Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.
Customized for You
we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Track Your Progress
every week, we’ll send you an estimated GRE score based on your performance
Practice Pays
we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Thank you for using the timer!
We noticed you are actually not timing your practice. Click the START button first next time you use the timer.
There are many benefits to timing your practice, including:
Your score will improve and your results will be more realistic
Is there something wrong with our timer?Let us know!
Michael Walzer concluded the decade with a marvelous essay about parti
[#permalink]
12 Oct 2021, 10:42
2
1
Expert Reply
1
Bookmarks
Question 1
00:00
Question Stats:
51% (02:53) correct
49% (02:14) wrong based on 63 sessions
HideShow
timer Statistics
A
B
C
D
E
Question 2
00:00
Question Stats:
33% (00:51) correct
68% (01:15) wrong based on 40 sessions
HideShow
timer Statistics
A
B
C
Michael Walzer concluded the decade with a marvelous essay about participation in progressive politics. He made several key points. First, a citizen’s choice not to participate does not constitute false consciousness. There are many legitimate reasons for citizens to disengage themselves from politics. Equally important, these nonparticipants play an important role in democracy. They serve as audiences and critics of participants. Furthermore, they are citizens who have rights and interests that need to be represented. Walzer wrote, “Participatory democracy needs to be paralleled by representative democracy.” Second, participatory democracy has a tendency to become “the rule of men with the most evenings to spare.” Activists often turn participation into an onerous “duty” that entails constant meetings, discussions, deliberations, and decision-making. That duty may become so burdensome that most citizens cannot conceivably do it and many activists burn out trying. The “participatory” element in participatory democracy may disappear when the few activists who are willing to give 110 percent to the cause monopolize among themselves political initiative, strategy, and authority. Walzer warned that the most committed participants are the ones who need the strongest reminder that they are only part of the citizenry.
10. The passage implies which of the following about the relationship between participatory and representative democracy?
A. Those who actively urge others to participate are more valuable to the democratic process than those who do not. B. People who do not vote forfeit their right to a stake in the outcome of an election. C. Activists should devote some of their attention to ensure that those who do not vote are fairly represented. D. It is more valuable for most people to be an audience for those who participate in democracy than to participate themselves. E. The most committed activists would do well to allow others to have a greater role.
Consider each of the choices separately and select all that apply.
11. The passage suggests which of the following about political activists?
A. A minority of activists control a majority of political effort. B. Activists use duty as a way of removing their political rivals from the participatory process. C. Certain activists have shortsighted views regarding representation.
Re: Michael Walzer concluded the decade with a marvelous essay about parti
[#permalink]
14 Oct 2021, 09:38
1
Expert Reply
koala wrote:
I couldn't understand the meaning of option C from Q2. Can someone please help?
C is in this phrase
Activists often turn participation into an onerous “duty” that entails constant meetings, discussions, deliberations, and decision-making. That duty may become so burdensome that most citizens cannot conceivably do it and many activists burn out trying.
That means they do not understand fully the meaning of participation of a democracy
Michael Walzer concluded the decade with a marvelous essay about parti
[#permalink]
16 Oct 2021, 01:58
1
Why in question 2 is B wrong? The passage did say that they who give 110 percent monopolize among themselves political initiative, strategy and authority doesn't monopoly belong to candidates as well? As few are 110 percent.
Re: Michael Walzer concluded the decade with a marvelous essay about parti
[#permalink]
03 Dec 2021, 00:06
JaxHammer wrote:
Why in question 2 is B wrong? The passage did say that they who give 110 percent monopolize among themselves political initiative, strategy and authority doesn't monopoly belong to candidates as well? As few are 110 percent.
they monopoly but not removing from meeting,right?
gmatclubot
Re: Michael Walzer concluded the decade with a marvelous essay about parti [#permalink]