- Fri Jan 31, 2014 5:14 am
#14221
I am having a bit of difficulty with arriving to the correct answer to this flaw question. In this stimulus, I know that it concludes that democracy does not promote political freedom.
When reading this stimulus again, it appears that the stimulus is making this claim based on two historical cases:
1.) A society where democracy existed and there was no political freedom;
2.) A society where there was no democracy but political freedom did exist
I think the key word in the conclusion is "promote". Democracy (among other factors) can promote political freedom even though in some societies they don't exist at the same time. So, in both examples mentioned above, democracy can still promote political freedom, but it just so happens that in example 1 other factors may have helped prevent political freedom from existing, and in example 2 oligarchies instead of a democracy existed and yet political freedom prevailed. At the end of the day though in both cases democracy still promotes political freedom. Is this what answer choice D is trying to say?
When reading this stimulus again, it appears that the stimulus is making this claim based on two historical cases:
1.) A society where democracy existed and there was no political freedom;
2.) A society where there was no democracy but political freedom did exist
I think the key word in the conclusion is "promote". Democracy (among other factors) can promote political freedom even though in some societies they don't exist at the same time. So, in both examples mentioned above, democracy can still promote political freedom, but it just so happens that in example 1 other factors may have helped prevent political freedom from existing, and in example 2 oligarchies instead of a democracy existed and yet political freedom prevailed. At the end of the day though in both cases democracy still promotes political freedom. Is this what answer choice D is trying to say?