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

Both authors base their positions on empirical findings. Passage A opens with "Research concerning happiness and wealth reveals a paradox..." and supports its account with study results and examples (e.g., "the 'required income' correlates strongly with their actual income: a rise in actual income causes a roughly equivalent rise in required income"; the Solnick and Hemenway study and "The majority chose the first. They were happy to be poorer, provided their relative position improved."). Passage B explicitly appeals to evidence: "This theory may sound good and is commonly heard, but it is not the explanation best supported by the evidence. Rather, the data show that earning more makes people happier..." These explicit references to data in both passages support the answer that both authors assert their positions are supported by data.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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20.

In arguing for their respective positions, the author of passage A and the author of passage B both do which one of the following?

Correct Answer
E
Both authors explicitly appeal to empirical evidence to support their claims. Passage A begins with "Research concerning happiness and wealth reveals a paradox..." and then cites survey correlations and the Solnick and Hemenway choice study ("The majority chose the first..."). Passage B explicitly rejects a popular hypothesis on the grounds that it is "not the explanation best supported by the evidence" and states "Rather, the data show..." Together these passages show that each author asserts that his position is supported by data.
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More Authors' use of evidence / shared argumentative move Practice