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Official Explanation

­1. Based on the passage, what can we infer about a society that focuses primarily upon a code of moral right and wrong?

Explanation

The difference between the two kinds of societies, according to the author, is a matter of internal (guilt) and external (shame) motivators. What you must consider, then, is where a moral code might be placed. You are given one particularly useful clue in the phrase “internal guidelines,” which even if it lacks the strength of a sense of moral right and wrong, still allows us to classify the society in the question as guilt-based. And furthermore, in the example at the end of the passage, it is suggested that “moral standards” are an example of a trait of a guilt-based society. The answer is (B).

Choice (C) is wrong; don’t be distracted by the description at the end of the passage that describes how medieval Europe, a shame-based society, dealt with adultery.

Choices (D) and (E) both go beyond the scope of the passage.

Answer: B
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Official Explanation

­2. Which of the following CANNOT be inferred from the passage?

Explanation

You are looking for statements that go beyond what can reasonably be inferred from the passage.

(I) is a good choice, because while the passage mentions that it was “primarily a shame-based society,” there is no mention of a lack of concern with moral codes; furthermore, the passage notes that neither classification of societies is without some influence of the other.

(II) also cannot be inferred from the sentence—in fact, it is contradicted in the fourth sentence. While the passage mentions the complexity of the social guidelines of shame-based societies, and it might be inferred that there are many laws in such societies, there is no way you can infer from this that (III) guilt-based societies have few laws. 

Answer: E
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­
Official Explanation

­
3. Based on the passage, a society that prizes the harmony of the social group would most likely be

Explanation

For this question you must consider the description of the society in the question compared to what you are given in the passage. Early in the passage, you see mention of dishonoring one’s family as an example of a damaging effect on the social group. This indicates that the society in the question would be a shame-based society as in the example in the passage, and the correct answer is thus (A). This eliminates choice (B).

Choice (C) is wrong because there are certainly rules in a shame-based society. Similarly you can reject (E). It goes beyond the scope of the passage, which does not offer evidence to suggest that individuals within a society that emphasizes social cohesion do not have an internally regulated morality.

(D) is wrong because there are insufficient data to support such an assertion.


Answer: A­
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