- Mon May 31, 2021 7:15 pm
#87482
Tacking on here - Took me a while to interpret this one on A versus C but I think I finally see it.
The primary difference between A and C is this "contradictory" versus "mistaken" idea. In my timed pass of this on my PT, I didn't even realize that "preventing one another from offending each other" and "kindness and social harmony" were linked (I'm a pretty dense individual, so I rarely catch those things.)
In any event - the key here is noticing that many people don't necessarily have views that are contradictory about etiquette because they don't explicitly link their approval of kindness and social harmony to etiquette. While these two things are clearly direct results of etiquette, as evidenced by the 2nd sentence in the stimulus, we can't fix that origin to the "many people." In order to make A work, we would have to have information that these many people acknowledge the fact that kindness and social harmony derive from etiquette. That type of answer would produce something like ~ "many people criticize etiquette because it has no beneficial effects for society, but these same people think that kindness and social harmony, which derive directly from etiquette, are good (for society). Short of the long here, however, is that we don't have this assurance about the many people and their PERSONALLY HELD beliefs about where the good things they support derived from.
C, on the other hand, does something similar to A, but does so in a way that does not require assumptions. It says this same group of many people is "mistaken" - they are mistaken because etiquette is sufficient to produce social harmony and kindness, which the many people purport to be beneficial to society. So, these many people are mistaken in their belief regarding etiquette having no beneficial effects on society, without holding contradictory beliefs about etiquette itself.