Answer Choices
Neither sex would feel oppressed.
Both sexes would be greatly harmed.
Men would try to reclaim their lost authority.
Men and women would have privileges they do not need.
Explanation for Question 33 From the Reading Section on the Official Sat Practice Test 7
Question 33 asks in passage. 2 One Tocqueville implies that treatment of men and women as identical in nature would 3 have which consequence. So we can look back in this passage, 4 one to see kind of where Tocqueville's referencing trading men and woman as identical, 5 and see if they mention anything about like the effects or consequences of that. 6 To get some context, to answer this question here. 7 So we find that in the second paragraph of passage, 8 one, we can just read through it real quickly. It sells, 9 it says they would give to both the same functions, 10 impose on both the same duties and grant to both the same rights. 11 So this is directly discussing treating men and women as equals. 12 So that's how we know this is the evidence to look at. It says 13 they would mix them in all things, their occupations, 14 their pleasures, their business. It may be readily conceived that by thus attempting to 15 make one sex equal to another. 16 So this is going to show us the sentence, the cause and effect relationship 17 here. So the cause making one sex equal to the other effect, 18 both are degraded and from so preposterous, 19 a medley of the works of nature, nothing could ever result, 20 but weak men and disorderly women. So two things that are really emphasized 21 here is that the result is going to be weak men and disorderly women. 22 And that both sexes are degraded. 23 So let's look for an answer choice here that has that negative connotation and 24 is saying that it...