Library/PT 123/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

In late-1800s England many middle-class people gave money and time to private charity. Modern critics make two main complaints: first, that small private efforts were too weak to solve big industrial problems like unemployment and needed government action; second, that charity often served the donors by boosting their status, gaining influence, and shaping the poor’s behavior to suit employers (a social-control idea). Critics also call Victorian charity amateurish and assume state-run charity is better (the Whig fallacy), but Victorians knew the objections, feared government-managed aid, and genuinely devoted resources and effort to helping others.

Logic Breakdown

Identify the author's central claim: the passage presents two modern criticisms of Victorian philanthropy and then argues that those criticisms are rooted in a theoretical bias (the 'Whig fallacy') that produces a mistaken interpretation of Victorian philanthropy.

Passage Stimulus

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21.

Which one of the following best summarizes the main idea of the passage?

Correct Answer
D
D is correct because the passage (1) lays out the two modern criticisms—that Victorian philanthropy was obsolete and that it was self-serving—and (2) argues that these criticisms stem from a biased interpretive stance (the 'Whig fallacy') that misreads the past and thus leads to an incorrect interpretation of history. Support from the passage: 'modern commentators have articulated two major criticisms of the philanthropy that was a mainstay of England's middle-class Victorian society.' The earlier criticism: 'these problems required substantial legislative action by the state' and 'nor could it be solved by well-wishing philanthropists.' The more recent charge: 'The more recent charge holds that Victorian philanthropy was by its very nature a self-serving exercise...' The author identifies the bias: 'This assumption is typical of the "Whig fallacy": the tendency to read the past as an inferior prelude to an enlightened present.' The author then defends the Victorians: 'This version of history patronizes the Victorians...they put their money where their mouths were, and gave of their careers and lives as well.'
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