- Posts: 78
- Joined: Feb 22, 2021
- Sat Mar 06, 2021 5:18 pm
#85024
PG 51/140
The explanation says Anger is too extreme to be correct, yet earlier on the same page (140), the passage summary says "the language used to describe their suffering displays feelings of compassion and outrage (emphasis mine).
So if the author uses outraged language, how could he not be angry and why isn't A the answer?
Is it fair to say then, that any answer choice on the LSAT with the word angry (or ecstatic, thrilled, furious, etc.) is automatically wrong no matter what?
The explanation says Anger is too extreme to be correct, yet earlier on the same page (140), the passage summary says "the language used to describe their suffering displays feelings of compassion and outrage (emphasis mine).
So if the author uses outraged language, how could he not be angry and why isn't A the answer?
Is it fair to say then, that any answer choice on the LSAT with the word angry (or ecstatic, thrilled, furious, etc.) is automatically wrong no matter what?