Stuck between question A and B. Any tips?
Admin Note: Edited title. For LR questions, please use the format: "PT#.S#.Q# - brief description of the question."
Stuck between question A and B. Any tips?
Admin Note: Edited title. For LR questions, please use the format: "PT#.S#.Q# - brief description of the question."
I thought it was D, but I understand why it's C now.
It's because D creates another unfair situation: it prevents people who could apply for the rebate from doing so.
Here's an analogy. Imagine if I'm giving free money to people on Monday. I publicize the money-giving event by sending people invites in their DMs. Then, I discover that some of the invites had the wrong date. The unfair result is that while some will show up on the right date, others will show up on the wrong date and miss out on the event. As a result, do I
(C) try to find the invites that had the wrong date and send them the invite with the right date, or
(D) cancel the event entirely
C fulfils its obligation to rectify the unfair result
D's attempt to rectify the unfair result creates another unfair result. People who were gonna get free money will not.
So the principle of rectifying unfair results most helps to justify the action in C, not D.
I could be wrong tho.
I chose B in BR. Doesn't the columnist change the meaning of the word bad by using the word ineffective?
It seems like a flaw, but, on second thought, maybe that's not the flaw to which the argument is most vulnerable.
Any perspective would be appreciated!
#help
using dragon ball z to explain weakening questions...i think i'm in love
my mistake here was trying to force the first few statements into conditionals
interested
J.Y did not just say "sprinkle refreshing dust"😂😂
anyway, point taken