CAT 2024 Slot 1VARC Question 5

Mixed PracticeEasy
Passage / Data

The passage below is accompanied by four questions. Based on the passage, choose the best answer for each question.

There is a group in the space community who view the solar system not as an opportunity to expand human potential but as a nature preserve, forever the provenance of an elite group of scientists and their sanitary robotic probes. These planetary protection advocates [call] for avoiding “harmful contamination” of celestial bodies. Under this regime, NASA incurs great expense sterilizing robotic probes in order to prevent the contamination of entirely theoretical biospheres. . . .

Transporting bacteria would matter if Mars were the vital world once imagined by astronomers who mistook optical illusions for canals. Nobody wants to expose Martians to measles, but sadly, robotic exploration reveals a bleak, rusted landscape, lacking oxygen and flooded with radiation ready to sterilize any Earthly microbes. Simple life might exist underground, or down at the bottom of a deep canyon, but it has been very hard to find with robots. . . . The upsides from human exploration and development of Mars clearly outweigh the welfare of purely speculative Martian fungi. . . .

The other likely targets of human exploration, development, and settlement, our moon and the asteroids, exist in a desiccated, radiation-soaked realm of hard vacuum and extreme temperature variations that would kill nearly anything. It’s also important to note that many international competitors will ignore the demands of these protection extremists in any case. For example, China recently sent a terrarium to the moon and germinated a plant seed—with, unsurprisingly, no protest from its own scientific community. In contrast, when it was recently revealed that a researcher had surreptitiously smuggled super-resilient microscopic tardigrades aboard the ill-fated Israeli Beresheet lunar probe, a firestorm was unleashed within the space community. . . .

NASA’s previous human exploration efforts made no serious attempt at sterility, with little notice. As the Mars expert Robert Zubrin noted in the National Review, U.S. lunar landings did not leave the campsites cleaner than they found it. Apollo’s bacteria-infested litter included bags of feces. Forcing NASA’s proposed Mars exploration to do better, scrubbing everything and hauling out all the trash, would destroy NASA’s human exploration budget and encroach on the agency’s other directorates, too. Getting future astronauts off Mars is enough of a challenge, without trying to tote weeks of waste along as well. A reasonable compromise is to continue on the course laid out by the U.S. government and the National Research Council, which proposed a system of zones on Mars, some for science only, some for habitation, and some for resource exploitation. This approach minimizes contamination, maximizes scientific exploration . . .

Mars presents a stark choice of diverging human futures. We can turn inward, pursuing ever more limited futures while we await whichever natural or manmade disaster will eradicate our species and life on Earth. Alternatively, we can choose to propel our biosphere further into the solar system, simultaneously protecting our home planet and providing a backup plan for the only life we know exists in the universe. Are the lives on Earth worth less than some hypothetical microbe lurking under Martian rocks?

The author’s overall tone in the first paragraph can be described as

Answer & solution

  • A

    approving of the amount of money NASA spends to restrict the spread of contamination in space.

  • B

    equivocal about the reasons extended by the group of scientists seeking to limit space exploration.

  • sceptical about the excessive efforts to sanitise planets where life has not yet been proven to exist.

  • D

    indifferent to the elitism of a few scientists aiming to corner space exploration.

Solution

Medium

Tone is read from the author's word choices, not the topic. In paragraph 1 the author describes "planetary protection advocates" with loaded, mocking language—they treat the solar system as a "nature preserve", reserved for "an elite group of scientists and their sanitary robotic probes", and NASA "incurs great expense sterilizing… entirely theoretical biospheres". The repeated stress on "great expense" for "theoretical" life signals doubt about whether such caution is worth it.

A

Approving of NASA's spending. The opposite of the text. The author calls the expense excessive ("incurs great expense… entirely theoretical biospheres"), clearly disapproving rather than approving. Reject.

B

Equivocal (uncertain / two-minded). The author is not on the fence; paragraph 1 is pointedly one-sided against the protection advocates. "Equivocal" misses the clear critical edge. Reject.

C

Sceptical about excessive efforts to sanitise planets where life is unproven. Exactly matches the cues: "great expense" spent on "entirely theoretical biospheres" expresses scepticism toward over-sterilisation of worlds whose life is purely speculative. Accept.

D

Indifferent to the elitism. The author is far from indifferent—he actively derides the "elite group of scientists" and their "sanitary robotic probes". Indifference contradicts the engaged, critical tone. Reject.

Option C. The first paragraph is sceptical about lavishing expense to sanitise planets whose life is merely theoretical.

CAT 2024 Slot 1 VARC Q5: The author’s overall tone in the first paragraph can be described as — Solution | TheCATExam