Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages debate how to study plagiarism. Ricks (Passage A) criticizes a historian who treats plagiarism, imitation, and originality as the same and says moral judgments are just power plays; he argues plagiarism is about honesty and removing moral concerns from history is wrong. Kewes (Passage B) says the idea of plagiarism has changed over time because of business, artistic theories, and copyright law, so the same acts have sometimes been condemned and sometimes praised; she agrees some historical work is bad but insists studying past views doesn’t mean approving them.
Logic Breakdown
Look at Passage A's opening where Ricks summarizes Rosenthal and explicitly says what her questioning 'invariably leads' to; match that explicit claim to an option.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.Passage A asserts that the inevitable answer to the question raised in Rosenthal's book is that
Correct Answer
B
Passage A says explicitly: "But such rhetorical questioning invariably leads to the required postmodern answer: that there is no difference between these things—other than that those in power use the opprobrious term 'plagiarism' when the work in question emanates from those whom they dislike." The earlier clause names the items as "plagiarism, imitation, adaptation, repetition, and originality," so choice B correctly paraphrases this asserted inevitable answer.
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