Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT119 S1 P1 Q1 Explanation

Definition of Prosperity

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsMain PointSociety

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Passage

Economists have long defined prosperity in terms of monetary value, gauging a given nation’s prosperity solely on the basis of the total monetary value of the goods and services produced annually. However, critics point out that defining prosperity solely as a function of monetary value is questionable since it fails to recognize quality of life may in fact initiate economic activity that, by the economists’ measure, bolsters prosperity.

It can also happen that communities seeking to increase their prosperity as measured strictly in monetary terms may damage their quality of life and their environment. The situation of one rural community illustrates this point: residents of the community value the local timber industry as a primary source of income, and they the harvest limitations would lower their wages or even cause the loss of jobs.

But critics of the economists’ view argue that this view of the situation overlooks a crucial consideration. Without the harvest limitations, they say, the land on which the community depends would be seriously damaged. Moreover, they point out that the residents themselves cite the abundance of natural beauty as one of the will thus lose much more—even understood in monetary terms—if the proposed harvest limits are not implemented.

Economists respond by arguing that to be a useful concept, prosperity must be defined in easily quantifiable terms, and that prosperity thus should not include difficult-to-measure values such as happiness or environmental health. But this position dodges the issue—emphasizing ease of calculation causes one to disregard substantive issues that directly influence real and quantifiable measure, but it is a poor substitute for an accurate appraisal of literary merit.

What this question is testing

Main Point

Your task

Capture the passage's overall primary point — the claim everything else supports.

Common trap

Answers that are true but too narrow (a single paragraph) or too broad (beyond the passage's scope).

Winning move

Summarize the whole passage in one sentence first, then match it to a choice.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
1.

Which one of the following most accurately states the main point of

Answer choices

  1. Wrong Emphasis3% picked this

    According to critics, communities that seek to increase their prosperity recognize the need to gauge the value and ensure the long-term

    This answer says nothing about "how to define prosperity", which was the central topic of the passage, so it's not really worth considering. This answer makes it seem like the central topic of the passage was "communities that seek to increase their prosperity", which clearly was not the main topic.

  2. Correct84% picked this

    Economists’ definition of prosperity strictly in terms of monetary value is too narrow to truly capture our ordinary

    Why this is right

    This has the right feel: "defining prosperity solely in monetary value is dumb." In the second to last sentence of the passage, the author is saying, emphasizing ease of calculation (the way the economists do) causes one to disregard substantive issues that directly influence real prosperity. What does the author mean by "real" prosperity? Our ordinary conception of this notion -- thriving as a species. Having a decimated ozone layer is not prosperity. Ruining the natural beauty of an area by removing harvest limitations would not be prosperity.

    Skill tested: Main Point · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  3. Out of Scope4% picked this

    If economists were to alter and expand their definition of prosperity, it is likely that the economic and environmental health of most communities would

    Out of Scope: if definition changed Too Strong: most This answer makes a prediction about what would change if the economists changed their position. The passage never got into any speculation about what would happen if economists changed their position. The passage just presented the debate and then sided with the people who think the economists hold a crappy position. The author definitely didn't make a prediction that got as specific as at least 51% of communities would be worse off.

  4. Too Strong: little use6% picked this

    In contrast with the views of economists, some critics believe that prosperity can be neither scientifically measured nor accurately defined, and as a concept

    The critics aren't agitating for us to throw away the concept of prosperity. They're just saying, "can't we include some non-monetary sources of value in our assessment of prosperity?" They don't seem hopeless that prosperity cannot be accurately defined. They're just arguing that prosperity is not being accurately defined by the economists.

  5. Wrong Emphasis Too Strong3% picked this

    While they are generally an accurate and practical measure of current economic prosperity, figures for the total expenditures of a nation do not aid

    Wrong Emphasis Too Strong: do not aid The central topic of the passage was "how should we define prosperity". The central topic, according to the grammar of this answer, is "figures for the total expenditures of a nation". That's too far off to keep reading. Even if it were on topic, it's not supported. The author isn't arguing that GDP type figures do not aid in providing an indication of future economic prospects. The author is only saying that GDP does not suffice as the only indication of future economic prospects.

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