GMAT逻辑经典练习题TEST第四十八部分

2022-05-31 00:19:21

  GMAT考试包含分析性邪祖哦、综合推理、定量推理和文本逻辑推理四个部分,其中

  Advertisement: Clark brand-name parts are made for cars manufactured in this country. They satisfy all of our government automotive test—the toughest such tests in the world. With foreign-made parts, you never know which might be reliable and which are cheap look-alikes that are poorly constructed and liable to cost you hundreds of dollars in repairs. Therefore, be smart and insist on brand-name parts by Clark for your car.

  The argument requires the assumption that

  (A) Clark parts are available only in this country

  (B) foreign-made parts are not suitable for cars manufactured in this country

  (C) no foreign-made parts satisfy our government standards

  (D) parts that satisfy our government standards are not as poorly constructed as cheap foreign-made parts

  (E) if parts are made for cars manufactured in our country, they are not poorly constructed

  10. Even if a crime that has been committed by computer is discovered and reported, the odds of being both arrested and convicted greatly favor the criminal.

  Each of the following, if true, supports the claim above EXCEPT:

  (A) The preparation of computer-fraud cases takes much more time than is required for average fraud cases, and the productivity of prosecutors is evaluated by the number of good cases made.

  (B) In most police departments, officers are rotated through different assignments every two or three years, a shorter time than it takes to become proficient as a computer-crime investigator.

  (C) The priorities of local police departments, under whose jurisdiction most computer crime falls, are weighted toward visible street crime that communities perceive as threatening.

  (D) Computer criminals have rarely been sentenced to serve time in prison, because prisons are overcrowded with violent criminals and drug offenders.

  (E) The many police officers who are untrained in computers often inadvertently destroy the physical evidence of computer crime.

  11. Every week, the programming office at an FM radio station reviewed unsolicited letters from listeners who were expressing comments on the station’s programs. One week, the station received 50 letters with favorable comments about the station’s news reporting and music selection and 10 letters with unfavorable comments on the station’s new movie review segment of the evening program. Faced with this information, the programming director assumed that if some listeners did not like the movie review segment, then there must be other listeners who did like it. Therefore, he decided to continue the movie review segment of the evening program.

  Which on e of the following identifies a problem with the programming director’s decision process?

  (A) He failed to recognize that people are more likely to write letters of criticism than of praise.

  (B) He could not properly infer from the fact that some listeners did not like the movie review segment that some others did.

  (C) He failed to take into consideration the discrepancy in numbers between favorable and unfavorable letters received.

  (D) He failed to take into account the relation existing between the movie review segment and the news.

  (E) He did not wait until he received at least 50 letters with unfavorable comments about the movie review segment before making his decision.

  12. “Though they soon will, patients should not have a legal right to see their medical records. As a doctor, I see two reasons for this. First, giving them access will be time-wasting because it will significantly reduce the amount of time that medical staff can spend on more important duties, by forcing them to retrieve and return files. Second, if my experience is anything to go by, no patients are going to ask for access to their records anyway.”

  Which one of the following, if true, establishes that the doctor’s second reason does not cancel out the first?

  (A) The new law will require that doctors, when seeing a patient in their office, must be ready to produce the patient’s records immediately, not just ready to retrieve them.

  (B) The task of retrieving and returning files would fall to the lowest-paid member of a doctor’s office staff.

  (C) Any patients who asked to see their medical records would also insist on having details they did not understand explained to them.

  (D) The new law does not rule out that doctors may charge patients for extra expenses incurred specifically in order to comply with the new law.

  (E) Some doctors have all allowing their patients access to their medical records, but those doctors’ patients took no advantage of this policy.

  13. Alia: Hawthorne admits that he has influence with high government officials. He further admits that he sold that influence to an environmental interest group. There can be no justification for this kind of unethical behavior.

  Martha: I disagree that he was unethical. The group that retained Hawthorne’s services is dedicated to the cause of preventing water pollution. So, in using his influence to benefit this group, Hawthorne also benefited the public.

  Alia and Martha disagree on whether

  (A) the meaning of ethical behavior has changed over time

  (B) the consequences of Hawthorne’s behavior can ethically justify that behavior

  (C) the standards for judging ethical behavior can be imposed on Hawthorne by another

  (D) the meaning of ethical behavior is the same in a public situation as in a private one

  (E) the definition of ethical behavior is rooted in philosophy or religion

  14. The mayor boasts that the average ambulance turnaround time, the time from summons to delivery of the patient, has been reduced this year for top-priority emergencies. This is a serious misrepresentation. This “reduction” was produced simply by redefining “top priority.” Such emergencies used to include gunshot wounds and electrocutions, the most time-consuming cases. Now they are limited strictly to heart attacks and strokes.

  Which one of the following would strengthen the author’s conclusion that it was the redefinition of “top priority” that produced the reduction in turnaround time?

  (A) The number of heart attacks and strokes declined this year.

  (B) The mayor redefined the city’s financial priorities this year.

  (C) Experts disagree with the mayor’s definition of “top-priority emergency.”

  (D) Other cities include gunshot wound cases in their category o top-priority emergencies.

  (E) One half of all of last year’s top-priority emergencies were gunshot wounds and electrocution cases.

  15. In a large residential building, there is a rule that no pets are allowed. A group of pet lovers tried to change that rule but failed. The rule-changing procedure outlined in the building’s regulations states that only if a group of tenants can obtain the signatures of 10 percent of the tenants on a petition to change a rule will the proposed change be put to a majority vote of all the tenants in the building. It follows that the pet lovers were voted down on their proposal by the majority of the tenants.

  The argument depends on which one of the following assumptions?

  (A) The pet lovers succeeded in obtaining the signatures of 10 percent of the tenants on their petition.

  (B) The signatures of less than 10 percent of the tenants were obtained on the pet lovers’ petition.

  (C) Ninety percent of the tenants are against changing the rule forbidding pets.

  (D) The support of 10 percent of the tenants for a rule change ensures that the rule change will be adopted.

  (E) The failure of the pet lovers to obtain the signatures of 10 percent of the tenants on their petition for a rule change ensures that the rule change will be voted down by a majority of the tenants.

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