- Wed Sep 04, 2024 10:21 am
#108789
Hi nicizle,
First, you were right the first time. The correct answer to this question is C, not A.
The key to correctly answering this question is properly distinguish between facts and opinions (and points of view) in this stimulus. LSAT stimuli often shift from facts to opinions or vice versa, and you want to pay attention to these shifts.
Here, the first two sentences are presented as facts. Etiquette does help people get along. It does prevent people from inadvertently offending people. We then get the opinion/belief of "many people" that etiquette has no beneficial effect. These same people think/believe that kindness and social harmony are good.
Now, if these people also believed that etiquette promotes kindness and social harmony, then they would have contradictory views about etiquette and Answer A would correctly describe that situation.
In that situation, these people would simultaneously believe that:
1. Etiquette promotes kindness and social harmony
2. Kindness and social harmony are good (i.e. beneficial)
3. Etiquette has no beneficial effects
The problem with Answer A is that we do not know that these people believe that etiquette promotes kindness and social harmony. Even though the stimulus states that etiquette helps people get along, which would imply promoting social harmony, that does not mean that these people believe this to be true. It is quite possible that they are either unaware of this fact or simply choose not to believe it.
Answer C, on the other hand, directly contrasts their belief that etiquette has no social benefit to the fact that it does help people get along, which would be considered a social benefit.