Reading comp PrepTest 108 · Section 1 · Question 17

Passage

Questions 17-21  .        Many people complain about corporations, but  . there are also those whose criticism goes further and Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Social Science


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • A criticism (corporations are immoral) and economists' rebuttal (corporations are just business relationships)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Many people's criticism:
      • Businesses are immoral and the cause of many problems in Western society (first sentence)
    • Comparison, according to many people:
      • Criticisms of business apply not just when to those that are fraudulent but also to prioritizing profit (second sentence)
    • Economists' rebuttal:
      • This criticism unfairly applies ethical principles to business relationships (last sentence)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Background information on corporate ownership (corporations are not people, but most are run by CEOs who serve the owners)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Author's view:
      • "Corporate responsibility" refers to the combined responsibility of the people in the corporation (second sentence)
    • Comparisons, according ot the author:
      • Corporations are not people (first sentence)
      • Some corporations are run by the owners, but many (and most large) are run by CEOs who have an obligation to the owners (last sentence)
    • Author's attitude: "only by" (first sentence), "are not" (first sentence)

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Premises to economists' rebuttal (CEOs only responsible to owners, but even maximizing profits helps public)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • The economists' view (the rebuttal against the criticism of corporations): CEOs are just doing their job
      • It's the CEO's job to produce profits (first and second sentence)
      • Even if the CEO was only obligated to look to the public good, they would still work to maximize profits because that will also eventually help the public (last sentence)
    • Comparison:
      • A CEO's job for a charitable institution is not simply producing profits, unlike non-charitable corporations (first sentence)

Paragraph 4

  • Paragraph note
    • Author's criticism of the rebuttal (not all profit-seeking enterprises serve public, CEOs have moral responsibility)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Author's view:
      • Corporate profit doesn't always lead to public profit (second sentence)
      • Business obligations do not override moral ones (fourth sentence)
        • A CEO could make a case against an immoral practice to owners (fifth sentence)
      • Example of profit-seeking endeavor that harms public
        • A paper mill that decimates forests & pollutes lakes to increase profits (third sentence)
      • Author's attitude: "But" (first sentence), "does not hold up under careful scrutiny" (first sentence), "although there is no doubt" (second sentence), "there is no guarantee—either theoretically or in practice" (second sentence), "It is absurd to deny" (third sentence), "they are not morally paramount" (fourth sentence), "ultimately do not excuse the individual from the responsibility of acting morally" (last sentence)

Main Point: The economists' defense of corporations is ill-founded because corporate profit doesn't always lead to public profit and business obligations do not override moral ones.

Key Lines?

Paragraph 1, Sentence 1 (P1, S1): Criticism of corporations

P1, S3: The economists' rebuttal

P4, S1: The author's response is introduced

Meta-Structure?

Criticizing a Viewpoint: This passage utilizes a Criticizing a Viewpoint Meta-Structure.* In such structures, the author describes a view held by another person or group, and then criticizes that view.

In passages that use a Criticizing a Viewpoint Meta-Structure, the main point will be the author's central criticism or a summary of the criticisms. We can often find a conclusion in which the author summarizes their criticisms. But since this author doesn't provide such a conclusion, we'll come up with one ourselves. Thus, the main point will be: "The economists' defense of corporations is ill-founded because corporate profit doesn't always lead to public profit and business obligations do not override moral ones."

*As is true for many Criticizing a Viewpoint passages, other Critical Meta-Structures could apply here. Correcting the Record could also certainly describe this passage's argument. You could even use the Resolving a Debate Meta-Structure.

Comparison: This passage’s most prominent minor Meta-Structure is the comparison. The author draws many distinctions throughout the passage (corporations and people, owner-operated and CEO-operated corporations, charitable organizations and corporations, the CEO’s business/legal obligations and moral obligations). At least one of these is bound to be relevant to a question, so having them conveniently highlighted can help us review relevant text when necessary.

Last Thoughts?

Viewpoints in RC are sometimes stacked like onion layers. At the center of this particular passage, we have a view that claims corporations are to blame for many of the problems in Western society. This view is not articulated or expanded upon – it's simply the starting point. Then, the next layer of viewpoint belongs to the economists who think that corporations are absolved from this kind of moral evaluation. This view and the argument behind it are explained. Finally, the center layer of this onion is the author's view that these corporations do, in fact, have moral responsibilities. This view is outlined in the most detail and it represents the main point of the passage. Keeping these views organized and understanding the relationship between them is vital to a complete understanding of this passage.

Question prompt

The discussion of the Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: B

The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.

Question Type

Social Science

Strategy Overview

Review the passage’s reference to a paper mill, consult notes, and choose an answer choice based on your understanding of that reference in the passage’s overall argument

Answer Anticipation

This question asks us why the author inserted the discussion of a paper mill into the fourth paragraph. Unless a detail conflicts with the paragraph's purpose, the author probably mentioned that detail to advance the paragraph's role. So reviewing the fourth paragraph’s role, which we hopefully wrote down in the notes on our scratch paper, will generally reveal why the author included that detail.In this case, the fourth paragraph is there to lay out the author’s criticism of the economists’ view. Now, looking at the context for the specific detail in question, we see immediately that it's an example. (Hopefully, we highlighted that, given that examples are one of the minor Meta-Structures.) The author says, “[T]here is no guarantee … that a given CEO will benefit the public by maximizing corporate profit” (P4, S2). This is exemplified by the possibility of “a paper mill legally maximizing its profits over a five-year period by decimating a forest for its wood or polluting a lake with its industrial waste” (P4, S3). Therefore, we can anticipate an answer choice that says something like this: the discussion of the paper mill is there to provide a possible example of a company that maximizes its profits in a way that does not benefit the public.

Answer choices

  1. A
    offer an actual case Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited

    (A) Does this match the purpose that we anticipated (“provide a possible example of a company that maximizes its profits in a way that does not benefit the public”)?

    Nope. We don’t know if the paper mill was an “actual case.” The author says that this situation is a “possibility,” so it’s probably just a hypothetical. (A) is out.

  2. B
    refute the contention that Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B matches the stem

    (B) Does this match the purpose that we anticipated (“provide a possible example of a company that maximizes its profits in a way that does not benefit the public”)?

    Yes! This is almost exactly what we anticipated. We can confidently pick (B) and move on.

  3. C
    illustrate that ethical restrictions Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C is not credited

    (C) Does this match the purpose that we anticipated (“provide a possible example of a company that maximizes its profits in a way that does not benefit the public”)?

    Not quite. We didn't review anything about ethical restrictions at all (moral obligations are not the necessarily the same as ethical ones). Plus, we didn't review anything about enforcement. (C) is out.

  4. D
    demonstrate that corporations are Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited

    (D) Does this match the purpose that we anticipated (“provide a possible example of a company that maximizes its profits in a way that does not benefit the public”)?

    Not quite. This certainly is an example of a company doing something bad. But again, this is just a hypothetical paper mill — it doesn’t provide any evidence that businesses have actually caused “social ills.” (D) is out.

  5. E
    deny that corporations are Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) Does this match the purpose that we anticipated (“provide a possible example of a company that maximizes its profits in a way that does not benefit the public”)?

    Nope. The paper mill only illustrates that companies are hypothetically capable of immoral actions – it does nothing to confirm that they are capable of moral actions. (E) is out.

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 9%
  2. B Credited 86%
  3. C 3%
  4. D 2%
  5. E 0%

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