Library/PT 141/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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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.

Logic Breakdown

The passage summarizes Marcuse’s false-needs critique of advertising, then argues against it: the real/false needs distinction is extremely problematic, and most consumers act autonomously; advertising cannot induce unwilling behavior in rational, informed adults, and people may freely choose products or even enjoy ads. The natural conclusion is that, even if advertising might be socially detrimental on other grounds, the Marcusian critique does not establish this.

Passage Stimulus

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21.

Which one of the following sentences would most logically complete the passage?

Correct Answer
A
Choice A matches the passage’s overall aim: to undercut the Marcusian critique without committing to an overall defense of advertising. The author argues that the critique’s key premise is flawed: "the distinction between real and false needs upon which this critique depends is extremely problematic." The author also claims Marcusians err about autonomy: "Marcusians make a major mistake in assuming that the majority of consumers who respond to advertising do not do so autonomously," and supports this with, "Advertising techniques are unable to induce unwilling behavior in rational, informed adults ... [and] most adults understand and recognize the techniques used and are not merely passive instruments." Finally, the author allows that consumers may freely derive fulfillment: "This does not mean, however, that consumers do not freely and intentionally use the product as a means to another sort of fulfillment, or even that its genuine fulfillment of needs must be less than the advertisement suggests." These points collectively support the conclusion that the Marcusian critique does not provide grounds for condemning advertising, even if other grounds might exist.
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