Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT141 S1 P3 Q18 Explanation

Advertising Criticisms

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

TopicsParagraph PurposeSociety

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Passage

Some critics of advertising have assumed that the creation of false needs in consumers is the principal mechanism underlying what these critics regard as its manipulative and hegemonic power. Central to this type of critique are the writings of political theorist Herbert Marcuse, who maintained that modern people succumb to oppression by to the genuine well-being of consumers, but rather to the profit—and thereby the disproportionate power—of corporations.

Marcuse supposed that we all have certain real needs, both physical and psychological. Advertising appropriates these needs for its own purposes, forging psychological associations between them and consumer items, e.g., between sex and perfume, thereby creating a false “need” for these items. Since the quest for fulfillment is thus displaced from its never really fulfilled and the consumer remains at some level unsatisfied.

Unfortunately, the distinction between real and false needs upon which this critique depends is extremely problematic. If Marcusians are right, we cannot, with any assurance, separate our real needs from the alleged false needs we feel as a result of the manipulation of advertisers. For, in order to do so, it would society that they have come to inform our instinctive judgments about things.

But, in fact, Marcusians make a major mistake in assuming that the majority of consumers who respond to advertising do not do so autonomously. Advertising techniques are unable to induce unwilling behavior in rational, informed adults, and regulations prohibit misinformation in advertising claims. Moreover, evidence suggests that most adults understand and recognize fulfillment, or even that its genuine fulfillment of needs must be less than the advertisement suggests.

What this question is testing

Paragraph Purpose

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
18.

The main function of the first paragraph

Answer choices

  1. Scope: political / economic context7% picked this

    summarize the political and economic context from which Marcusian critiques of

    The first paragraph summarizes the Marcusian critique of advertising, not the political / economic context from which it arises. We don't know anything about the background conditions that gave way to the Marcusian critique of advertising. We just know the content of their ideas, not the backstory behind them.

  2. Too Narrow7% picked this

    outline the mechanisms by which false needs originate in mass

    This seems to describe the last sentence of the first paragraph, which does discuss "false needs" and does mention "mass market culture". We could say that "the powerful psychological techniques of advertising" is a mechanism by which false needs are created. But did the first paragraph outline mechanisms, plural? No. If we count the psychological techniques as various different mechanisms, did the first paragraph outline different psychological techniques? No. Most importantly, this answer just doesn't vibe with what we thought we were looking for. The first paragraph presents the Marcusian view, and this answer isn't capturing that reality at all.

  3. Out of Scope: evaluate5% picked this

    evaluate the psychological processes by which the manipulative techniques of mass market

    As we observed before, the first paragraph doesn't contain any ideas in the author's voice or from her perspective. So there can't be any evaluation taking place (that indicates that the author is expressing her opinion or making value judgments).

  4. Out of Scope: prevailing views28% picked this

    describe the prevailing views among contemporary critics of advertising and categorize Marcuse's theories in relation

    The adjective "prevailing" means "the mainstream / the leading view". If we say, "The prevailing wisdom is to arrive at the airport at least an hour before your flight", we mean "the #1 perspective / what the most people believe". Does this first paragraph ever describe a view that prevails / dominates among contemporary critics of advertising? No, it just says that "some critics of advertising [have Marcusian beliefs]."

  5. Correct54% picked this

    describe Marcusian views regarding mass market manipulation and indicate their role in certain

    Why this is right

    We love "describe Marcusian views", since that's basically what we were looking for. The views are regarding mass market manipulation. And the first paragraph does indicate their role in certain criticisms; the 2nd sentence begins by saying that Marcuse's views are "central to the type of critique" discussed in the 1st sentence. In essence. this answer starts by describing the 2nd and 3rd sentences of the first paragraph and ends by describing the 1st sentence.

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

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