- Wed Sep 06, 2017 4:39 pm
#39277
I struggled a lot with this question and ultimately picked randomly on the test, and then chose (D) on blind review.
(D) seems like the best answer by process of elimination, but I burned a ton of time trying to understand why it was so likely that Tyne misinterpreted anything. I can see how his statement about the "value of natural, undisturbed areas" could be understood as non-economic, but I thought it made a lot more sense understood as economic.
If, for example, a bunch of developers were building hotels on a beach, without zoning restrictions the developers would over-run the land and, in doing so, cause each of their own properties to become less valuable, because the quality of the beach declines with excessive development. Some natural, undisturbed land actually increases the value of the land that is developed. This seems to me like a foundational premise of all zoning regulations.
What confused me so much about this question is that, to me, Tyne's statement only makes sense if it is understood as economic. If he's talking about the natural non-economic value of undisturbed land, why would he preface his argument with "Though it is true that the recent increase in...regulations...could be seen by developers as merely an activists' ploy to restrict development"...in fact, X-Y-Z? If we understand his argument as talking about something non-economic, then it seems necessarily true that the regulations *are* activists' ploys to restrict development. That's the whole point!
But if we take Tyne to be talking about economic value, his "though...but" construction makes perfect sense. Though it may seem like a ploy to redistrict development, it's actually an attempt to preserve the economic value of the surrounding development.
You'll probably say I'm bringing into way too much outside information and assumptions to my analysis. But what's the point of "though...could be" if he's not disputing the purely economic logic of Marisa's argument?