- Wed Dec 04, 2024 8:57 am
#110925
Hello,
I did choose E for this question, but I feel it is not entirely accurate to say chefs derive professional benefit from following social norms. To be exact, I think that Passage B shows that when one chef follows the social norms, the chef on the other side receives the benefit.
Take for instance the first norm, which states "a chef must not copy another chef's recipe innovation exactly. The function of this norm is analogous to patenting in that the community acknowledges the right of a recipe inventor to exclude others from practicing his or her invention." One chef would follow the norm of not copying the other chef's recipe. But the one who benefits is technically the chef who owns the recipe, not the chef who followed the norm. The same concept would apply to the second and third norms.
Is answer choice E correct because we'd assume that by following social norms, a chef would become part a system where other chefs would also follow the same norms, thereby eventually becoming a beneficiary?
Please let me know. Thank you!