Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT15 S1 P3 Q16 Explanation

J.G.A. Pocock

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

TopicsMain PointHumanities

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Passage

J. G. A. Pocock’s numerous investigations have all revolved around the fruitful assumption that a work of political thought can only be understood in light of the linguistic constraints to which its author was subject, for these prescribed both the choice of subject matter and the author’s conceptualization of this subject matter. its meaning, even if the philosopher had no knowledge of the period of the text’s composition.

The language Pocock has most closely investigated is that of “civic humanism.” For much of his career he has argued that eighteenth-century English political thought should be interpreted as a conflict between rival versions of the “virtue” central to civic humanism. On the one hand, he argues, this virtue is described by virtue using a vocabulary of commerce and economic progress; for them the ideal is the merchant.

In making such linguistic discriminations Pocock has disassociated himself from historians like Namier, who deride all eighteenth-century English political language as “cant.” But while Pocock’s ideas have proved fertile when applied to England, they are more controversial when applied to the late-eighteenth-century United States. Pocock’s assertion that Jefferson’s attacks on the commercial though guilty of some exaggeration, has done the most to make us aware of their importance.

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
16.

The main idea of the passage

Answer choices

  1. Trap2% picked this

    civic humanism, in any of its manifestations, cannot entirely explain eighteenth-century

  2. Trap12% picked this

    eighteenth-century political texts are less likely to reflect a single vocabulary than to

  3. Correct76% picked this

    Pocock’s linguistic approach, though not applicable to all eighteenth-century political texts, provides a useful model for

    Why this is right

    Answer C is correct.

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

  4. Trap2% picked this

    Pocock has more successfully accounted for the nature of political thought in eighteenth-century England than in

  5. Trap8% picked this

    Pocock’s notion of the importance of language in political texts is a logical extension of the insights

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