CAT 2021 Slot 3VARC 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.

Today we can hardly conceive of ourselves without an unconscious. Yet between 1700 and1900, this notion developed as a genuinely original thought. The "unconscious" burst the shell of conventional language, coined as it had been to embody the fleeting ideas and the shifting conceptions of several generations until, finally, it became fixed and defined in specialized terms within the realm of medical psychology and Freudian psychoanalysis.

The vocabulary concerning the soul and the mind increased enormously in the course of the nineteenth century. The enrichments of literary and intellectual language led to an altered understanding of the meanings that underlie time-honored expressions and traditional catchwords. At the same time, once coined, powerful new ideas attracted to themselves a whole host of seemingly unrelated issues, practices, and experiences, creating a peculiar network of preoccupations that as a group had not existed before. The drawn-out attempt to approach and define the unconscious brought together the spiritualist and the psychical researcher of borderline phenomena (such as apparitions, spectral illusions, haunted houses, mediums, trance, automatic writing); the psychiatrist or alienist probing the nature of mental disease, of abnormal ideation, hallucination, delirium, melancholia, mania; the surgeon performing operations with the aid of hypnotism; the magnetizer claiming to correct the disequilibrium in the universal flow of magnetic fluids but who soon came to be regarded as a clever manipulator of the imagination; the physiologist and the physician who puzzled oversleep, dreams, sleepwalking, anesthesia, the influence of the mind on the body in health and disease; the neurologist concerned with the functions of the brain and the physiological basis of mental life; the philosopher interested in the will, the emotions, consciousness, knowledge, imagination and the creative genius; and, last but not least, the psychologist.

Significantly, most if not all of these practices (for example, hypnotism in surgery or psychological magnetism) originated in the waning years of the eighteenth century and during the early decades of the nineteenth century, as did some of the disciplines (such as psychology and psychical research). The majority of topics too were either new or assumed hitherto unknown colors. Thus, before 1790, few if any spoke, in medical terms, of the affinity between creative genius and the hallucinations of the insane . . .

Striving vaguely and independently to give expression to a latent conception, various lines of thought can be brought together by some novel term. The new concept then serves as a kind of resting place or stocktaking in the development of ideas, giving satisfaction and a stimulus for further discussion or speculation. Thus, the massive introduction of the term unconscious by Hartmann in 1869 appeared to focalize many stray thoughts, affording a temporary feeling that a crucial step had been taken forward, a comprehensive knowledge gained, a knowledge that required only further elaboration, explication, and unfolding in order to bring in a bounty of higher understanding. Ultimately, Hartmann's attempt at defining the unconscious proved fruitless because he extended its reach into every realm of organic and inorganic, spiritual, intellectual, and instinctive existence, severely diluting the precision and compromising the impact of the concept.

"The enrichments of literary and intellectual language led to an altered understanding of the meanings that underlie time-honored expressions and traditional catchwords." Which one of the following interpretations of this sentence would be closest in meaning to the original?

Answer & solution

  • A

    Time-honored expressions and traditional catchwords were enriched by literary and intellectual language.

  • The meanings of time-honored expressions were changed by innovations in literary and intellectual language.

  • C

    Literary and intellectual language was altered by time-honored expressions and traditional catchwords.

  • D

    All of the options listed here.

Solution

Easy

A paraphrase question. Parse the sentence's cause and effect precisely: enrichments in literary and intellectual language (cause) produced an altered understanding of the meanings of time-honored expressions and catchwords (effect). The correct option keeps this direction; wrong options reverse the causality or alter the wrong thing.

A

Wrong — reversed. Here the expressions/catchwords are said to be enriched by language. The original makes language the source of change, not the recipient. Direction is flipped.

B

Correct. “The meanings of time-honored expressions were changed by innovations in literary and intellectual language” preserves the original direction exactly: language-enrichment is the cause, the altered understanding of those expressions' meanings is the effect.

C

Wrong — reversed. This makes language the thing altered by the expressions. But the original says language was enriched and that enrichment altered the understanding of the expressions, not the other way round.

D

Wrong. Since A and C invert the meaning, “all of the options” cannot be correct.

Answer: Option B. Only B keeps the causal direction of the original — innovations in language changed the meanings of established expressions.

CAT 2021 Slot 3 VARC Q12: "The enrichments of literary and intellectual language led to an altered understanding of the meanings that un — Solution | TheCATExam