October 4 SAT Critical Reading

<p>I was referring to a comment that was deleted hahaha</p>

<p>And i concur with “true but trivial”</p>

<p>was the answer to the monolith question B?</p>

<p>the brain is composed of several distinct pieces… something like that</p>

<p>i put something along the lines of it being complex</p>

<p>mono means single… that’s how i got the clue</p>

<p>it said that it ISNT a monolith correct?</p>

<p>i just remember i put down B. is that right? I remember i was debating between two answers…</p>

<p>ya it said it isnt a monolith, which means it would be the opposite, as in not mono or not single… or in short, multiple or several</p>

<p>didnt it say that like human brains having varying perspectives???</p>

<p>is the “complex” answer the same as the “several pieces” answer?</p>

<p>dunno… there was one that said the brain is composed of several distinct components… something like that</p>

<p>

</p>

<p>Personally, I think it’s a logical fallacy. The purpose of that paragraph is to dismiss a logic. In the first, sentence it proposes a hypothesis. I don’t care what others think. I think a logical fallacy is correct.</p>

<p>well you are wrong.</p>

<p>ya i put varying perspectives for something</p>

<p>the monolith… was one of the answer choices about people having different views on things? i think i chose something along those lines</p>

<p>yeah i think im thinking of waht jln153 is talking about</p>

<p>does anyone remember the other choices for the “true but trivial” pipe questions?</p>

<p>there was one about quantum scientists. What was that?</p>

<p>For the May SAT which I took you could get exactly 7 wrong without omissions to get a 700. I personally thought the October CR was harder than May’s so we should see a slightly nicer curve.</p>