LNAT Practice Test 3
LNAT Practice Test 3
Typically, those unfortunate individuals suffering from a fatal disease, once it has been deemed
incurable, reach a stage in which they are expected to die in a matter of weeks - or even days.
Medically speaking, it is then in such patients' best interests to be allowed to die (passive
euthanasia).
Often the dying patient's circumstances are such that it is more a question of whether or not to
treat a secondary infection - not simply maintaining the medical support being given for the
underlying illness. Many medical practitioners would agree with passive euthanasia whenever
one of their patient's illness becomes so acute that the patient is in constant pain. The moral
question of whether it is right or wrong could then be said to based upon the patient's quality
of life which is likely to remain very poor. Many law courts would also agree. Hence, most
countries allow competent adults to refuse to receive medical treatment. This is not the same
as active euthanasia; in which. Many British doctors have been convicted of attempted
murder.
Certain people - such as practitioners of the Jehovah Witness faith - may well refuse serious
medical treatment, such as a blood transfer, on religious grounds. In legal terms, any medical
treatment of a patient against their will is treated as a physical violation. In summary, a
competent person should be allowed to refuse to receive life-saving treatment.
1. The passage suggests which circumstances under which a passive euthanasia decision is
most likely to change?
(INFERENCE)
(COMPREHENSION)
3. The author uses which one of the following factors to support their argument for
passive euthanasia?
(INTERPRETATION)
● Immoral considerations
● Doctor's track record
● Universal healthcare
● International legal systems
● A patient's quality of life
4. The passage mentions which one or more of the following euthanasia considerations?
(ANALYSIS)
5. The passage differentiates between patients in which two of the following ways?
(DEDUCTION)
● Patients with and without extended families
● Patients who can and cannot afford treatment
● Patients with and without terminal illnesses
● Competent and incompetent patients
Jung considered that the human brain provides everyone with the same psychological
infrastructure. However, everyone has their own personal way of interpreting external events,
perceiving internal feelings/thoughts (and how best to respond). This is what is commonly
meant by the term psychological, or personality, type.
There are two key issues in any model of psychological type: what are the core components of
this psychic infrastructure, and what are the individual differences in these components? For
Jung at least, these components are his four psychic functions. Jung believed that people
differed in terms of their individual preference for using these psychic functions. He was also
the first to differentiate between those people who prioritised their interpretation of external
events from those people whose actions were more motivated by their inner feelings and
thoughts. Jung called these two mutually exclusive groups of people as extroverts and
introverts respectively.
6. Which of the following words is the most suitable replacement for the word
infrastructure i n the first sentence of the third paragraph?
(COMPREHENSION)
● Building
● Model
● Build
● Framework
● Level
7. According to Jung, his psychological type theory (as published in 1921) is founded on
which one of the following assumptions?
(INTERPRETATION)
8. Jung believed that individuals differed on which one, or more, of the following?
(ANALYSIS )
● Personality traits
● Four psychic functions
● Psychological infrastructure
● Level of consciousness
● Psychological type
9. Which one of the following facts is based solely upon information in the passage?
(DEDUCTION)
10. Which two of the following inferences are based upon the passage?
(INDUCTION)