to the United States to raise money and interest in his operations." Additionally, Parker "and his British colleagues formed the Medical Missionary Society of China to coordinate the efforts of all the western hospitals springing up in the trading ports of Asia." 
(E) The second paragraph opens with the statement that Parker “had, at best, modest success attracting converts to Christianity," suggesting that he did not completely achieve his missionary goals.  

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 18

In April 1841, medical missionary Reverend Peter Parker, M.D., addressed an enthusiastic audience gathered at a special meeting of the Boston Medical Association. His subject was “the condition and prospects of the hospitals of China.” He described his own work at the hospital he had established in the foreign factory district outside the city walls of Canton where he offered free treatment for both rich and poor. At P’u Ai I Yuan (Hospital of Universal Love, as it was known in Chinese) Parker and his colleagues used western surgical techniques as a means to facilitate religious conversion. Medicine, Parker believed, could be the “handmaid of religious truth,” and he held regular religious services for his patients.
While he had, at best, modest success attracting converts to Christianity, the hospital had fostered tremendous goodwill among the Chinese. It was a bright spot amid the gloomy period of Western-Chinese tension that led to the outbreak of the Opium Wars between Great Britain and China. Forced to flee Canton because of these rising hostilities, Parker returned to the United States to raise money and interest in his operations. In the spring of 1841, he spoke to many religious societies, a few medical bodies, and even the United States Congress, where he preached to members of the House and Senate and lobbied legislators on the need for diplomatic relations with China.
In his talks, Parker described the state of medical and surgical knowledge—or, rather, scientific ignorance—in China. Despite the surgical feats of legendary ancient doctors such as Hua T’o of the third century A.D., surgery did not develop to any great extent in China. Some accounts attribute this to Confucian precepts about the integrity of the body and proscriptions against any form of mutilation or dismemberment; others emphasize the pharmacological tendencies within traditional Chinese medicine and a preference for moxas and other caustic plasters.
Whatever the cause, it was undoubtedly the case that Parker’s surgical practice tapped into a huge unmet need.
Almost as soon as he opened his Ophthalmic Hospital in Canton, as it was known in English, he acquired a reputation as a surgeon of such skill that the hospital quickly became a general hospital. Parker and his small staff handled thousands of cases each year, treating more than fifty thousand cases by the 1850s. His hospital became the model for other medical missions, and Parker and his British colleagues formed the Medical Missionary Society of China to coordinate the efforts of all the western hospitals springing up in the trading ports of Asia. Parker earned his reputation performing operations to remove tumors and cataracts—forms of surgery with relatively good odds of success and ones that could be accomplished quickly, important in an era without anesthetics. Because of the absence of surgery in China, a large number of patients were afflicted with mature tumors (typically five to thirty-five years old) of a size seldom seen in Europe or the United States. Parker was able to help these patients in ways previously thought impossible in China. He has thus been credited with bringing Western medicine to the most populous country on Earth.

Q. The primary purpose of the passage is to

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 18

The question asks for the primary purpose of the passage. In other words, what was the author's agenda in writing the passage? The correct answer must take the entirety of the passage into account without misrepresenting the author's intent. Typically, the opening paragraph and the topic sentences of each paragraph will reveal the focus of the passage.  (A) The passage focuses primarily on the medical activities of Peter Parker in China and on behalf of China, not on the status of the medical profession in China before his arrival in the country.  
(B) The author summarizes the contributions of Peter Parker, ending the passage with the statement that Parker “has thus been credited with bringing Western medicine to” China, but does not argue that China could not have gained modern medical knowledge without the influence of Peter Parker.
(C) The passage focuses on the introduction of Western medicine into China, not the state of medicine in China before the nineteenth century.(D) The only view of nineteenth century Chinese medicine presented in the passage is that of Peter Parker, who spoke on the subject in his talks once back in the West. The passage does not challenge Parker’s view.
(E) CORRECT. The passage as a whole concerns the activities of Peter Parker and his influence in bringing Western medicine to China in the nineteenth century. 

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 19

A clone is a genetically identical copy of a living organism.
Human clones are nothing new; they occur naturally in the recognizable form of identical twins. Not until the successful cloning of a sheep called Dolly, however, has the possibility of intentionally producing an identical copy of a human been considered seriously.
Production of a human clone would most likely utilize the same basic methodology that resulted in Dolly. A human egg would be retrieved from an individual, and its genetic material (DNA) would be removed and replaced with DNA derived from any adult human cell type. This would bypass the need for fertilization of the egg by the sperm in order to obtain a full complement of DNA. In a laboratory dish, the egg would then undergo several cell divisions. Placed into a uterus, the resulting embryo would grow and, with luck, develop until birth.
Although this cloning technique is conceptually and procedurally simple, its success rate has been extremely low. The birth of one Dolly, for instance, required the preparation of 277 re-nucleated eggs, followed by the implantation of 29 resulting best embryos. The low success rate can be attributed to the difference between the young DNA of a normally fertilized egg and the genetic material of the re-nucleated egg, which is mature and of defined destiny – it has already committed itself to a particular physiological role. In order for proper fetal development to occur, mature DNA must be coaxed into reverting to its youthful state, a complex process that will be difficult to achieve for the human species.
Beyond the practical difficulties of intentional human cloning, scientists, politicians, and others have raised serious ethical concerns about this practice. For example, there is a chance that the cloning procedure would adversely affect the developing embryo. There also might be deleterious effects on the long-term health of the clone.
Proponents of human cloning counter that human sexual reproduction is not a risk-free affair either. Even if human cloning could be made safe, the motivations behind producing human clones do not fall clearly on one side of the ethical divide. While proponents stress potentially appealing motivations – a man and a woman who are both carriers of a genetic disease can use cloning to assure that their child will not be afflicted with the disorder – critics argue that the practice could and likely would be used for unethical ends, such as to select for certain traits, such as hair/eye color or sexual orientation, for example.

Q. The primary purpose of the passage is to

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 19

The question asks for the primary purpose of the passage. The correct answer must take the entirety of the passage into account without misrepresenting its focus. The passage focuses on the process by which cloning occurs and gives a brief discussion of the debate surrounding the ethics of the practice; in this debate, the author presents both sides from the points of view of others (critics and proponents)
(A) The passage does not dismiss cloning as entirely unethical, it merely raises the issue of ethics. 
(B) Cloning is not a medical procedure, and furthermore the passage does not defend cloning. It gives a more neutral presentation of the topic.
(C) CORRECT. This passage explains cloning and discusses its ramifications
(D) Cloning is not a hypothesis, as the passage states – it has been successfully accomplished with sheep. Furthermore the passage does not focus only on the negative consequences.
(E) Cloning is not a new medical approach. Also the passage doesn't analyze possible outcomes, or results, of cloning; it discusses the positive and negative ramifications of cloning.  

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 20

A clone is a genetically identical copy of a living organism.
Human clones are nothing new; they occur naturally in the recognizable form of identical twins. Not until the successful cloning of a sheep called Dolly, however, has the possibility of intentionally producing an identical copy of a human been considered seriously.
Production of a human clone would most likely utilize the same basic methodology that resulted in Dolly. A human egg would be retrieved from an individual, and its genetic material (DNA) would be removed and replaced with DNA derived from any adult human cell type. This would bypass the need for fertilization of the egg by the sperm in order to obtain a full complement of DNA. In a laboratory dish, the egg would then undergo several cell divisions. Placed into a uterus, the resulting embryo would grow and, with luck, develop until birth.
Although this cloning technique is conceptually and procedurally simple, its success rate has been extremely low. The birth of one Dolly, for instance, required the preparation of 277 re-nucleated eggs, followed by the implantation of 29 resulting best embryos. The low success rate can be attributed to the difference between the young DNA of a normally fertilized egg and the genetic material of the re-nucleated egg, which is mature and of defined destiny – it has already committed itself to a particular physiological role. In order for proper fetal development to occur, mature DNA must be coaxed into reverting to its youthful state, a complex process that will be difficult to achieve for the human species.
Beyond the practical difficulties of intentional human cloning, scientists, politicians, and others have raised serious ethical concerns about this practice. For example, there is a chance that the cloning procedure would adversely affect the developing embryo. There also might be deleterious effects on the long-term health of the clone.
Proponents of human cloning counter that human sexual reproduction is not a risk-free affair either. Even if human cloning could be made safe, the motivations behind producing human clones do not fall clearly on one side of the ethical divide. While proponents stress potentially appealing motivations – a man and a woman who are both carriers of a genetic disease can use cloning to assure that their child will not be afflicted with the disorder – critics argue that the practice could and likely would be used for unethical ends, such as to select for certain traits, such as hair/eye color or sexual orientation, for example.

Q. The author of the passage mentions Dolly most probably in order to

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 20

In the first paragraph, the author states "Not until the successful cloning of a sheep called Dolly, however, has the possibility of intentionally producing an identical copy of a human been considered seriously."  This indicates that the author believes Dolly's success has encouraged researchers to pursue human cloning.
(A) CORRECT.  If researchers have been encouraged by Dolly's success to pursue human cloning, it must be because they believe there is a chance of success.
(B) Dolly is mentioned in the first paragraph; the ethical concerns are discussed in the fourth paragraph.  In addition, the author does not show that ethical concerns are misguided; he merely presents both sides of the argument.
(C) The author does not argue, or even discuss, anywhere in the passage the idea that one type of cloning is less efficient than another type.
(D) The author does not argue for (or against) human cloning anywhere in the passage.
(E) The author does not refute anything in the passage.  In the fourth paragraph, the author does present the viewpoints of proponents and critics, but the author does not weigh in on the debate.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 21

A clone is a genetically identical copy of a living organism.
Human clones are nothing new; they occur naturally in the recognizable form of identical twins. Not until the successful cloning of a sheep called Dolly, however, has the possibility of intentionally producing an identical copy of a human been considered seriously.
Production of a human clone would most likely utilize the same basic methodology that resulted in Dolly. A human egg would be retrieved from an individual, and its genetic material (DNA) would be removed and replaced with DNA derived from any adult human cell type. This would bypass the need for fertilization of the egg by the sperm in order to obtain a full complement of DNA. In a laboratory dish, the egg would then undergo several cell divisions. Placed into a uterus, the resulting embryo would grow and, with luck, develop until birth.
Although this cloning technique is conceptually and procedurally simple, its success rate has been extremely low. The birth of one Dolly, for instance, required the preparation of 277 re-nucleated eggs, followed by the implantation of 29 resulting best embryos. The low success rate can be attributed to the difference between the young DNA of a normally fertilized egg and the genetic material of the re-nucleated egg, which is mature and of defined destiny – it has already committed itself to a particular physiological role. In order for proper fetal development to occur, mature DNA must be coaxed into reverting to its youthful state, a complex process that will be difficult to achieve for the human species.
Beyond the practical difficulties of intentional human cloning, scientists, politicians, and others have raised serious ethical concerns about this practice. For example, there is a chance that the cloning procedure would adversely affect the developing embryo. There also might be deleterious effects on the long-term health of the clone.
Proponents of human cloning counter that human sexual reproduction is not a risk-free affair either. Even if human cloning could be made safe, the motivations behind producing human clones do not fall clearly on one side of the ethical divide. While proponents stress potentially appealing motivations – a man and a woman who are both carriers of a genetic disease can use cloning to assure that their child will not be afflicted with the disorder – critics argue that the practice could and likely would be used for unethical ends, such as to select for certain traits, such as hair/eye color or sexual orientation, for example.

Q. According to the passage, which of the following is a potential obstacle to human cloning?

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 21

The third paragraph states "The low success rate can be attributed to the difference between the young DNA of a normally fertilized egg and the genetic material of the re-nucleated egg, which is mature and of defined destiny – it has already committed itself to a particular physiological role." This means that human cloning faces difficulties in overcoming the fixed roles of mature DNA.
(A) The difficulty lies in overcoming the fixed roles of mature DNA; this choice does not address the issue.
(B) CORRECT.  "Predetermination" reflects the fixed rolls of DNA found with "mature" or adult cells.
(C) The passage does not mention funding issues.
(D) The passage does not mention a need to determine "biological relationships within an egg" or the equivalent.  The issue revolves around the different between young DNA and mature DNA.
(E) The passage does not mention any issues surrounding chemical reactions in the uterus.  The issue revolves around the different between young DNA and mature DNA. 

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 22

A clone is a genetically identical copy of a living organism.
Human clones are nothing new; they occur naturally in the recognizable form of identical twins. Not until the successful cloning of a sheep called Dolly, however, has the possibility of intentionally producing an identical copy of a human been considered seriously.
Production of a human clone would most likely utilize the same basic methodology that resulted in Dolly. A human egg would be retrieved from an individual, and its genetic material (DNA) would be removed and replaced with DNA derived from any adult human cell type. This would bypass the need for fertilization of the egg by the sperm in order to obtain a full complement of DNA. In a laboratory dish, the egg would then undergo several cell divisions. Placed into a uterus, the resulting embryo would grow and, with luck, develop until birth.
Although this cloning technique is conceptually and procedurally simple, its success rate has been extremely low. The birth of one Dolly, for instance, required the preparation of 277 re-nucleated eggs, followed by the implantation of 29 resulting best embryos. The low success rate can be attributed to the difference between the young DNA of a normally fertilized egg and the genetic material of the re-nucleated egg, which is mature and of defined destiny – it has already committed itself to a particular physiological role. In order for proper fetal development to occur, mature DNA must be coaxed into reverting to its youthful state, a complex process that will be difficult to achieve for the human species.
Beyond the practical difficulties of intentional human cloning, scientists, politicians, and others have raised serious ethical concerns about this practice. For example, there is a chance that the cloning procedure would adversely affect the developing embryo. There also might be deleterious effects on the long-term health of the clone.
Proponents of human cloning counter that human sexual reproduction is not a risk-free affair either. Even if human cloning could be made safe, the motivations behind producing human clones do not fall clearly on one side of the ethical divide. While proponents stress potentially appealing motivations – a man and a woman who are both carriers of a genetic disease can use cloning to assure that their child will not be afflicted with the disorder – critics argue that the practice could and likely would be used for unethical ends, such as to select for certain traits, such as hair/eye color or sexual orientation, for example.

Q. The passage suggests which of the following?

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 22

The second paragraph states "A human egg would be retrieved from an individual, and its genetic material (DNA) would be removed and replaced with DNA derived from any adult human cell type.  This would bypass the need for fertilization of the egg by the sperm in order to obtain a full complement of DNA." This implies that the DNA from the adult cell already contains DNA from the egg (mother) and the sperm (father).
(A) The passage does not address anything about the time table for success with human cloning.
(B) The passage directly contradicts this statement by noting, in paragraph three, how difficult it was to clone Dolly.  In addition, the word "always" is extreme.
(C) The passage does not imply this; if anything, it implies that the similarity between the two types of egg is part of the reason why the success of cloning Dolly may translate into success with human cloning.
(D) CORRECT.  As noted above, the passage implies that an adult cell contains DNA from both parents.
(E) The passage does not imply this; if anything, it implies that the similarity between the two types of DNA is part of the reason why the success of cloning Dolly may translate into success with human cloning. 

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 23

A clone is a genetically identical copy of a living organism.
Human clones are nothing new; they occur naturally in the recognizable form of identical twins. Not until the successful cloning of a sheep called Dolly, however, has the possibility of intentionally producing an identical copy of a human been considered seriously.
Production of a human clone would most likely utilize the same basic methodology that resulted in Dolly. A human egg would be retrieved from an individual, and its genetic material (DNA) would be removed and replaced with DNA derived from any adult human cell type. This would bypass the need for fertilization of the egg by the sperm in order to obtain a full complement of DNA. In a laboratory dish, the egg would then undergo several cell divisions. Placed into a uterus, the resulting embryo would grow and, with luck, develop until birth.
Although this cloning technique is conceptually and procedurally simple, its success rate has been extremely low. The birth of one Dolly, for instance, required the preparation of 277 re-nucleated eggs, followed by the implantation of 29 resulting best embryos. The low success rate can be attributed to the difference between the young DNA of a normally fertilized egg and the genetic material of the re-nucleated egg, which is mature and of defined destiny – it has already committed itself to a particular physiological role. In order for proper fetal development to occur, mature DNA must be coaxed into reverting to its youthful state, a complex process that will be difficult to achieve for the human species.
Beyond the practical difficulties of intentional human cloning, scientists, politicians, and others have raised serious ethical concerns about this practice. For example, there is a chance that the cloning procedure would adversely affect the developing embryo. There also might be deleterious effects on the long-term health of the clone.
Proponents of human cloning counter that human sexual reproduction is not a risk-free affair either. Even if human cloning could be made safe, the motivations behind producing human clones do not fall clearly on one side of the ethical divide. While proponents stress potentially appealing motivations – a man and a woman who are both carriers of a genetic disease can use cloning to assure that their child will not be afflicted with the disorder – critics argue that the practice could and likely would be used for unethical ends, such as to select for certain traits, such as hair/eye color or sexual orientation, for example.

Q. Which of the following is NOT given in the passage as a reason not to pursue human cloning?

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 23

In this "double-negative" question, we have to be very careful to make sure that we don't get confused or turned around.  The "true-false" technique will be useful here: answer choices get a True if they are mentioned as a reason not to pursue human cloning and a False if they are not mentioned for this reason.  The correct answer will be labeled False.
(A) True.  Paragraph four states that there "might be deleterious effects on the longterm health of the clone."  This translates into unknown effects on adult human clones.
(B) True.  Paragraph four states "there is a chance that the cloning procedure would adversely affect the developing embryo."
(C) True.  Paragraph four states that cloning could be used to "select for certain traits, such as hair/eye color..." (D) True.  Paragraph three states that "mature DNA must be coaxed into reverting to its youthful state, a complex process that will be difficult to achieve for the human species."
(E) CORRECT.  False.  While it may be true that cloning is exorbitantly expensive, these costs are not mentioned anywhere in the passage.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 24

In recent years, a class of drugs known as COX-2 inhibitors has gotten much publicity for the drugs’ power to relieve inflammation and pain. These drugs are relatively new to the pharmaceutical industry, their mechanisms of action having been discovered only in 1971. That year, John Vane discovered the relationship between nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, such as aspirin, and a group of molecules, called prostaglandins, responsible for producing the sensation of pain in the human body, among other functions.
Prostaglandins were first discovered in the 1930s and are now known to be generated by most mammalian tissues in response to external stimuli. Unlike classical hormones that are synthesized in one tissue but act on a distant one, prostaglandins act on the cells that produce them or on cells located close to the prostaglandins’ cells of origin.
Aspirin alleviates pain by inhibiting the function of an enzyme called cyclooxygenase or COX; this inhibition prevents the production of prostaglandins. The three forms of this enzyme, COX-1, COX-2, and COX-3, all stimulate the production of prostaglandins, but each serves a different purpose. COX-1 functions to protect the stomach from irritating gastric acids. COX-2 functions to induce inflammation in injured tissue and COX-3 functions to control the sensation of pain. Aspirin and other similar drugs, such as naproxen, inhibit both COX-1 and COX-2, sometimes producing or aggravating stomach ulcers in patients who take them.
In order to eliminate the side effects of aspirin and related drugs, several pharmaceutical companies in the 1990s developed drugs that inhibited only COX-2. However, side effects almost always cropped up, even after clinical trials that seemed to indicate none. This often occurs because trials are conducted within very limited parameters; once the drug has been approved for mass distribution, however, the number of people taking it and the length of time that it is taken increase dramatically. Several COX-2 drugs that have been popular in recent years fit this pattern: initially successful in clinical trials, subsequent studies showed them to have serious, potentially lethal side effects.
Though prostaglandin chemistry and enzymology have been studied for half a century, pinpointing the exact role of the molecules in physiological processes still remains a challenge for researchers. Hence it is not surprising that recent therapeutic attempts to interfere with the formation of certain prostaglandins have produced unexpected side effects. It now seems that the hype surrounding COX-2 drugs may have been premature.

Q. The passage suggest which the following about COX2 inhibitors?

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 24

The word "suggests" in the question indicates that this is an inference question.  The correct answer, therefore, will not be directly stated in the passage, but it will be based only on information found within the passage, with no outside speculation or assumptions necessary.
(A) Paragraph 2 states that COX-1 enzymes stimulate production of prostaglandins that "protect the stomach from irritating gastric acids.” As stated in paragraph 3, however, COX-2 inhibitors were designed to affect only COX-2; the specific impetus was not to interrupt the beneficial effects of COX-1.
(B) The author never describes the side effects caused by COX-2 and furthermore he states in paragraph 3 that the COX-2 drugs were designed “in order to eliminate the side effects of aspirin and related drugs.” Paragraph 2 states that Naproxen is one of those related drug.
(C) CORRECT. Paragraph 3 states that the drug class known as COX-2 inhibitors was introduced by “several pharmaceutical companies in the 1990s."  Paragraph 1 states “their mechanisms of action having been discovered only in 1971."  This suggests that approximately 20 years passed between the initial discovery and the introduction of COX-2 inhibitors.
(D) This choice is incorrect as it describes COX-2 enzymes, not COX-2 inhibitors; in addition, the information is directly stated in the passage rather than suggested.  Paragraph 2 states that COX-2 appears to stimulate production of prostaglandins that "induce inflammation in injured tissues.”  (E) This choice is incorrect as it describes prostaglandins, not the drug class COX-2 inhibitors.  Paragraph 2 states that prostaglandins are "generated by most mammalian tissues in response to external stimuli" and "prostaglandins act on the cells that produce them." 

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 25

In recent years, a class of drugs known as COX-2 inhibitors has gotten much publicity for the drugs’ power to relieve inflammation and pain. These drugs are relatively new to the pharmaceutical industry, their mechanisms of action having been discovered only in 1971. That year, John Vane discovered the relationship between nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, such as aspirin, and a group of molecules, called prostaglandins, responsible for producing the sensation of pain in the human body, among other functions.
Prostaglandins were first discovered in the 1930s and are now known to be generated by most mammalian tissues in response to external stimuli. Unlike classical hormones that are synthesized in one tissue but act on a distant one, prostaglandins act on the cells that produce them or on cells located close to the prostaglandins’ cells of origin.
Aspirin alleviates pain by inhibiting the function of an enzyme called cyclooxygenase or COX; this inhibition prevents the production of prostaglandins. The three forms of this enzyme, COX-1, COX-2, and COX-3, all stimulate the production of prostaglandins, but each serves a different purpose. COX-1 functions to protect the stomach from irritating gastric acids. COX-2 functions to induce inflammation in injured tissue and COX-3 functions to control the sensation of pain. Aspirin and other similar drugs, such as naproxen, inhibit both COX-1 and COX-2, sometimes producing or aggravating stomach ulcers in patients who take them.
In order to eliminate the side effects of aspirin and related drugs, several pharmaceutical companies in the 1990s developed drugs that inhibited only COX-2. However, side effects almost always cropped up, even after clinical trials that seemed to indicate none. This often occurs because trials are conducted within very limited parameters; once the drug has been approved for mass distribution, however, the number of people taking it and the length of time that it is taken increase dramatically. Several COX-2 drugs that have been popular in recent years fit this pattern: initially successful in clinical trials, subsequent studies showed them to have serious, potentially lethal side effects.
Though prostaglandin chemistry and enzymology have been studied for half a century, pinpointing the exact role of the molecules in physiological processes still remains a challenge for researchers. Hence it is not surprising that recent therapeutic attempts to interfere with the formation of certain prostaglandins have produced unexpected side effects. It now seems that the hype surrounding COX-2 drugs may have been premature.

Q. According to the passage, all of the following are true of prostaglandins EXCEPT:

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 25

The "True/False" technique is useful for EXCEPT questions.  Four of the answer choices will contain information found in the passage; these will be labeled True.  One answer choice will contain information not found in the passage; it will be labeled False.
(A) True. Paragraph 2 states “prostaglandins were first discovered in the 1930s."
(B) True. Paragraph 2 states prostaglandins are "generated by most mammalian tissues.”  
(C) True. Paragraph 1 states that prostaglandins are "responsible for producing the sensation of pain in the human body, among other functions.”
(D) CORRECT. False. The author never claims that prostaglandins cause side effects. According to paragraph 4, the COX inhibitor drugs, not prostaglandins, caused side effects that went undetected during clinical trials.
(E) True. Paragraph 2 states that “aspirin alleviates pain by inhibiting... COX; this inhibition prevents the production of prostaglandins" and goes on to list the three forms of the enzyme, COX-1, COX-2, and COX-3.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 26

In recent years, a class of drugs known as COX-2 inhibitors has gotten much publicity for the drugs’ power to relieve inflammation and pain. These drugs are relatively new to the pharmaceutical industry, their mechanisms of action having been discovered only in 1971. That year, John Vane discovered the relationship between nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, such as aspirin, and a group of molecules, called prostaglandins, responsible for producing the sensation of pain in the human body, among other functions.
Prostaglandins were first discovered in the 1930s and are now known to be generated by most mammalian tissues in response to external stimuli. Unlike classical hormones that are synthesized in one tissue but act on a distant one, prostaglandins act on the cells that produce them or on cells located close to the prostaglandins’ cells of origin.
Aspirin alleviates pain by inhibiting the function of an enzyme called cyclooxygenase or COX; this inhibition prevents the production of prostaglandins. The three forms of this enzyme, COX-1, COX-2, and COX-3, all stimulate the production of prostaglandins, but each serves a different purpose. COX-1 functions to protect the stomach from irritating gastric acids. COX-2 functions to induce inflammation in injured tissue and COX-3 functions to control the sensation of pain. Aspirin and other similar drugs, such as naproxen, inhibit both COX-1 and COX-2, sometimes producing or aggravating stomach ulcers in patients who take them.
In order to eliminate the side effects of aspirin and related drugs, several pharmaceutical companies in the 1990s developed drugs that inhibited only COX-2. However, side effects almost always cropped up, even after clinical trials that seemed to indicate none. This often occurs because trials are conducted within very limited parameters; once the drug has been approved for mass distribution, however, the number of people taking it and the length of time that it is taken increase dramatically. Several COX-2 drugs that have been popular in recent years fit this pattern: initially successful in clinical trials, subsequent studies showed them to have serious, potentially lethal side effects.
Though prostaglandin chemistry and enzymology have been studied for half a century, pinpointing the exact role of the molecules in physiological processes still remains a challenge for researchers. Hence it is not surprising that recent therapeutic attempts to interfere with the formation of certain prostaglandins have produced unexpected side effects. It now seems that the hype surrounding COX-2 drugs may have been premature.

Q. The author mentions that prostaglandins a re generated in response to external stimuli primarily in order to support the contention that

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 26

If prostaglandins are a response to external stimuli, or stimuli outside of the body, then that external stimuli must be closely linked to at least one of the major functions of prostaglandin. (A) Stomach ulcers are produced or aggravated by aspirin and similar drugs, not prostaglandins (and, in fact, these drugs inhibit prostaglandins).
(B) It is mentioned in the passage that “prostaglandins act on the cells that produce them,” but the author does not draw a connection between where prostaglandins act and what (i.e. external stimuli) generates their production.  
(C) Paragraph 2 states that aspirin, not prostaglandin, prevents cyclooxygenase from functioning.  
(D) Paragraph 2 states that most mammalian hormones "are synthesized in one tissue but act on a distant one" and contrasts prostaglandins, which "act on the cells that produce them" or on other nearby cells.  This difference is based upon where the hormones act, not on what the hormones are responding to (whether external stimuli or something else). 
(E) CORRECT. Paragraph 1 states that prostaglandins are "responsible for producing the sensation of pain in the human body, among other functions.” In the second paragraph the author mentions that aspirin alleviates pain by preventing the production of prostaglandins. To bridge the two assertions, the author provides evidence that prostaglandins are indeed responsible for the sensation of pain, an external stimuli.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 27

In recent years, a class of drugs known as COX-2 inhibitors has gotten much publicity for the drugs’ power to relieve inflammation and pain. These drugs are relatively new to the pharmaceutical industry, their mechanisms of action having been discovered only in 1971. That year, John Vane discovered the relationship between nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, such as aspirin, and a group of molecules, called prostaglandins, responsible for producing the sensation of pain in the human body, among other functions.
Prostaglandins were first discovered in the 1930s and are now known to be generated by most mammalian tissues in response to external stimuli. Unlike classical hormones that are synthesized in one tissue but act on a distant one, prostaglandins act on the cells that produce them or on cells located close to the prostaglandins’ cells of origin.
Aspirin alleviates pain by inhibiting the function of an enzyme called cyclooxygenase or COX; this inhibition prevents the production of prostaglandins. The three forms of this enzyme, COX-1, COX-2, and COX-3, all stimulate the production of prostaglandins, but each serves a different purpose. COX-1 functions to protect the stomach from irritating gastric acids. COX-2 functions to induce inflammation in injured tissue and COX-3 functions to control the sensation of pain. Aspirin and other similar drugs, such as naproxen, inhibit both COX-1 and COX-2, sometimes producing or aggravating stomach ulcers in patients who take them.
In order to eliminate the side effects of aspirin and related drugs, several pharmaceutical companies in the 1990s developed drugs that inhibited only COX-2. However, side effects almost always cropped up, even after clinical trials that seemed to indicate none. This often occurs because trials are conducted within very limited parameters; once the drug has been approved for mass distribution, however, the number of people taking it and the length of time that it is taken increase dramatically. Several COX-2 drugs that have been popular in recent years fit this pattern: initially successful in clinical trials, subsequent studies showed them to have serious, potentially lethal side effects.
Though prostaglandin chemistry and enzymology have been studied for half a century, pinpointing the exact role of the molecules in physiological processes still remains a challenge for researchers. Hence it is not surprising that recent therapeutic attempts to interfere with the formation of certain prostaglandins have produced unexpected side effects. It now seems that the hype surrounding COX-2 drugs may have been premature.

Q. The primary purpose of this passage is to

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 27

The first paragraph introduces COX-2 inhibitors and talks briefly about a 1971 discovery linking aspirin to prostaglandins.  
Paragraph 2 elaborates on the connections among aspirin, prostaglandins, and the three types of COX enzymes.  Paragraph 3 discusses COX-2 inhibitors specifically, both the impetus for creating them and some negative effects.  The final paragraph provides caution about the promise of COX-2 inhibitors.
(A) The passage explains the intended benefits behind the development of COX-2 inhibitors, but this is much too narrow to be the main purpose of the passage, particularly when a large part of the passage addresses the negative consequences.
(B) The author does not initiate a “debate.” For a debate, the author must introduce two clear opposing sides. The COX-2 inhibitors were developed to replace the earlier drugs that inhibited both COX-1 and COX-2, but then they were also found to have side effects. 
(C) While paragraph 4 states that “Side effects almost always cropped up, even after clinical trials that seemed to indicate none," the author notes this only in the context of explaining the result of COX-2 inhibitors. This is too narrow to be the main purpose of the passage.  
(D) CORRECT. This choice reflects the summary above: why COX-2 inhibitors were developed and the result of the drugs' introduction into the marketplace.
(E) This is incorrect because the passage never mentions a drug class of “COX-1 inhibitors.” COX-1 is introduced as an enzyme; it is not a class of drug. 

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 28

Ciara distrusts modern medicine. She says that the drugs prescribed by doctors are just synthetic poisons that they dispense to make money. She uses only herbs and essential oils to treat her health problems, declaring that they are much safer than prescription drugs because they come directly from nature.
Which of the following, if true, most weakens Ciara's argument?

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 28

Explanation: C is correct because Ciara claims that herbs and natural remedies are safe, while some plants and natural substances are in fact poisonous.

A is not correct because Ciara's argument is about the safety of natural remedies, rather than the cost.

B is not correct because the drugs may be derived from natural substances but do not come "directly from nature" as Ciara argues about natural remedies.

D is not correct because Ciara's argument is about the safety of the remedies, rather than that they are 100% effective.

E is not correct because Ciara's argument is about the safety of the remedies, not the cost.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 29

Recent DNA analysis shows that the majority of modern humans alive today have at least some genetic material in common with Neanderthal humans. Archaeologists believe that the first evidence of religious behavior has been found in excavations of Neanderthal dwellings in France. The presence of Neanderthal DNA in modern Europeans has led some scholars to assert that Europeans are genetically programmed for religious behavior in ways that people from other areas of the world are not.

Which of the following, if true, more seriously weakens this argument?

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 29

Explanation: C is correct because, if Europeans are genetically programmed for religious behavior, then we should not find evidence of religious behavior among all human groups.

A is incorrect because, while this may mean that artifacts are better preserved and there is thus more evidence for Neanderthal religion, we cannot tell from this if there is (or would be) evidence of religion in other cultures.

B is incorrect because the debate over the meaning of the artifacts may mean that there is disagreement over whether Neanderthals had religion, it does not challenge the notion that there is a genetic link to religious behavior.

D is incorrect because modern Europeans not practicing religion does not tell us anything about a genetic motivation for religion.

E is incorrect because the argument does not rely on figuring out who does and does not have Neanderthal DNA.

GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 30

It has long been supposed that Neanderthal humans were replaced by modern humans. Most anthropologists thought that the two groups did not have contact or interbreed. However, a recent archaeological dig found Neanderthal artifacts and modern human artifacts mixed together, indicating that there was some contact between the two. The archaeologists leading this dig have published a new article asserting that, in fact, Neanderthals and modern humans did live side by side and interbreed.

Which of the following evidence would provide the strongest support for the archaeologists' claim?

Detailed Solution for GMAT Full Mock Test- 4 - Question 30

Explanation: C is correct because a key part of the archaeologists' claim is that the two groups interbred. The only way to show this definitively would be to find the remains of an individual with DNA from both groups.

A is incorrect because such dating will only show that the groups may have been contemporary. It does not speak to them living side by side (artifacts could be found or traded for over distances) or that they interbred.

B is incorrect because such burials may show that the two groups lived together, but not that they interbred.

D is incorrect because such paintings might show that the two groups lived together, but not that they interbred.

E is incorrect because such villages may have been built on abandoned sites – they do not prove contact between the groups.

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