CAT 2021 Slot 1VARC Question 3

Mixed PracticeEasy
Passage / Data

Direction for Reading Comprehension: The passages given here are followed by some questions that have four answer choices; read the passage carefully and pick the option whose answer best aligns with the passage.

We cannot travel outside our neighbourhood without passports. We must wear the same plainclothes. We must exchange our houses every ten years. We cannot avoid labour. We all go to bed at the same time . . . We have religious freedom, but we cannot deny that the soul dies with the body, since 'but for the fear of punishment, they would have nothing but contempt for the laws and customs of society'. . . . In More's time, for much of the population, given the plenty and security on offer, such restraints would not have seemed overly unreasonable. For modern readers, however, Utopia appears to rely upon relentless transparency, the repression of variety, and the curtailment of privacy. Utopia provides security: but at what price' In both its external and internal relations, indeed, it seems perilously dystopian.

Such a conclusion might be fortified by examining selectively the tradition which follows more on these points. This often portrays societies where. . .'it would be almost impossible for man to be depraved, or wicked'. . . . This is achieved both through institutions and mores, which underpin the common life. . .. The passions are regulated and inequalities of wealth and distinction are minimized. Needs, vanity, and emulation are restrained, often by prizing equality and holding riches in contempt. The desire for public power is curbed. Marriage and sexual intercourse are often controlled: in Tommaso Campanella's The City of the Sun (1623), the first great literary utopia after More's, relations are forbidden to men before the age of twenty-one and women before nineteen. Communal child-rearing is normal; for Campanella this commences at age two. Greater simplicity of life, 'living according to nature', is often a result: the desire for simplicity and purity are closely related. People become more alike in appearance, opinion, and outlook than they often have been. Unity, order, and homogeneity thus prevail at the cost of individuality and diversity. This model, as J. C. Davis demonstrates, dominated early modern utopianism. . . . And utopian homogeneity remains a familiar theme well into the twentieth century.

Given these considerations, it is not unreasonable to take as our starting point here the hypothesis that utopia and dystopia evidently share more in common than is often supposed. Indeed, they might be twins, the progeny of the same parents. Insofar as this proves to be the case, my linkage of both here will be uncomfortably close for some readers. Yet we should not mistake this argument for the assertion that all utopias are, or tend to produce, dystopias. Those who defend this proposition will find that their association here is not nearly close enough. For we have only to acknowledge the existence of thousands of successful intentional communities in which a cooperative ethos predominates and where harmony without coercion is the rule to set aside such an assertion. Here the individual's submersion in the group is consensual (though this concept is not unproblematic). It results not in enslavement but voluntary submission to group norms. Harmony is achieved without . . .harming others.

Which sequence of words below best captures the narrative of the passage?

Answer & solution

  • A

    Relentless transparency - Homogeneity - Utopia - Dystopia.

  • B

    Utopia - Security - Dystopia - Coercion.

  • C

    Curtailment of privacy - Dystopia - Utopia - Intentional community.

  • Utopia - Security - Homogeneity - Intentional community.

Solution

Easy

This asks for the sequence of words that tracks the passage's narrative arc. Map the passage's flow: it starts from Utopia (More's vision), notes it offers security, describes how the tradition produces homogeneity, and ends by invoking real intentional communities as harmonious utopias. The best chain follows that order and includes the closing key idea, "intentional community."

A

Wrong. "Relentless transparency – Homogeneity – Utopia – Dystopia" ends on dystopia and omits the passage's concluding turn to intentional communities, where harmony is achieved consensually. It misses the final movement of the argument.

B

Wrong. "Utopia – Security – Dystopia – Coercion" drops the central second-paragraph theme of homogeneity and ends on "coercion," whereas the passage closes precisely by denying coercion ("harmony without coercion").

C

Wrong. "Curtailment of privacy – Dystopia – Utopia – Intentional community" scrambles the order: the passage opens with utopia and reaches "dystopian" only as a conclusion, not before utopia. The sequence is reversed.

D

Correct. "Utopia – Security – Homogeneity – Intentional community" mirrors the passage: More's Utopia, the security it offers, the homogeneity of the tradition, and the closing appeal to successful intentional communities. It includes both the key theme (homogeneity) and the concluding idea (intentional community).

Option D. It alone follows the passage's actual order and carries its central and final ideas.

CAT 2021 Slot 1 VARC Q3: Which sequence of words below best captures the narrative of the passage? — Solution | TheCATExam