Concept:Howard Gardner's theory of Multiple Intelligences proposes different types of intelligence. A scientist uses logic and numbers, while a sculptor uses physical skill and coordination.
Explanation:A scientist excels in logical-mathematical intelligence, which involves reasoning, pattern recognition, and problem-solving with data and experiments.
A sculptor relies on bodily-kinesthetic intelligence, which means using the body skillfully to create or manipulate objects, requiring hand-eye coordination and fine motor skills.
Option A (Spatial; Bodily Kinesthetic) is not accurate because spatial intelligence is about visual space, not the primary strength of a scientist.
Option B (Naturalistic; Spatial) is wrong because naturalistic intelligence relates to nature, not typical for a scientist in general, and a sculptor uses spatial less than bodily-kinesthetic.
Option C (Transductive; Spatial) is incorrect because transductive reasoning is not one of Gardner's intelligences.
Only option D correctly pairs logical-mathematical with a scientist and bodily-kinesthetic with a sculptor.
Answer:The correct answer is D. Logical-mathematical; Bodily Kinesthetic.