- Mon Aug 26, 2024 7:32 pm
#108583
To be honest, I'm having a lot of trouble understanding how any of these answer choices bear any relevance to what's being discussed in the stimulus--they all seem like very weak answers to me that have marginal impact on the argument in terms of weakening. I struggle a lot with these late stage strengthen/weaken questions because the answer choice always seems to be a profound reach or something that has extremely marginal relevance to what's being discussed.
With respect to AC B, I'm still struggling to understand the connection to the stimulus. If the stimulus is saying that people should shop at businesses with high ethical standards and that the media should publicize when a business does "notably ethical action" because people are possibly more inclined to shop there, why do we care even remotely about what B is saying? To me, an apt weakener would suggest that there is no relationship between business ethics and customer's inclination to patronize them, or that ethics is not enough to stimulate business... or asserting that just because a business performs a 'notably ethical action,' doesn't necessarily mean the business exhibits high ethical standards.
Even if B is true, how does that impact what the stimulus is discussing? Who cares that meeting high ethical standards just means not doing anything bad? How does that weaken the assertion that the media should publicize notably ethical actions?
Is the weakener in choice B the implication that lowering the standard for what "high ethics" means actually means that many businesses could be classified as "high ethics" just by doing the bare minimum in not doing bad? But even at that, I really don't see how that weakens the idea that the media should publicize notable ethical actions.
Sorry for the long post, but I'm just struggling to see how literally any of these answer choices help weaken the conclusion, let alone AC B.
If possible, a complete explanation would be nice.