mikemcgarry wrote:
Apourv wrote:
This passage is so difficult to comprehend. Is there any technique which I can use to understand such RCs. They go over my head.

Dear
Apourv,
My friend, I'm happy to respond.

Veritas wrote a very good passage here, but it is particularly difficult. It helps considerably if you have a little sense of the history of Western Philosophy. One thing I would say is that, if you plan to go to business school, you should have at least a rough idea of the major thinkers in the history of Economics:
Adam Smith,
Thomas Malthus,
Karl Marx,
John Maynard Keynes,
Milton Friedman,
John Kenneth Galbraith,
Thorstein Veblen,
Paul Samuelson,
Paul Krugman, etc. etc. Read the Wikipedia articles on these people and get a sense of their ideas. That will put what you will be learning in business school into a larger context.
You see, my friend, there is a paradox concerning outside material. On the one hand, GMAT RC and CR questions do not depend on outside material: they only ask about information presented in the prompt passage. On the other hand, having familiarity with the general topic will help you make sense of the information in the passage, and this will help you answer the questions more quickly and more effectively. See:
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2014/gmat-criti ... knowledge/Finally---and this is the most important point to appreciate---there are no "techniques" for improving reading comprehension. The only way to make serious improvements in your reading comprehension is to practice reading sophisticated material in English every day. Practice, practice, practice: that's what improves reading, not any magical shortcut techniques. See:
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2014/how-to-imp ... bal-score/Does all this make sense?
Mike

4. The author would most likely not agree with which of the following?
A. The disparity amongst the wealth of nations is growing.
The author agree, the evidence present in last para
It's also clear that the political and economic success of Western liberalism is helping to increase the already alarming gap between rich and poor throughout the world, in precisely the way Marx predicted.
B. Some of the steps taken by Western governments to combat terrorism are anti-liberal.
The author agree, the evidence present in third para
In the West, the Hobbes-Locke formulation of liberal political order is very much alive and in the ascendant, as the hard-won adjustments to that brought about by a socialism inspired by Marx are, bit by bit, being shredded(cut up/damage) by the need to keep capitalism dynamic and by the growing power of giant corporations. At the same time, however, the threats posed by terrorism are leading many Western governments to introduce significant limitations on personal liberty in the name of national security.
C. Democratic societies will not elect their leaders irrationally.
For all their significant differences, these philosophers had one thing in common: they believed that modern political thinking must be based on reason, on a rational analysis of human nature and of the conditions necessary for freedom and justice, in states maintained by the consent of the governed. Hence, they would almost all share a certain despair and wonder at the extent to which modern politics has in some places been dominated by irrationality, by, for example, the success of charismatic tyrants who justify their activities by the cult of personality or by racial-ethnic-nationalistic metaphors or by a return to theocracy, the rule of the clerisy in the name of a traditional religion.
D. Personal liberty is a virtue of liberal governments that should be highly valued.
This should be the statement to which the author agree in second para
Dealing with such states creates real problems for Liberals and Communists alike, because they rest on principles foreign to the entire modern Western tradition and hence are often frustratingly incomprehensible to Westerners. Its very hard for us to accept that some people may not want democracy, do not place a particularly high value on personal liberty to do as they wish, and are not concerned about the consent of the governed or citizens' rights in the way that our models of the state require.
E. Modern political thinking should be based on reason.
The author agree this in para1
For all their significant differences, these philosophers had one thing in common: they believed that modern political thinking must be based on reason,
I thought this is an article very similar to those show up in Economist magazine which mikemcgarry always recommend us to read, I’m not a strong reader and reading comprehension is my weakest part, however to this passage I got 3 out of 4
correct
para1: philosopher believe political thinking must be reason、rational, however, that’s not always the case
para2: take irrational Liberal& Communism as example to illustrate the idea present in para1
para3: both the rising of Hobbes-Lock formulation of Liberalism, which give rise to Capitalism, as well as the anti-Liberal trend in the Western world
para4: even if dire warnings are all around, there still pose a big problem to inequality which rise from liberalism’s success and this further lead to the author offer advice that liberalism somehow need to be modify