- Fri Mar 22, 2019 5:32 pm
#63598
Happy to lend a hand here, bbonds675. "Most at odds" means in conflict with, violates, or contradicts. This language is common for a Cannot Be True question, which this is (and these are incredibly rare in LR, with many tests having none at all and most others having just one). When we are asked about being "at odds" with a principle, it means we are looking for an answer that violates the principle. In other words, what rule was broken? Find the rule that the government broke, and you have your winner!
Answer C looks like an opposite answer, once we know what we are looking for. The government in this case basically followed that rule - they prevented the testing on the grounds that it would mislead the public. We need a rule that says they should have allowed the testing, because that would be a rule that they broke! Only answer A does that, and that makes it the right answer.
Rare question type, so no surprise it caused some trouble. If it helps (and I might be showing my age here), think about The Odd Couple. Felix and Oscar were an odd couple because they were opposites, in conflict all the time. That's what being "at odds" is all about!
Adam M. Tyson
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