Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT133 S4 P4 Q24 Explanation

Historical Objectivity

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TopicsAuthor OpinionSociety

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Passage

Passage A Central to the historian’s profession and scholarship has been the ideal of objectivity. The assumptions upon which this ideal rests include a commitment to the reality of the past, a sharp separation all, a distinction between history and fiction.

According to this ideal, historical facts are prior to and independent of interpretation: the value of an interpretation should be judged by how well it accounts for the facts; if an interpretation is contradicted by facts, it should be abandoned. The fact that successive generations of historians have ascribed different meanings claim, that the events themselves lack fixed or absolute meanings.

Objective historians see their role as that of a neutral judge, one who must never become an advocate or, worse, propagandist. Their conclusions should display the judicial qualities of balance and evenhandedness. As with the judiciary, these qualities require insulation from political considerations, and avoidance of partisanship or bias. Thus objective historians historical truth and to colleagues who share a commitment to its discovery.

Passage B The very possibility of historical scholarship as an enterprise distinct from propaganda requires of its practitioners that self-discipline that enables them to do such things as abandon wishful thinking, assimilate bad news, elementary tests of evidence and logic.

Yet objectivity, for the historian, should not be confused with neutrality. Objectivity is perfectly compatible with strong political commitment. The objective thinker does not value detachment as an end in itself but only as an indispensable means of achieving deeper understanding. In historical scholarship, the ideal of objectivity is most compellingly embodied abode that they cannot even explore others can never be persuasive to anyone but fellow habitués.

Such arguments are often more faithful to the complexity of historical interpretation—more faithful even to the irreducible plurality of human perspectives—than texts that abjure position-taking altogether. The powerful argument is the highest fruit of the kind of thinking I would call objective, and in it neutrality plays no part. Authentic objectivity bears a question, editorially splitting the difference between them, irrespective of their perceived merits.

What this question is testing

Author Opinion

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

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

The question
24.

The author of passage B and the kind of objective historian described in passage A would be most likely

Answer choices

  1. Unsupported Disagree Position13% picked this

    detachment aids the historian in achieving an objective view of

    It's pretty clear that Passage A would agree with this, but it doesn't seem like we could easily support Passage B saying, "Detachment is of no help to historians trying to objectively view the past". Passage B doesn't need his objectivity to be totally neutral, but there still might be moments where detachment can aid a historian. He talks about historians managing "to suspend momentarily his or her own perceptions so as to anticipate and take into account objections and alternate constructions", which sounds like a form of detachment.

  2. Correct81% picked this

    an objective historical account can include a strong

    Why this is right

    Passage B has the Agree position. 2nd sentence of the 2nd paragraph: Objectivity is perfectly compatible with strong political commitment. Passage A has the Disagree position, "objectivity cannot include a strong political commitment". 3rd sentence of the 3rd paragraph: [Objective historians should display qualities that] require insulation from political considerations, and avoidance of partisanship or bias.

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

  3. Out of Scope Comparison2% picked this

    historians today are less objective than they

    Neither author discusses whether objectivity is growing or shrinking among historians today. Both passages are sort of a timeless discussion of what objectivity means.

  4. Unsupported Agree Position3% picked this

    propaganda is an essential tool of

    Both authors would disagree with this. They both think propaganda is to be avoided. Passage A explicitly disagrees with this in the beginning of the 3rd paragraph: Objective historians ... must never become an advocate or, worse, propagandist. Passage B's first sentence suggests that historical scholarship is trying to be distinct from propaganda. No matter what, Passage B can't be said to agree with this answer. We wouldn't find any in B to support the very strong notion that "Propaganda is essential".

  5. Unsupported Disagree Position2% picked this

    historians of different eras have arrived at differing interpretations of the

    Everyone in the world would agree with this. Disagreeing with this would be saying "Every single historian of every single era has arrived at identical interpretations of a given historical event".

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