Library/PT 141/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Both passages explain why richer people seem happier than poorer people at a moment in time, yet societies don’t get happier as they get richer. Passage A says this is because people quickly get used to higher incomes (habituation) and care about how they rank versus similar others (rivalry), so rising incomes push up what people consider “enough”; a study showed most people prefer being relatively better off even if their absolute income is lower, and East Germans felt worse after reunification because they began comparing themselves to West Germans. Passage B rejects the idea that this is just showing off and says money mainly matters because it signals success and value creation—feeling successful, not money itself, brings happiness.

Logic Breakdown

Passage B argues that relative wealth makes people happy only to the extent that it signals perceived success/creation of value rather than money itself. Key supporting lines are: "If two people feel equally successful, they will be equally happy even if their incomes differ greatly." and "But it is the success—not the money per se—that provides the happiness." From these statements, the author would predict that if someone believes their wealth is merely lucky (not a sign of success), greater wealth would not increase that person's happiness.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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16.

The author of passage B would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements?

Correct Answer
C
Passage B explicitly treats perceived success (creating value) as the mechanism by which wealth yields happiness: "Rather, the data show that earning more makes people happier because relative prosperity makes them feel that they are successful, that they have created value." It further states, "If two people feel equally successful, they will be equally happy even if their incomes differ greatly," and that "it is the success—not the money per se—that provides the happiness." If a person believes their wealth is due merely to luck (not to creating value/success), they would not feel successful; therefore being wealthier than others would not make them happier. This reasoning directly supports option C.
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