<!--StartFragment --> For many years, historians thought
that the development of capitalism had not
faced serious challenges in the United
Line States. Writing in the early twentieth cen-
(5) tury, Progressive historians sympathized
with the battles waged by farmers and
small producers against large capitalists
in the late nineteenth century, but they did
not question the widespread acceptance
(10) of laissez-faire (unregulated) capitalism
throughout American history. Similarly,
Louis Hartz, who sometimes disagreed
with the Progressives, argued that Americans
accepted laissez-faire capitalism
(15) without challenge because they lacked
a feudal, precapitalist past. Recently,
however, some scholars have argued
that even though laissez-faire became
the prevailing ethos in nineteen-century
(20) America, it was not accepted without
struggle. Laissez-faire capitalism, they
suggest, clashed with existing religious
and communitarian norms that imposed
moral constraints on acquisitiveness to
(25) protect the weak from the predatory, the
strong from corruption, and the entire culture
from materialist excess. Buttressed
by mercantilist notions that government
should be both regulator and promoter
(30) of economic activity, these norms persisted
long after the American Revolution
helped unleash the economic forces that
produced capitalism. These scholars
argue that even in the late nineteenth
(35) century, with the government’s role in
the economy considerably diminished,
laissez-faire had not triumphed completely.
Hard times continued to revive
popular demands for regulating busi-
(40) ness and softening the harsh edges of
laissez-faire capitalism.
Q37: The passage suggests that the scholars mentioned in line 17 would agree with which of the following statements regarding the "norms" mentioned in line 23?
A. They provided a primary source of opposition to the devlopment of laissez-fire capitalism in the United States in the nineteenth century.
B. Their appeal was undermined by diffcult economic times in the United States at the end of the nineteenth century.
C. They disappeared in the United States in the late nineteenth century because of the trinmph of laissez-faire captitalism.
D. They facilitated the successful implementation of mercantilist notions of government in the United States in the nineteenth-century.
E. They are now recognized by historians as having been an important part of the ideology of the American Revolution.
Answer: A,
My answer: D, as this is supported by bold line. |