Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The passage explains two types of international systems: multipolar systems, with three or more roughly equal powers that form shifting alliances and often have many small clashes but can still be stable (example: the Concert of Europe); and bipolar systems, with two main rivals that others join, which are rigid, zero-sum, and can lead to big conflicts (examples: Athens vs. Sparta, the U.S. vs. the USSR). The author says that after the Cold War the return to a multipolar Europe could be more dangerous now because modern weapons and many changing alliances might let small fights escalate, and suggests that the bipolar Cold War setup may actually have helped keep peace compared with the deadly multipolar rivalries before World War I.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the cited sentence in paragraph 2 and ask what role it plays in the author's depiction of bipolar systems—does it show an outcome, a transformation, a contrast, or a general principle?
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage3.The author's reference to the possibility that confrontations may lead to capitulation (second-to-last sentence of the second paragraph ) serves primarily to
Correct Answer
A
'Overall superiority is sought by both major members, which can lead to frequent confrontations, debilitating armed conflict, and, eventually, to the capitulation of one or the other side.' The author uses this claim to show that bipolar systems can produce serious, destabilizing outcomes (confrontations leading even to capitulation), i.e., to indicate that bipolar systems can have unstable characteristics.
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