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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
nice question
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
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Choice B is the official answer if anyone is still wondering.
soumya1989 wrote:
A person who agrees to serve as mediator between two warring factions at the request of both abandons by so agreeing the right to take sides later. To take sides
at a later point would be to suggest that the earlier presumptive impartiality was a sham.

The passage above emphasizes which of the following points about mediators?
A) They should try to form no opinions of their own about any issue that is related to the dispute.
B) They should not agree to serve unless they are committed to maintaining a stance of impartiality.
C) They should not agree to serve unless they are equally acceptable to all parties to a dispute.
D) They should feel free to take sides in the dispute right from the start, provided that they make their biases publicly known.
E) They should reserve the right to abandon their impartiality so as not to be open to the charge of having been deceitful.

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Question: 1
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
Choice B
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
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Choice B seems the most logical
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
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Correct Answer: B.
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
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A person who agrees to serve as mediator between two warring factions at the request of both abandons by so agreeing the right later to take sides. To take sides at a later point would be to suggest that the earlier presumptive impartiality was a sham.

The passage above emphasizes which of the following points about mediators?

(A) They should try to form no opinions of their own about any issue that is related to the dispute.
(B) They should' not agree to serve unless they are committed to maintaining a stance of impartiality.
(C) They should not agree to serve unless they are equally acceptable to all parties to a dispute.
(D) They should feel free to take sides in the dispute right from the start. provided that they make their biases publicly known.
(E) They should reserve the right to abandon their impartiality so as not to be open to the charge of having been deceitful.
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
i need an explanation to this
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
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Merged similar topic. Ask if something remains still unclear. I will provide further insight

Regards
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
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The sentence structure of the first sentence is unclear to me, especially the bold part.
Quote:
A person who agrees to serve as mediator between two warring factions at the request of both abandons by so agreeing the right later to take sides

I interpreted it as "The mediator has to take a side initially because taking sides later will be a contradiction to his earlier stance of impartiality."
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
Carcass wrote:
Merged similar topic. Ask if something remains still unclear. I will provide further insight

Regards


Carcass please explain
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
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In all fairness the OG says that this question is easy but it is all level but easy. I mean for sure is not a 5 level but is not that easy.

First off, it is an inference question.

Second, the key part is just in the beginning, right there

A person who agrees to serve as a mediator between two warring factions at the request of both abandons by so agreeing the right to take sides later. To take sides at a later point would be to suggest that the earlier presumptive impartiality was a sham.

The rest of the sentence in its wording basically conveys the meaning: the person becomes biased or take a stance of one side or another and the result is a sham.

The inference at this point is pretty straight: we can conclude that the person BEFORE to accept the mandate should NOT become biased or have a tendency for one or the other side

B is the only that says this clearly


Hope this helps
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
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Ah gregmat you beauty!
Simplification stratergyin 30 seconds.
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
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choice [C] vs choice [B] ??
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
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amitnathgupta wrote:
choice [C] vs choice [B] ??


What do you mean ??
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
What type of question is this? Is it a Critical Reasoning Question or Inference Question or Main Idea?
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
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akmkawser wrote:
What type of question is this? Is it a Critical Reasoning Question or Inference Question or Main Idea?


Critical reasoning aka passage paragraph argument. you can see in the tag
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Re: A person who agrees to serve as mediator [#permalink]
Hi. I am a little confused about option D. It's written that the mediator should agree to not take sides 'later'. For me, it hints that either mediator should not take sides at all throughout the process or he/she should take sides right from the start and make it known (to counter 'presumptive impartiality' part in the latter part of the sentence). I know it won't make much sense in real life for a mediator to declare his/her bias but GRE expects us to not apply any outside information while solving the questions, which in my opinion makes D a possible answer.
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