Library/PT 133/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Both parts explain what historians mean by objectivity. Passage A says objectivity means treating the past as real, keeping facts separate from values, and judging interpretations by how well they match the facts; historians should act like neutral judges and avoid political bias. Passage B says objectivity is not the same as being neutral or indifferent—it's about discipline: giving up wishful thinking, fairly understanding opposing views, and presenting those views honestly before criticizing them so your argument is stronger. In short, true objectivity is careful, fair-minded engagement, not fake equal treatment of both sides.

Logic Breakdown

Compare the two passages' statements about neutrality and political commitment—find whether Passage A's call to purge external loyalties conflicts with Passage B's claim that objectivity can coexist with strong political commitment.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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24.

The author of passage B and the kind of objective historian described in passage A would be most likely to disagree over whether

Correct Answer
B
Passage A emphasizes insulation from politics and elimination of external loyalties: 'These qualities require insulation from political considerations, and avoidance of partisanship or bias. Thus objective historians must purge themselves of external loyalties.' Passage B explicitly asserts the opposite view: 'Objectivity is perfectly compatible with strong political commitment.' These directly conflicting statements show the authors would disagree about whether an objective historical account can include a strong political commitment.
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