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#33323
Complete Question Explanation

Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (E)

The author of this stimulus presents a number of requirements that go along with giving a sincere apology, and with sincerely accepting an apology. First, one should apologize only to someone that person has wronged, and only for having wronged them. Further, a sincere apology requires acknowledgment of one’s wrongful act, and an intention not to repeat that wrongful act:
  • ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... acknowledgement of wrongful act
    sincere apology offering ..... :arrow: ..... ..... ..... ..... +
    ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... intention not to repeat wrongful act
Finally, the author provides that a sincere acceptance of an apology requires both acknowledging the wrongdoing and a vow not to hold a grudge:
  • ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... acknowledgement of wrongful act
    sincere apology acceptance ..... :arrow: ..... ..... ..... ..... +
    ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... vow not to hold a grudge
The stimulus is followed by a Must Be True question, so the right answer choice will be confirmed by the information from the stimulus, likely by the conditional statements diagrammed above.

Answer choice (A): The author provides that a sincere apology requires the intent not to repeat the act; however, a subsequent repeat offense does not necessarily mean that the requisite intent was absent at the time of the apology. This choice fails the Fact Test and should be ruled out of contention for this Must Be True question.

Answer choice (B): According to the information provided in the stimulus, the sincere acceptance of an apology requires acknowledgement of the wrongful act and a vow not to hold a grudge. The author does not say that the apology has to have been offered sincerely, so this choice is not confirmed by the information from the stimulus.

Answer choice (C): The stimulus specifies that one should apologize only for having wronged another person, not that a sincere apology is due for having committed any wrongful act, so this choice can be ruled out of contention.

Answer choice (D): The author provides that a sincere apology offering requires acknowledgement of the wrongful act and intent not to repeat the act, but the stimulus does not specify that the apology be capable of being sincerely accepted, so this choice is not confirmed by the stimulus and cannot be the right answer to this question.

Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. As is reflected in the conditional diagrams in the discussion of the stimulus, a sincere apology offering requires acknowledgment of the wrongful act, as does a sincere apology acceptance, confirming this as the correct answer to this Must Be True question.
 lsatstudier
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#32151
Hi,

Could someone please explain why the answer is E? I thought it was A. I'm starting to get frustrated because I thought I understood MBT questions yet I am still getting tripped up on exams, especially with the questions that deal with moral issues like this one or being prudent, etc.

Thank you so much!
 Kristina Moen
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#32162
lsatstudier,

This stimulus contained conditional reasoning. You can treat it mechanistically. It doesn't matter if it's about apologizing, prudence, wronging someone, morality, or those others terms that tend to sound a bit fuzzy. If you treat it mechanistically, then you don't have to think about what it means or conceptualize the terms.

So here's how I approach a question like this. As soon as I see a Conditional Reasoning Indicator, my pencil hits the paper. Here, we've got a conditional indicator right away! The word "only" is a Necessary Condition Indicator, so I diagram the first sentence as:
Apologize -> To the person wronged AND for having wronged the person.

It's important to know that you could have wronged someone, but that doesn't mean you have to apologize! But if you DO apologize, it's necessary that it be to the person wronged and for having wronged them. So I can't go up to the wronged person's Grandma and say "Sorry." I'd have to go to the person wronged and say "Sorry for eating all your bananas!" :-D

Here's the next sentence diagrammed: Apologize sincerely -> Acknowledging that one acted wrongfully.

But the third sentence has a Conditional Reasoning Indicator that is special: "Unless." When you encounter the word "unless," it's a necessary condition, and you negate the other part to get the sufficient condition. So again, I'm just treating this mechanistically. I'm not thinking about whether it makes sense. I'm not conceptualizing it in my head. So I would diagram this as:
Apologize -> Intend not to repeat harmful act. I negated "cannot apologize" to simply "apologize."

Here's the last sentence diagrammed: Accept apology sincerely -> acknowledge a wrong AND vow not to hold a grudge.

So let's put it all together (and of course, on the real test you won't be typing out explanations, so the diagrams will be right there in one place):
Apologize -> To the person wronged AND for having wronged the person.
Apologize sincerely -> Acknowledge that one acted wrongfully.
Apologize -> Intend not to repeat harmful act.
Accept apology sincerely -> Acknowledge a wrong AND vow not to hold a grudge.

So treating this mechanistically, let's diagram answer choice (A) and (E).

Answer choice (A): Apologize and repeats the wrongful act -> Not sincere. Looks pretty good, but I've hit a snag. The third sentence is about intent, not about action. Apologizing sincerely requires an INTENT not to repeat the harmful act. Someone who repeats the wrongful act may have intended not to repeat it when they apologized. If I were doing this question, I probably wouldn't think about it so deeply and just keep it. It has an "off" word (repeating the act, rather than intending to repeat the act), but I'd keep it in case nothing else looks good.

Answer choice (E): Ah, the word "unless" again. Remember, "unless" signals a necessary condition, and you negate the other part to get the sufficient. I'm doing this mechanistically. I diagram this as:
Apology sincerely offered and accepted -> acknowledge a wrongful act occurred

YES! It's a perfect match. The stimulus told me that acknowledging you acted wrongfully is a requirement for apologizing sincerely. And acknowledging the wrong is a requirement for accepting an apology sincerely. It's a perfect match, as you always hope on a Must Be True question.

I know this was a really long explanation. When you're doing practice questions, just get used to putting your pencil to the paper whenever you see a Conditional Reasoning Indicator. You can solve questions like this mechanistically!
 Pragmatism
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#61773
So I was stuck between A & E and ended up choosing the incorrect answer. I see the conditional reasoning you have diagrammed, but I am still missing how the answer choice is correct by meeting only 1/2 of the necessary condition “acknowledge a wrongful act” needed to constitute any of those conditional reasoning correct.

acknowledgement of wrongful act (AWA)
1. sincere apology offering (AO) ———————>. +
intention not to repeat wrongful act (~IRWA)

acknowledgement of wrongful act (AWA)
2. sincere accept. apology (AA) ———————>. +
Vow not to hold grudge (~HG)

The Contrapositive would be:

1. ~AWA or IRWA —-> ~AO

2. ~AWA OR HG ——> ~AA

I cannot see any way how 1 & 2 share something in common other than that 1/2 of a necessary assumption. Please help.
 James Finch
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#62067
Hi Pragmatism,

Your diagrams look correct, so I'm not sure where your confusion lies. Acknowledging a wrongful act occurred is one of two necessary conditions that must be fulfilled for both offering and acceptance of a sincere apology. In both diagrams, not acknowledging that a wrongful act occurred may act as a sole sufficient condition, so neither offering nor acceptance of a sincere apology would be possible. Consider:

Acknowledge Wrongful Act :arrow: Offer a Sincere Apology + Accept a Sincere Apology

Let me know if this clears things up.
 Pragmatism
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#62170
Thank you for the clarification!
 nusheenaparvizi
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#77022
I wanted to gain some advice or insight onto my thought process on answer E. I did not choose E because I saw that it mentioned only one aspect of the necessary part of the conditional... acknowledging that a wrongful act has occurred. My problem with this was that it can't be JUST acknowledging the fact that a problem has occurred, the conditionals even say (as the stimulus indicates) "and" vows not to hold any grudges.... so I assumed that E would be wrong because it only mentions one part of the conditional when the not holding a grudge part is also part of the conditional?

I initially chose E because I didn't see this, and then when I saw this I was like aha! Only to realize I was wrong and my revolutionary realization wasn't actually helpful or accurate... Can someone explain why my thought process was wrong? Why wouldn't we account for that second part of the necessary part of the conditional?

Thanks so much!
 Adam Tyson
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#77556
This looks like a case of letting the perfect be the enemy of the good, nusheenaparvizi, a trap we all fall into from time to time. You saw the answer as being incomplete, and thus imperfect, and called it wrong. But we don't need perfect answers on the LSAT - we need CORRECT answers! And an incomplete answer to a Must Be True question can still be valid and true and necessary.

Here's an example:

In order to please my wife on our anniversary, I must remember the occasion, bring her flowers, and either cook dinner or take her out to a nice restaurant.

Now, if it is our anniversary and I pleased my wife, what must be true?

I remembered the occasion.

Must that be true? Of course! It was one of the requirements. Is that everything that must be true? No, but it's still true, isn't it?

Don't reject an answer to a Must Be True question just because it isn't the only thing that must be true, just as you would not reject an answer to a Weaken question just because it is not the only thing that weakens the argument. Is the answer necessarily true? Then pick it, even if it seems like the answer could have been more complete.
 blade21cn
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#85805
I thought the first part of the correct answer (E) is ambiguous: "An apology cannot be both sincerely offered and sincerely accepted."

(1) An apology cannot be both sincerely offered and sincerely accepted at the same time, though either one can stand by itself: apologize sincerely → NOT accept sincerely; CP: accept sincerely → NOT apologize sincerely.

(2) Neither apologize sincerely nor accept sincerely: NOT apologize sincerely + NOT accept sincerely.

Apparently, (E) is taking on the second interpretation, but is the first interpretation correct? If it's valid, then how should we know which interpretation to use? Thanks!
 Robert Carroll
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#88320
blade,

The part of answer choice (E) you're looking at is part of a conditional. We see the word "unless" in the answer. So we diagram the entire answer as a conditional; the part you're looking at won't have a "cannot" in it at all when the Unless Equation is used on it.

"Cannot do A and B unless C" = (A + B) :arrow: C

So:

(apology sincerely offered + same apology sincerely accepted) :arrow: each person acknowledges wrongful act

Robert Carroll

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