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Re: QOTD # 22 For many years, most physicists supported one of [#permalink]
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In the last question, only the first two options are correct.

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Re: QOTD # 22 For many years, most physicists supported one of [#permalink]
Can you please give me proper reason? I always falter at this type of questions that give me less score in GRE VERBAL
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Re: QOTD # 22 For many years, most physicists supported one of [#permalink]
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The question states that

"the Big Bang was the only cosmological theory that could be valid."

In the passage is only said the Hubble confirmed that we live in an expanding universe, no the Big bang is the only possible theory.

hope this helps
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Re: QOTD # 22 For many years, most physicists supported one of [#permalink]
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Carcass wrote:
The question states that

"the Big Bang was the only cosmological theory that could be valid."

In the passage is only said the Hubble confirmed that we live in an expanding universe, no the Big bang is the only possible theory.

hope this helps


But Big Bang theory too was based on expansion from a single object. So, isn't it evident that post establishment of Hubble's theory, BB theory is the only one that is valid. As the question is Inference type, this can be inferred from the passage. Can you please provide some detailed insight?
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Re: QOTD # 22 For many years, most physicists supported one of [#permalink]
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The biggest error students do is not to read very super extremely careful what the passage says.

The last sentence tells us

Quote:
Hubble’s result was the first experimental proof that we do not live in a steady-state universe, but rather a dynamic and expanding one.


Hubble confirmed we live in an expanding universe.

The question, the third, says

Quote:
After Hubble’s discovery of the expanding universe, the Big Bang was the only cosmological theory that could be valid.


The passage and even less the telescope hubble assert that the BB is the only theory. it is only said that of the two possible knew theories the expanding universe is confirmed.

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Re: QOTD # 22 For many years, most physicists supported one of [#permalink]
The passage says:

"The further away any two points are, the more the expansion affects them, and the faster they appear to be moving away from each other. "

So, for question no. 3, choice II says:

The closer any two points in the universe are, the less expansion effects them, and the slower they appear to be moving apart.

Doesn't it follow that if something is far away, it's moving faster, so if it's closer, it moves slower? Faster and slower are relative terms.

Did anyone else have this reasoning for picking choice II?

I seem to be picking choices that other people are not picking. :(
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Re: QOTD # 22 For many years, most physicists supported one of [#permalink]
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I did not get your point sorry.

For the third question, you got it right, wrong or ??

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Re: QOTD # 22 For many years, most physicists supported one of [#permalink]
For Question #3, how is option B correct?

In passage, it is mentioned "The further away any two points are, the more the expansion affects them, and the faster they appear to be moving away from each other.". But nothing is mentioned about 'the closer points'. So, we should not make our own story about closeness.

According to me, only Option A should be correct. Can you explain why option B is also correct?
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Re: QOTD # 22 For many years, most physicists supported one of [#permalink]
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