CAT 2021 Slot 1VARC Question 12

Mixed PracticeEasy
Passage / Data

Direction for Reading Comprehension: The passages given here are followed by some questions that have four answer choices; read the passage carefully and pick the option whose answer best aligns with the passage.

For the Maya of the Classic period, who lived in Southern Mexico and Central America between 250 and 900 CE, the category of "persons" was not coincident with human beings, as it is for us. That is, human beings were persons - but other, nonhuman entities could be persons, too. . . . In order to explore the slippage of categories between "humans" and "persons", I examined a very specific category of ancient Maya images, found painted in scenes on ceramic vessels. I sought out instances in which faces (some combination of eyes, nose, and mouth) are shown on inanimate objects. . . . Consider my iPhone, which needs to be fed with electricity every night, swaddled in a protective bumper, and enjoys communicating with other fellow-phone-beings. Does it have personhood (if at all) because itis connected to me, drawing this resource from me as an owner or source? For the Maya (who did have plenty of other communicating objects, if not smartphones), the answer was no. Nonhuman persons were not tethered to specific humans, and they did not derive their personhood from a connection with a human. . . . It's a profoundly democratising way of understanding the world. Humans are not more important persons - we are just one of many kinds of persons who inhabit this world. . . .

The Maya saw personhood as 'activated' by experiencing certain bodily needs and through participation in certain social activities. For example, among the faced objects that I examined, persons are marked by personal requirements (such as hunger, tiredness, physical closeness), and by community obligations (communication, interaction, ritual observance). In the images I examined, we see, for instance, faced objects being cradled in humans' arms; we also see them speaking to humans. These core elements of personhood are both turned inward, what the body or self of a person requires, and outward, what a community expects of the persons who are a part of it, underlining the reciprocal nature of community membership.

Personhood was a nonbinary proposition for the Maya. Entities were able to be persons while also being something else. The faced objects I looked at indicate that they continue to be functional, doing what objects do (a stone implement continues to chop, an incense burner continues to do its smoky work). Furthermore, the Maya visually depicted many objects in ways that indicated the material category to which they belonged - drawings of the stone implement show that a person-tool is still made of stone. One additional complexity: the incense burner (which would have been made of clay, and decorated with spiky appliques representing the sacred ceiba tree found in this region) is categorised as a person - but also as a tree. With these Maya examples, we are challenged to discard the person/nonperson binary that constitutes our basic ontological outlook. . . . The porousness of boundaries that we have seen in the Maya world points towards the possibility of living with a certain uncategorisability of the world.

Which one of the following, if true, would not undermine the democratising potential of the Classic Maya worldview?

Answer & solution

  • A

    They understood the stone implement and the incense burner in a purely human form.

  • B

    They believed that animals like cats and dogs that live in proximity to humans have a more clearly articulated personhood.

  • They depicted their human healers with physical attributes of local medicinal plants.

  • D

    While they believed in the personhood of objects and plants, they did not believe in the personhood of rivers and animals.

Solution

Easy

This is a double-negative question: find the option that would not undermine the worldview's "democratising potential." The democratising idea is that humans are not more important — many kinds of persons share the world, with no human-centric hierarchy. So three options will weaken it (by re-centring humans, ranking by proximity to humans, or restricting personhood) and one will be neutral/compatible. Pick the harmless one.

A

Wrong (it undermines). Understanding objects "in a purely human form" re-centres the human and reinstates the human/nonhuman hierarchy the democratising view dissolves. This weakens the worldview, so it is not the answer.

B

Wrong (it undermines). Granting animals "more clearly articulated personhood" because they "live in proximity to humans" ranks persons by closeness to humans — a human-centred hierarchy that contradicts "humans are not more important persons." This weakens it.

C

Correct. Depicting human healers with attributes of medicinal plants blends categories without ranking humans above non-humans; it actually echoes the passage's blurring of boundaries (the person-tool still shown as stone). It leaves the egalitarian, non-binary spirit intact — so it does not undermine the democratising potential.

D

Wrong (it undermines). Granting personhood to objects and plants but denying it to rivers and animals draws an arbitrary boundary, re-introducing the person/nonperson binary the worldview is supposed to discard. This weakens it.

Answer: Option C — blending human and plant attributes is consistent with the boundary-porous, non-hierarchical view, so it alone does not undermine its democratising potential.

CAT 2021 Slot 1 VARC Q12: Which one of the following, if true, would not undermine the democratising potential of the Classic Maya world — Solution | TheCATExam