Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The passage outlines Marcuse’s view that advertising tricks people by creating "false needs": it links our real desires (like love or belonging) to products, so we keep buying things that don’t truly satisfy us while corporations profit. The author then challenges this, arguing it’s hard to draw a clean line between real and false needs in a society full of persuasion, and that most adults understand how ads work and make their own choices. Ads can’t force informed people to act against their will, and people may reasonably choose to seek emotional fulfillment through products—or even from ads themselves—even if the exact feelings ads suggest aren’t fully delivered.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage17.The author states that Marcuse believed that advertisers
Correct Answer
B
{
"stimulusAnalysis": "The passage presents Marcuse’s view that advertising manipulates consumers by creating false needs. It does this by appropriating people’s real needs and forging psychological associations between those needs and consumer goods. The author then critiques the real/false needs distinction and argues consumers are autonomous and informed.",
"correctAnswer": "B",
"correctExplanation": "Marcuse’s view is that advertising appeals to real needs to create false ones: \"Advertising appropriates these needs for its own purposes, forging psychological associations between them and consumer items... thereby creating a false 'need' for these items.\" Earlier the author summarizes Marcuse similarly: advertising uses \"powerful psychological techniques\" to \"create 'needs' that are false.\"",
"wrongAnswerExplanations": {
"A": "The passage does not state that Marcuse believed advertisers base strategies on psychological research findings. He is said to claim they use psychological techniques to create false needs, but no link to research findings is made.",
"B": "",
"C": "This is the author’s rebuttal, not Marcuse’s belief: \"regulations prohibit misinformation in advertising claims\" appears in the author’s critique of Marcusians, not in the description of Marcuse’s position.",
"D": "No part of the passage attributes to Marcuse the claim that advertisers exaggerate a need for independent decision-making. This idea is not discussed.",
"E": "The passage does not address what advertisers deny or admit. Marcuse claims advertisers create false needs; there is no claim that advertisers deny those needs are less real.",
"questionType": "Detail"
}
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