Reading comp PrepTest 112 · Section 2 · Question 14

Passage

Questions 7-14  .        In Intellectual Culture in Elizabethan and  . Jacobean England , J.W. Binns asserts that the drama Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Humanities


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Binns's view (important Latin Renaissance texts are underappreciated because of academic specialization)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Binns's view:
      • People who learn Latin tend to leave alone texts on "theology and science, law and medicine," even though those writings "revolutionized Western thought" (fifth sentence)
    • Comparisons, according to Binns:
      • Latin was used by English intellectuals (especially for works of law, theology, and science) more than English during the Renaissance (second sentence)
      • Language specialists focus on poems and orations more than works of theology, science, law, and medicine (fifth sentence)
      • Unlike language specialists, specialists in theology, science, law, and medicine do not have philological (linguistic) training (fifth sentence)
      • Historians can find more guidance when reading Milton's Latin poetry than they can when reading the more challenging scientific works by Newton (last sentence)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • More on Binns's view (intellectual historians underestimate the importance of Latin on Renaissance England)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Binns's view:
      • "Intellectual historians" love to dig into "historical, cosmological, and theological" topics, but they do so with texts that were either written in or translated into English (first sentence)
      • This means that they ignore important context for these English writers, including that English writers were taught Latin in school and grew up in a world that was dominated by Latin (second through last sentence)

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Author's view (limitations are understandable but distort our understanding of Renaissance England)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Author's view:
      • This problem is understandable because no one is trained with all the skills that you would need to completely understand some Renaissance texts (first and second sentence)
      • Still, this problem keeps us from truly understanding some important texts (last sentence)
    • Author's attitude: "understandable" (first sentence), "No modern classicist" (second sentence), "difficult" (second sentence), "few students" (second sentence), "inability to cross boundaries" (last sentence), "each presents a distorted reading" (last sentence)

Main Point: Because so few academics are trained to read Renaissance Latin, some important texts from the English Renaissance have not been thoroughly studied.

Meta-Structure?

Problem/Solution: This passage uses a Problem/Solution Meta-Structure.* In such passages, the author will articulate a problem and then (usually) will discuss potential solutions.

In this specific passage, the first paragraph lays out the problem as it has been stated by one J.W. Binns. According to Binns, "because many academic specializations do not overlap, many texts central to an interpretation of early modern English culture have gone unexamined" (P1, S3). The rest of the first paragraph and the entirety of the second describes how people who can read Latin only read the literary stuff (like poems and stories) and the people who have the specialized knowledge to understand the more technical stuff (like science, medicine, theology, and law) haven't been trained to read Latin.

Now that we have identified the problem, we need to ask ourselves, does the author provide a solution? The answer is simply no. The author never identifies what could be done to fix this problem, but that's okay! In a Problem/Solution Meta-structure, the author is not obligated to fix the problem that the passage introduces. In this specific case, the author is content to simply tell us that the issue at hand is a problem.

Generally, the main point in a Problem/Solution passage will be either the solution the author endorses or proffers. However, since we know that our author does not tell us about any potential solutions, our main point will be our author's opinion on the problem. In the last paragraph, the passage gives us a sentence that summarizes just that. It says, "[T]he result of each side's inability to cross boundaries has been that each presents a distorted reading of the intellectual culture of Renaissance England" (P3, S2). Thus, our main point will be something like, "Because so few academics are trained to read Renaissance Latin, some important texts from the English Renaissance have not been thoroughly studied."

*This passage is almost a Reporting a Viewpoint passage but the author presents their view in the third paragraph. Still, if you treated this passage like a Reporting a Viewpoint passage, you'd come out with a solid grasp of the main point and organization. You could also think of this as a Phenomenon/Explanation passage (phenomenon: many English Renaissance texts go unexamined; explanation: few scholars can appreciate these texts in their original Latin)

Last Thoughts?

Whenever a RC passage discusses an author at length (as this passage does with Binns), it's important to analyze the relationship between this writer and the author of the passage. Does the author of the passage agree? Do they disagree? In this text, there's nothing explicit to tell us how our author feels about Binns, so we have to rely on inferring that attitude from the tone of the passage. 

To that end, we should note that the first two paragraphs are framed as Binn's argument. Sentences often say "Binn asserts" or "according to Bin." Nowhere in these two paragraphs is it apparent that the author has shifted into their own voice and perspective. Yet, in the third paragraph, where there is no "Binn says," it seems that we have shifted to the author's voice. Other than conceding that the limitations Binns observes are "understandable," the argument remains the same. Therefore, we can infer that the author implicitly agrees with Binn's thoughts. Understanding that relationships will almost certainly help us answer some of the questions about this passage.

Question prompt

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

Credited answer: D

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

Question Type

Humanities

Strategy Overview

Review the main point and any major Meta-Structures, then find an answer that best captures the latter with the details from the former

Answer Anticipation

A question that asks for what the author is "primarily concerned with" asks us to select the answer choice that describes why the author wrote the passage. The correct answer will describe an action: what the author hoped to do in the passage and how the author accomplished that.Now, in a broad sense, every author hopes to convince us that the main point is true. However, different authors employ different means to convince us of that main point. That’s why the passage’s Meta-Structure can be revealing: it helps us predetermine how this specific author was attempting to convey the main point.In this case, the central Meta-Structure was Problem/Solution. But, as we stated in the Meta-Structure section in the Passage Summary, the author never offers a solution. Instead, the author only describes the problem. According to our main point, the problem is that some important texts from the English Renaissance have not been thoroughly studied because so few academics are trained to read Renaissance Latin. So, inserting the details from the main point into the general framework provided by the Meta-Structure, we can say the author is primarily concerned with describing a problem in the study of Renaissance England.

Answer choices

  1. A
    an enumeration of new Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited

    (A) Does this say the author is primarily concerned with describing a problem in the study of Renaissance England?

    Nope. This makes it sound like an Old Approach/New Approach passage. The author never described new approaches to understanding the intellectual context of Renaissance England, so we can cross off (A).

  2. B
    contrasting views of disparate Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (B) Does this say the author is primarily concerned with describing a problem in the study of Renaissance England?

    No. This makes it sound like a Describing a Debate passage. The author never contrasts views — the author only describes Binns' view on studying Renaissance England.

  3. C
    a summary of intellectual Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C is not credited

    (C) Does this say the author is primarily concerned with describing a problem in the study of Renaissance England?

    No. The author only summarizes one intellectual's point — Binns'. Binns isn't in dispute with anyone, as far as we know, so (C) is offbase.

  4. D
    a discussion of a Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D matches the stem

    (D) Does this say the author is primarily concerned with describing a problem in the study of Renaissance England?

    Yep! It's fair to say that the problem is a "significant deficiency" since many important books go overlooked and unexamined. This matches the main point and Meta-Struture, so it is correct.

  5. E
    a correction of an Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) Does this say the author is primarily concerned with describing a problem in the study of Renaissance England?

    No. This sounds like a Rebutting Critics passage. The author never corrects themselves, so we can cross off (E).

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 4%
  2. B 2%
  3. C 6%
  4. D Credited 87%
  5. E 1%

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