- Tue Feb 09, 2021 1:12 pm
#83948
Hi iwishiwasbaking,
You're in the right ballpark, but you're not focusing as strongly on what the author is suggesting as the question wants you to. After all, that is what the question asks for: what "the author of passage A suggests that Rosenthal exhibits" with this phrase. The problem with going back to line 2 for the evidence of this is that line 2 gives us Rosenthal's own words. She says her purpose is to "question" certain categories, a softer term. But the author gives Rosenthal's book a pretty radical reading. In other words, Rosenthal herself might say, "I'm just asking questions about these categories." But the author reads her as doing something more extreme. Look at the end of the first paragraph: "such rhetorical questioning invariably leads to the required postmodern answer: that there is no difference between these things." In other words, the author suggests that she's doing more than questioning. She's transforming traditional categories by removing the distinctions among them. You get the same sense at the beginning of the next paragraph: "[Rosenthal] writes as if a political approach has to extirpate all moral considerations." In other words, traditional categories are being transformed by getting rid of all moral considerations.
Those are the references that back answer choice A, and given that there aren't any great references backing answer choice D (the author himself writes in a heated way about Rosenthal, but doesn't suggest that Rosenthal's purpose is to provoke that heat), that's what we're left with!
I hope this helps!
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant