- Fri Jan 17, 2020 6:48 pm
#73370
Shannon,
Note the actual wording of answer choice (D): "could conceivably". The author of passage A does not have to be committed to any actual benefits for those benefits to be conceivable. Looking around line 25, I can also see that the author thinks the right thing is not justified merely when it produces good outcomes - thus, the author is certainly conceiving of a situation where there's a right thing to do and yet it doesn't produce a good outcome, so that the normative argument has to be marshaled to prove that it's still the right thing.
Robert Carroll
Note the actual wording of answer choice (D): "could conceivably". The author of passage A does not have to be committed to any actual benefits for those benefits to be conceivable. Looking around line 25, I can also see that the author thinks the right thing is not justified merely when it produces good outcomes - thus, the author is certainly conceiving of a situation where there's a right thing to do and yet it doesn't produce a good outcome, so that the normative argument has to be marshaled to prove that it's still the right thing.
Robert Carroll