Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT8 S3 P4 Q25 Explanation

Rubinstein's London

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

TopicsLocal PurposeSociety

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Passage

A conventional view of nineteenth-century Britain holds that iron manufacturers and textile manufacturers from the north of England became the wealthiest and most powerful people in society after about 1832. According to Marxist historians, these industrialists were the target of the working class in its struggle for power. A new study by outnumbered and outdone by a London-based commercial elite. His claims are provocative and deserve consideration.

Rubinstein’s claim about the location of wealth comes from his investigation of probate records. These indicate the value of personal property, excluding real property (buildings and land), left by individuals at death. It does seem as if large fortunes were more frequently made in commerce than in industry and, within industry, more biases into the probate valuations of individuals with different types of businesses would be worth investigating.

The orthodox view that the wealthiest individuals were the most powerful is also questioned by Rubinstein’s study. The problem for this orthodox view is that Rubinstein finds many millionaires who are totally unknown to nineteenth-century historians; the reason for their obscurity could be that they were not powerful. Indeed, Rubinstein dismisses any companies. The only requirements were university attendance and a father with a middle-class income.

Rubinstein, in another study, has begun to buttress his findings about the location of wealth by analyzing income tax returns, which reveal a geographical distribution of middle-class incomes similar to that of wealthy incomes revealed by probate records. But claims can only be considered partially convincing.

What this question is testing

Local Purpose

Your task

Identify why the author included the referenced detail at that point in the passage — its function, not its content.

Common trap

Answers that merely repeat or summarize the topic of the detail instead of describing the role it plays.

Winning move

Ask what job the detail does for the paragraph, then for the passage's broader point.

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

The question
25.

The author mentions that goodwill was probably excluded from the probate valuation of a business in nineteenth-century Britain most

Answer choices

  1. Trap3% picked this

    give an example of a business asset about which little was known in

  2. Correct92% picked this

    suggest that the probate valuations of certain businesses may have been significant underestimations of their

    Why this is right

    Answer B is correct.

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

  3. Trap2% picked this

    make the point that this exclusion probably had an equal impact on the probate valuations of

  4. Trap3% picked this

    indicate that expectations about future profit-making is the single most important factor in determining the market

  5. Trap0% picked this

    argue that the twentieth-century method of determining probate valuations of a business may be consistently superior

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