Hi Esquire123!
You comment,
I understood that they're saying that political theories are being written by people in academia, who use very intricate language that makes it inaccessible to people outside of academia. It seems that there are key players outside of academia who are able to create change in society.
Your paraphrasing sounds correct! It's worth adding that this is a good practice to be in--if it doesn't take too much time, it can be helpful to paraphrase/reword a stimulus in your own words to enable it to make more sense.
So then the author goes on to conclude that we need these people outside of academia to write these political theories in more simple terms so that it's more accessible to people outside of academia.
This paraphrasing also seems to be accurate.
However, if the political theories are written in a very convoluted way that makes it hard for people outside of academia to understand, then how are these same people then expected to rewrite the political theories in simple terms if they don't know what they're saying in the first place?
The stimulus doesn't say that the academics aren't
able to write in widely accessible style. Rather, it's indicating that political theories are formulated and perhaps are conversed about within universities in language that may appear convoluted to people outside of that setting. It's possible that these academics are able to switch to more accessible language outside of that setting. It's also possible that many of them
do in fact switch--perhaps in addition to their academic scholarship, some of them occasionally publish on blogs or in newspapers to broad audiences. Finally, the stimulus doesn't indicate that these people "don't know what they're saying in the first place" (though that might be possible). Rather, the stimulus indicates
other people don't know what they're saying, i.e., people outside of academia might find the language of people within academia to be convoluted.
This is why answer choice (E) supplies a missing assumption. That answer states, "Persons within academic settings are less willing or less able than persons outside to write in a straightforward way." Using the Assumption Negation technique, we can negate this to: "Persons within academic settings are [not] less willing or less able than persons outside to write in a straightforward way." This negation is effectively saying that the people in academia are indeed able to write in a straightforward way. If this were true, the argument falls apart that people outside of academia are necessary to present the political theories in a straightforward way.