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Hey,

Could someone please clarify the third question? I'm still having trouble wrapping my head around it; more specifically, I don't really understand the question:

"The author implies that a party to the social contract who "chose to gamble on the outcome of the social order"..."

Isn't he talking about the blind choosers? Or is he talking about the blind choosers hypothetically intentionally not making decisions in a fair manner? Or something else?

Thanks for any clarification.
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I still have some trouble understanding why 2B is incorrect

paragraph 3 says rational beings will make a decision that ensures maximum justice and liberty

and paragraph 2 says contractarians are groups of rational men and women

OE says answer 2 B assume unanimity, I'm not exactly sure what that means
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Hey,

Could someone please clarify the third question? I'm still having trouble wrapping my head around it; more specifically, I don't really understand the question:

"The author implies that a party to the social contract who "chose to gamble on the outcome of the social order"..."

Isn't he talking about the blind choosers? Or is he talking about the blind choosers hypothetically intentionally not making decisions in a fair manner? Or something else?

Thanks for any clarification.

I've had the same question - no response on this one? Even though I scored 9 on Reading section of IELTS, I do not understand this passage well and I particularly this question
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Can someone explain the answer for the last question? Kudos and thanks for anyone who helps :)
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Official Explanation

4. It can be inferred that the author feels the ideas of John Rawls are relevant today because

Difficulty Level: 750

Explanation

Based on the keywords "It can be inferred", we can tell that this is an Inference question. We will then research the relevant text and use it to evaluate each answer choice individually.

Research Relevant Text in the Passage:

A quick look at our Passage Map tells us that John Rawl’s ideas are mentioned in paragraph 1. The author highly recommends this work as the "fullest exposition" of "the notion of a social contract".

Make a Prediction:

Since part of the purpose of the passage is the defend the ideas of the social contract, the author would agree that Rawls’ ideas are relevant today for all of the reasons presented in the passage. We must find the answer choice which best describes this opinion.

Evaluate the Answer Choices:

Answer Choice (C) makes sense: Rawls has constructed a new social contract from which maximum personal liberty can be logically derived. Considering the utilitarian versions of the old social contract, that’s news, and worth telling us about.
Choice (A): The author never suggests either that Rawls’ ideas represent an assault on an entrenched academic orthodoxy. This language is also too extreme, so we can eliminate this choice.
Choice (B): This answer assumes too much; the author never says that utilitarianism is not ethnically based – just that Rawls’ idea of justice better corresponds to the American concept of fairness.
Choice (D): This answer is incorrect because it is not clear that the author agrees or disagrees with any social philosophy.
Choice (E): This answer references "evidence", since no evidence is offered in the passage, just theories.

Answer: C

Hope it helps

kausikS
Can someone explain the answer for the last question? Kudos and thanks for anyone who helps :)
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MentorTutoring gmatexam439

This passage is treat for you :)
Need help with Q2 and Q3.

I was not able to comprehend the passage completely.
SajjadAhmad Can you share official explanations also.
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Quote:
2. Which of the following is an assumption of the contractarian model, as presented by the author?

(A) The decision makers act before acquiring any place in the social order.
(B) All members of the contracting group will place a high value on personal liberty.
(C) Justice can only be secured by ensuring that all positions in the social order have equal power and status.
(D) The contracting parties will seek to safeguard their own liberties at the expense of the rights of others.
(E) The members of society will accept restrictions on personal autonomy in order to gain peace and security.

Q2 is a detail type of question, means you will find this information in the passage itself. I got it after spending good 20 minutes on the passage, as I found this one difficult.

Para 2 of the passage (refer bolded part below) answers this question.

Para2: Rather than adopt Rousseau's vision of naturalman—a picture almost impossible to conjure up in the face of more recent scientific knowledge—the new contractarians postulate a group of rational men and women gathered for the purpose of elucidating a concept of justice which will guide their affairs. They further assume that these people make their decision behind a veil of ignorance; that is, they are totally ignorant for now of their position in society—their race, their gender, their place in the social order. Yet the principles at which they arrive will bind them once the veil is lifted.
Thus, option A.


Quote:
3. The author implies that a party to the social contract who "chose to gamble on the outcome of the social order" would select a principle of justice

(A) allowing an unequal access to liberty and other social goods
(B) based on equalization of material conditions and unequal personal liberty
(C) based on the greatest possible equalization of both personal freedom and material circumstances
(D) that explicitly denied inherent inequalities among the members of society
(E) that valued the benefit of society in the aggregate over the freedom of the individual

Let's understand the question first. Again a detail type of question. If we understand the question, we can find the answer easily.
In the last Para, those who "chose to gamble on the outcome of the social order" refer to someone who is not actually a contractarian but may just blindly support the concept.
This means, they would do anything that is opposite of the idea of contractarian theory.
Para 3 outlines the things that contractarians support. Anything that states the opposite of those points would be the answer.

Para3: Starting from this original position, it can be logically demonstrated that rational beings would arrive at a decision ensuring the maximum possible justice and liberty for even the meanest member of society. Thus, freedom of speech, for example, would be inviolable, whereas the utilitarian could easily justify its abridgment for a greater social good. Second, social and economic inequality, which are the inevitable result of the lottery of birth, should be arranged such that they inhere in offices and stations in life available to all and thus are, by consensus, seen to be to everyone's advantage. Injustice, then, is defined as an unequal distribution of good things, with liberty being first among them.

The bolded part appears in Option A!
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Quote:
2. Which of the following is an assumption of the contractarian model, as presented by the author?

(A) The decision makers act before acquiring any place in the social order.
(B) All members of the contracting group will place a high value on personal liberty.
(C) Justice can only be secured by ensuring that all positions in the social order have equal power and status.
(D) The contracting parties will seek to safeguard their own liberties at the expense of the rights of others.
(E) The members of society will accept restrictions on personal autonomy in order to gain peace and security.

Q2 is a detail type of question, means you will find this information in the passage itself. I got it after spending good 20 minutes on the passage, as I found this one difficult.

Para 2 of the passage (refer bolded part below) answers this question.

Para2: Rather than adopt Rousseau's vision of naturalman—a picture almost impossible to conjure up in the face of more recent scientific knowledge—the new contractarians postulate a group of rational men and women gathered for the purpose of elucidating a concept of justice which will guide their affairs. They further assume that these people make their decision behind a veil of ignorance; that is, they are totally ignorant for now of their position in society—their race, their gender, their place in the social order. Yet the principles at which they arrive will bind them once the veil is lifted.
Thus, option A.
In such case,
Look at below lines from 3,
"Starting from this original position, it can be logically demonstrated that rational beings would arrive at a decision ensuring the maximum possible justice and liberty for even the meanest member of society"
This clearly indicates All members of the contracting group will place a high value on personal liberty.

Hence option B should be true.
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Quote:
MeBossBaby
Quote:
2. Which of the following is an assumption of the contractarian model, as presented by the author?

(A) The decision makers act before acquiring any place in the social order.
(B) All members of the contracting group will place a high value on personal liberty.
(C) Justice can only be secured by ensuring that all positions in the social order have equal power and status.
(D) The contracting parties will seek to safeguard their own liberties at the expense of the rights of others.
(E) The members of society will accept restrictions on personal autonomy in order to gain peace and security.

Q2 is a detail type of question, means you will find this information in the passage itself. I got it after spending good 20 minutes on the passage, as I found this one difficult.

Para 2 of the passage (refer bolded part below) answers this question.

Para2: Rather than adopt Rousseau's vision of naturalman—a picture almost impossible to conjure up in the face of more recent scientific knowledge—the new contractarians postulate a group of rational men and women gathered for the purpose of elucidating a concept of justice which will guide their affairs. They further assume that these people make their decision behind a veil of ignorance; that is, they are totally ignorant for now of their position in society—their race, their gender, their place in the social order. Yet the principles at which they arrive will bind them once the veil is lifted.
Thus, option A.
In such case,
Look at below lines from 3,
"Starting from this original position, it can be logically demonstrated that rational beings would arrive at a decision ensuring the maximum possible justice and liberty for even the meanest member of society"
This clearly indicates All members of the contracting group will place a high value on personal liberty.

Hence option B should be true.

(B) All members of the contracting group will place a high value on personal liberty.
The word "personal" make this option incorrect. Members of contractarian group would place high value of liberty of everyone, not only of their own.
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MentorTutoring gmatexam439

This passage is treat for you :)
Need help with Q2 and Q3.

I was not able to comprehend the passage completely.
SajjadAhmad Can you share official explanations also.

Official Explanation

2. Which of the following is an assumption of the contractarian model, as presented by the author?

Difficulty Level: 750

Explanation

This is a Detail question, since we can determine the contractarians' assumptions from the passage. We must research the relevant text and make a prediction.

Research Relevant Text in the Passage:

Based on our Passage Map, we can see that the assumptions of the contractarian model can be found in paragraphs 2. Look for the keywords "postulate" and "assume" in the paragraphs. New contractarians "postulate" a group of people who decide what will be considered justice in their new society. "They further assume" that this hypothetical group makes its decision while "totally ignorant" of what place they will hold in society.

Make a Prediction:

Their main assumption is then that they make their decisions without knowing the social order, and where they stand in this order.

Evaluate the Answer Choices:

Answer Choice (A) correctly restates our prediction, based on the information in paragraph 2.

Choice (B) incorrectly assumes unanimity among the contracting group members, while the author implies only that a consensus will be reached.

Choice (C) contradicts the second point made in Paragraph 3, that all positions in the social order will NOT have equal power and status.

Choices (D) and (E) contradict the first point of Paragraph 3, which promises maximum personal liberty for all.

Answer: A

3. The author implies that a party to the social contract who "chose to gamble on the outcome of the social order" would select a principle of justice

Difficulty Level: 750

Explanation

This is an Inference question, since we are asked to deduce what the author implies about the contractarians "who choose to gamble". We must use our Passage Map to research the relevant text before evaluating the answer choices.

Research Relevant Text in the Passage:

The quote from the question stem appears in paragraph 4. Reviewing our notes from paragraph 4, we know that the author believes that the contractarians will select a principle of justice that is based in fairness and equality for everyone. However, pay careful attention to the keyword "gamble". The sure path would be to choose equality for everyone, but a gambler may choose an alternate decision.

Make a Prediction:

For Inference questions, a specific prediction is not useful to make. We must evaluate each of the answer choices to determine which one most closely ties to the information in paragraph 4.

Evaluate the Answer Choices:

Answer Choice (A) captures the essence of this gamble: a society where "justice" allows unequal access to liberty. Therefore, Answer Choice (A) is the correct answer.

Choice (B): While this also demonstrates a gamble, the passage discusses that they favor equal personal liberty over everything else, so if only one element was to be unequal, it would not be personal liberty.

Choice (C): This is a 180 trap, since this is the safe decision for the group to make.

Choice (D): Similar to choice (C), this choice would be a safe decision for the group.

Choice (E): This is out-of-scope, since we are never told how the collective feels about the individual versus the aggregate.

Answer: A

Hope it helps
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Quote:
Research Relevant Text in the Passage:

The quote from the question stem appears in paragraph 4. Reviewing our notes from paragraph 4, we know that the author believes that the contractarians will select a principle of justice that is based in fairness and equality for everyone. However, pay careful attention to the keyword "gamble". The sure path would be to choose equality for everyone, but a gambler may choose an alternate decision.


Why the gambler would choose the alternate decision? Why can't he choose the outcome that everyone has equal justice. I don't understand.

In general , gambling is taking risk when you don't know the outcome , but i can choose either way , why only put gambler in more risk?

carcass : can you share your opinion on Q3 since you got all correct. please suggest/

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Quote:
Research Relevant Text in the Passage:

The quote from the question stem appears in paragraph 4. Reviewing our notes from paragraph 4, we know that the author believes that the contractarians will select a principle of justice that is based in fairness and equality for everyone. However, pay careful attention to the keyword "gamble". The sure path would be to choose equality for everyone, but a gambler may choose an alternate decision.


Why the gambler would choose the alternate decision? Why can't he choose the outcome that everyone has equal justice. I don't understand.

In general , gambling is taking risk when you don't know the outcome , but i can choose either way , why only put gambler in more risk?

carcass : can you share your opinion on Q3 since you got all correct. please suggest/

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Sajjad1994 GMATNinjaTwo bm2201


From the question stem "The author implies ...Choose to gamble ... would select a principle" So the question is asking that the people who are unsure about the outcome and are gambling on the outcome of the principle what will their stand be. With the understanding of the question now clear, let's move on to the answer.

From the passage - "While it can be and has been argued that the blind choosers envisioned by the new contractarian's might well.." this is referring to the last few lines of the previous para - "Second, social and economic inequality, which are the inevitable result of the lottery of birth, should be arranged such that they inhere in offices and stations in life available to all and thus are, by consensus, seen to be to everyone's advantage. Injustice, then, is defined as an unequal distribution of good things, with liberty being first among them"


So reading them in conjunction we realise that the author is claiming that people who believe in the "lottery of birth" = choose to gamble on the outcome of the social order believe that "the offices and stations" = material conditions will be equalized but "liberty" will be unequally distributed.

Hope you understood the answer, it is an extremely challenging passage even for someone who is very good at RC, so don't worry too much if you don't get it right immediately.
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Niceeeeee passage.
All correct, in the allotted time

Thanks. Study is paying off, Finally

Kudos

PS: in my opnion I do not like kaplan at all but for RC passage is the best prep company

Posted from my mobile device
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How is B incorrect? The author calls "Socialism" and "neo conservatism", radical solutions to social problems. Then, he proposes "Contractarian view" as an alternative. I really don't like when mass market companies sell their agenda. The point here is B is not right because "it regurgitates language from the passage".

The explanation provided by Kaplan is this - "Contractarian" view is the radical view and not an alternative. But the passage / author called the alternative radical views.

WTF Kaplan.. I struggled to choose between A & B, and then went B. A sounds right too. I went with B because the author explicitly calls the other solutions - radical. Is this a case of Kaplan "shoving down their ideas down our throat"? So, B uses "regurgitated language, can't be right".

Don't give me those rules. Provide a logical explanation..

1. The author most likely wrote this passage primarily to

(A) outline and defend a contractarian view of justice
(B) propose an alternative to radical solutions to social problems
(C) compare the utilitarian and contractarian theories
(D) explore the political theory of John Rawls
(E) resurrect the idea of the social contract
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GMATNinja and GMATNinjaTwo
Could you please help me with the approach to solve such hard and abstract passages? Thanks in advance.
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