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

Focus on paragraph 2 (the "social control" thesis). Note words that describe philanthropy as a "means" serving philanthropists' or their class interests; pick the answer that restates philanthropy as a tool (means to an end).

Passage Stimulus

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25.

It can be inferred from the passage that a social control theorist would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements concerning the motives of Victorian philanthropists?

Correct Answer
E
Paragraph 2 explicitly characterizes the social-control view in instrumental terms: "In this view, philanthropy was a means of flaunting one's power and position ... or even a means of cultivating social connections that could lead to economic rewards." The paragraph goes on to say philanthropists encouraged values "designed to create more productive members of the labor force," and concludes, "Philanthropy, in short, was a means of controlling the labor force and ensuring the continued dominance of the management class." These statements show the social-control theorist would see philanthropy as a means to an end rather than an end in itself.
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