The statement that best summarizes feudal Japan's social hierarchy is:
"Members of the warrior classes tended to hold more political power in feudal Japan."
In feudal Japan, the social hierarchy was largely dominated by the samurai and other warrior classes, who held significant political and military power. Although the emperor was a figurehead, it was the shogun and the samurai who exercised real authority. Farmers and peasants, despite being crucial to the economy, were considered lower in the hierarchy, and merchants, although they could accumulate wealth, did not hold the same status as the warrior class.