Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
During the 1790s French Revolution, two supporters argued differently about women's rights. Condorcet said women’s rights were just part of equal rights for everyone and that reason and fair laws would naturally end unfair treatment, so no special political campaign was needed. Olympe de Gouges said women’s lack of political power caused most of their problems and that women must actively fight for voting rights, property, and equal jobs. Condorcet spoke in general ideas; Gouges pushed for direct political action — but neither view became widely accepted.
Logic Breakdown
Look for a point explicitly stated by both writers. Condorcet blames inequality on a failure to reason consistently; Gouges is said to have "exposed harmful inconsistencies" — so identify language about inconsistent beliefs.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage6.It can most reasonably be concluded that both Gouges and Condorcet mentioned which one of the following in their arguments for equal rights?
Correct Answer
B
Both authors criticize inconsistent beliefs. Condorcet: "all discrimination was an oversight, the result of not reasoning consistently or not fully using one's rationality to guide one's actions." Gouges: she "exposed harmful inconsistencies in the period's revolutionary universalism." These lines show both men- and women-focused arguments appeal to the inconsistency of prevailing beliefs as a reason for equal rights.
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