- Thu Feb 20, 2014 12:00 am
#33190
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=13649)
The correct answer choice is (D)
Both passages deal with the idea that people have a natural inclination to want more than their neighbors, and this question asks for the choice with the two authors’ likely description of such people.
Answer choice (A): The first author would not describe such a person as insular, and the second would not describe such a person as cosmopolitan, so this choice is wrong on both counts and can be confidently ruled out of contention.
Answer choice (B): Wanting more than your neighbor is hardly altruistic, and the second author believes that the drive for more has honorable foundations, so this choice can be ruled out on both counts.
Answer choice (C): The first author would not necessarily agree that a person with a drive for greater relative prosperity is necessarily happy, and the second author would say that such a drive has a beneficial basis, not likely agreeing that any such person must be miserable.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The first author would agree with the characterization “misguided,” and points out that we cannot foresee how we will adjust our expectations even as we acquire more material goods, so we over-acquire material things leaving less resources to spend on leisure.
Answer choice (E): There is nothing in the first passage to support the notion that the author would characterize such a person as lucky, and while the second author does mention the theory regarding an underlying biological drive, the author would not describe a person who wants greater relative prosperity as primitive. As such, this cannot be the right answer choice to this Must Be True question.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=13649)
The correct answer choice is (D)
Both passages deal with the idea that people have a natural inclination to want more than their neighbors, and this question asks for the choice with the two authors’ likely description of such people.
Answer choice (A): The first author would not describe such a person as insular, and the second would not describe such a person as cosmopolitan, so this choice is wrong on both counts and can be confidently ruled out of contention.
Answer choice (B): Wanting more than your neighbor is hardly altruistic, and the second author believes that the drive for more has honorable foundations, so this choice can be ruled out on both counts.
Answer choice (C): The first author would not necessarily agree that a person with a drive for greater relative prosperity is necessarily happy, and the second author would say that such a drive has a beneficial basis, not likely agreeing that any such person must be miserable.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The first author would agree with the characterization “misguided,” and points out that we cannot foresee how we will adjust our expectations even as we acquire more material goods, so we over-acquire material things leaving less resources to spend on leisure.
Answer choice (E): There is nothing in the first passage to support the notion that the author would characterize such a person as lucky, and while the second author does mention the theory regarding an underlying biological drive, the author would not describe a person who wants greater relative prosperity as primitive. As such, this cannot be the right answer choice to this Must Be True question.