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Re: The great migration of European intellectuals to the United States in [#permalink]
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this is a hard questions which contain long sentences and hard content.

I see prediction is a good skill for rc. after reading and understanding a long sentence, we can predict what happen next. This way we can know that we already understood what we have just read and more importantly, we are able to read and understand the next text, which is dense detail.

we can understand the next dense details, only when we, fully or partly, understand the purpose of those details, which is predicted previously.

another skill is stopping and summarize. This skill help us remember what we have just read.

I think gmat require us read slowly a hard passage. if that is true, I want to find hard passages to practicie reading slowly and comprehensively. I think we do not need to read many easy passages
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Re: The great migration of European intellectuals to the United States in [#permalink]
[quote="parker"]Don't get bogged down in details! Here is a recreation of my thought process, as well as a cleaned-up version of my notes--I can't make symbols here, so I've rewritten those symbols as words; that makes the text look a bit longer.

<...>

Q13
(A) psg is not about US HISTORY--Eliminate
(B) T's career was not representative of migration experience as a whole, but migration of intellectuals and the effect of that migration on social thought--Eliminate
(C) Nice and general (but maybe too general?)--hold for now
(D) At first glance seems possible, but the passage is specifically about the period of transformation--"post-migration thought" includes ALL thought from the migration to the present day--Eliminate
(E) Again, we care about a very specific period of time--this choice is too broad--Eliminate

Do a quick check again of C-- still seems good (although it's missing the higher degree of specificity we'd like, all the other choices are concretely wrong; sometimes these general questions are just that-- really general)

<...>

Hi,

These are great explanations. I picked a wrong answer because I thought C is too easy. It seems logical that "post-migration thought" is too strong in answer D, but then why the author uses the very same term in Q 17 "It can be inferred that postmigration social thought is distinguished from premigration thought by its"?

Thank you in advance
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Re: The great migration of European intellectuals to the United States in [#permalink]
workout, SajjadAhmad, u1983, GMATNinja, GMATNinjaTwo, Gnpth
hi

please give explation to question 4 and 5
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The great migration of European intellectuals to the United States in [#permalink]
Hi GMATNinjaTwo SajjadAhmad GMATNinja parker

How do you decipher meaning in such a vocabulary heavy passage? Honestly, it took me a lot of time to just understand what the author was trying to say. For example, these sentences:

The result, according to H. Stuart Hughes in The Sea-Change, was an increased sophistication and deprovincialization in social theory.

Comparable to the fusion by other expatriate intellectuals of their own idealist traditions with the Anglo-American empiricist tradition was Tillich’s synthesis of German Romantic religiosity with the existentialism born of the twentieth-century war experience. Tillich’s basic goal, according to Hughes, was to move secular individuals by making religious symbols more accessible to them. Forced to make his ethical orientation explicit in the context of American attitudes, Tillich avoided the esoteric academic posture of many Old World scholars, and was able to find a wide and sympathetic audience for his sometimes difficult theology.

I tried to understand the structure and just go straight to the questions, but I still had to understand the specific details while solving the questions, taking a lot of time.

Can you recommend how to go about such passages? Would really appreciate it!
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Re: The great migration of European intellectuals to the United States in [#permalink]
daagh @SajjadAhmed DmitryFarber

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Can you explain Q5 here. I am unable to infer these statements from para 3.

Quote:
5. Which of the following statements describe Tillich's achievement?

I - He elucidated religious symbols in a secular context without sacrificing their impact.
II - He shunned the esotericism of much theological scholarship.
III - He adapted a traditional religiosity to the temper of the modern world.

(A) I only
(B) II only
(C) I and II only
(D) II and III only
(E) I, II, and II
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Re: The great migration of European intellectuals to the United States in [#permalink]
Sajjad1994 VeritasKarishma carcass

Can you please help me to understand statement (I) for Q5 ?
I think "secular context" means accessibility to all (please correct if this is not the intended meaning), but I can't conclude "without sacrificing their impact"

I referred to the sentence
Tillich’s basic goal, according to Hughes, was to move secular individuals by making religious symbols more accessible to them.
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Re: The great migration of European intellectuals to the United States in [#permalink]
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sting8 wrote:
Sajjad1994 VeritasKarishma carcass

Can you please help me to understand statement (I) for Q5 ?
I think "secular context" means accessibility to all (please correct if this is not the intended meaning), but I can't conclude "without sacrificing their impact"

I referred to the sentence
Tillich’s basic goal, according to Hughes, was to move secular individuals by making religious symbols more accessible to them.


All I can say is that all 3 statements agree with the passage in spirit.
Whether each statement is mentioned or implied is debatable.
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Re: The great migration of European intellectuals to the United States in [#permalink]
Question 5. in my view, Answer should be D II and III only; not E

It is not mentioned in the passage anywhere that there is no sacrifices by Tillich in an attempt to make the religious symbols more accessible.

Even more, if you are scrupulous you can argue that the followings imply Tillich made sacrifices:
"His basic goal was to move secular individuals..." his determinant may imply sacrificing some impact in order to persuade the American ideology may be within his scope
"deprovincialised his thought" deprovincialised may not be a negative world, but definitely not a world that means no impact, therefore again, negate the possibility that his experience is "without sacrificing their impact"
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Re: The great migration of European intellectuals to the United States in [#permalink]
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Re: The great migration of European intellectuals to the United States in [#permalink]
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