Library/PT 119/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

The passage argues that calling a country prosperous just because it makes a lot of money is too narrow, because money ignores important things like people’s quality of life and the environment. It gives examples: ozone damage could boost sales of sunscreen and look like more prosperity on paper, and a poor town that wants more logging to keep jobs might actually lose the natural beauty residents value. Critics say these non-money things have real value that economists ignore; economists reply that money is easiest to measure, but the author says that convenience is a bad reason to ignore what really matters—like judging a book only by how many copies it sells.

Logic Breakdown

Ask what function the final simile serves: identify how comparing economists to a critic who equates sales with value is meant to affect the reader's view of the economists' position.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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5.

The author compares the economists' position to that of a literary critic (final sentence of the passage) primarily to

Correct Answer
E
The final sentence compares economists' reliance on monetary totals to a critic who treats total sales as a book's value: 'The economists' stance is rather like that of a literary critic who takes total sales to be the best measure of a book's value—true, the number of copies sold is a convenient and quantifiable measure, but it is a poor substitute for an accurate appraisal of literary merit.' This shows the analogy's purpose is to point out that relying on convenient, quantifiable measures overlooks important substantive qualities—i.e., to illustrate the limitations of the economists' position.
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