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 reop6780
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#13317
For me, answer B and D seemed identical.

I chose B and the correct answer is D.

The principle states that depending on their motives, you should praise, not praise, condemn, and not condemn.

I read answer B and D several times but both of their motives do not rely on selfless motives, and they do not praise.
 Robert Carroll
PowerScore Staff
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#13334
reop,

Let's make explicit what the principle says:

praise an act of apparent generosity :arrow: believe it is actually performed out of selfless motives

condemn an act of apparent selfishness :arrow: believe it is actually performed out of self-centered motives

Look very carefully at answer choice (B). Since this is a situation where Sarah is not praising Michael, we'll refer to the first conditional above. If Sarah believed Michael's act was not performed out of selfless motives, then she should not praise that act of apparent generosity. Notice here that there are two acts: Michael's giving a tenth of his income to charity, and Michael's telling Sarah about it. Sarah has reason to think his motive for telling her about it is selfish, but we don't have any reason to think that his motive for giving the money in the first place was selfish! The principle in the stimulus tells us only about a connection between the motive of an act and the praise or condemnation of that act. It never says that having a selfish reason for telling someone about an act means that the original act itself should not be praised. This is why answer choice (B) is not identical to answer choice (D), and why it doesn't work.

This was a tricky one! I hope the explanation makes sense.

Robert
 LSAT2018
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#45716
Based on your conditional phrases, would answers (A) and (E) be Mistaken Reversals?
 Adam Tyson
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#49606
Answer A does sort of look like a Mistaken Reversal, in that there is no way based on these statements that we could ever prove that one is right to condemn someone, but only when it is not right to do so. But it isn't really a Mistaken Reversal because the author didn't tell us that the necessary condition had been met. We don;t know what Caroline believed, only what she knew, and we can't really say that Monica's offer was apparently selfish because at least on its face it looked generous.

Same issues with E - we can never prove that it is right to condemn, but this isn't an MR because we don't know that the act was apparently selfish and we don't know if Albert believed that Louis acted out self-centered motives.

A true Mistaken Reversal is where the author says "the necessary condition did, in fact, occur, and therefore the sufficient condition must have also occurred." In neither of these answers does the author tell us that the necessary condition occurred. They are both incorrect because they do not follow either principle, but not because they are MRs.
 w35t
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#77403
Hello,

Could someone explain why answer choice D is the correct answer?

Thank you in advance
 Paul Marsh
PowerScore Staff
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#77527
Hi w35t! Our stimulus here presents us with two principles

1) If you praise an act of apparent generosity :arrow: you have to believe it's performed out of selfless motives. (Contrapositive of this: if you don't believe the act is performed with selfless motives :arrow: don't praise an act of apparent generosity).

and

2) If you condemn an act of apparent selfishness :arrow: you have to believe it's performed out of self-centered motives. (Contrapositive of this: if you don't believe the act is performed out of self-centered motives :arrow: don't condemn the act).

Answer choice (D) conforms to those principles by applying the contrapositive of our first principle: Daniel didn't believe that Margaret offered to share her house for selfless reasons, so he didn't praise the act.

Hope that helps! Feel free to follow up if you have any more specific questions about this one.
 dshen123
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#110554
Adam Tyson wrote: Wed Aug 15, 2018 12:43 pm Answer A does sort of look like a Mistaken Reversal, in that there is no way based on these statements that we could ever prove that one is right to condemn someone, but only when it is not right to do so. But it isn't really a Mistaken Reversal because the author didn't tell us that the necessary condition had been met. We don;t know what Caroline believed, only what she knew, and we can't really say that Monica's offer was apparently selfish because at least on its face it looked generous.

Same issues with E - we can never prove that it is right to condemn, but this isn't an MR because we don't know that the act was apparently selfish and we don't know if Albert believed that Louis acted out self-centered motives.

A true Mistaken Reversal is where the author says "the necessary condition did, in fact, occur, and therefore the sufficient condition must have also occurred." In neither of these answers does the author tell us that the necessary condition occurred. They are both incorrect because they do not follow either principle, but not because they are MRs.
:-? Not Out of selfless motives—->should not praise. Not out of self centered motives——> should not condemn . are we just looking for “should not”? “Should” in this case confuses sufficient with necessary? If in A and E the necessary did occur would they be mistaken reversal? Thank you

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