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Saturday, Oct 21 2017

PT3.S4.Q9

Can someone help me understand the following phrase within the stimulus?

"This willingness is even more revealing than is good-natured acquiescence in having others poke fun at one".

In other websites, I see many people making connections between hearing funny story about oneself and self-confidence (Hearing funny story about oneself -> Self-confidence). I don't understand how they make such connection.

Thank you in advance!

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3 comments

  • Sunday, Oct 22 2017

    @donamhyun690 said:

    You are awesome! @madhavpanday95523 !!!! Thank you so much! I get it now!

    Glad I could help!! :)

    1
  • Sunday, Oct 22 2017

    You are awesome! @madhavpanday95523 !!!! Thank you so much! I get it now!

    1
  • Saturday, Oct 21 2017

    @donamhyun690 said:

    Can someone help me understand the following phrase within the stimulus?

    "This willingness is even more revealing than is good-natured acquiescence in having others poke fun at one".

    In other websites, I see many people making connections between hearing funny story about oneself and self-confidence (Hearing funny story about oneself -> Self-confidence). I don't understand how they make such connection.

    Thank you in advance!

    Both, good-natured acquiescence and the willingness to tell funny stories/jokes about oneself, are considered as signals of supreme self-confidence.

    The first sentence talks about how the "willingness to tell jokes about oneself" is the surest way of knowing that a person has self-confidence. The second sentence - the one you quoted above - compares it to good-natured acquiescence (the ability to tolerate others' jokes targeted at you), and renders it as a strong, but not quite as revealing of a person's self-confidence as the willingness to make oneself the subject of his/her own jokes.

    That's why one can reasonably infer that there are at least two factors which signal supreme self-confidence from the passage - one being the willingness to tell jokes about oneself; the second being good-natured acquiescence. The former, however, is more 'revealing' of one's self-confidence.

    Therefore, it's a two part argument:

    Hearing funny story about oneself (good-natured acquiescence) -> Self-confidence, is one part.

    Willingness to tell a joke -> SC, is the other part.

    The correct (AC A) is basically the contrapositive of the above.

    5

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