PrepTest 30, Section 3, Question 21
Tina: For centuries oceans and human eccentricity have been linked in the literary and artistic imagination. Such linkage is probably due to the European Renaissance practice of using ships as asylums for the socially undesirable.
Tina: For centuries oceans and human eccentricity have been linked in the literary and artistic imagination. Such linkage is probably due to the European Renaissance practice of using ships as asylums for the socially undesirable.
Sergio: No. Oceans have always been viewed as mysterious and unpredictable�qualities that people have invariably associated with eccentricity.
Tina: For centuries oceans and human eccentricity have been linked in the literary and artistic imagination. Such linkage is probably due to the European Renaissance practice of using ships as asylums for the socially undesirable.
Sergio: No. Oceans have always been viewed as mysterious and unpredictable�qualities that people have invariably associated with eccentricity.
Tina: For centuries oceans and human eccentricity have been linked in the literary and artistic imagination. Such linkage is probably due to the European Renaissance practice of using ships as asylums for the socially undesirable.
Tina's and Sergio's statements lend the most support to the claim that they disagree about which one of the following statements?
Eccentric humans were considered socially undesirable during the European Renaissance.
Oceans have always been viewed as mysterious and unpredictable.
The linkage between oceans and eccentricity explains the European Renaissance custom of using ships as asylums.
People have never attributed the same qualities to oceans and eccentrics.
The linkage between oceans and eccentricity predates the European Renaissance.
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