Can someone help me with this one?
I don't understand why B is not right. The stimulus I thought was saying that if it's something you don't have control over, then you are not responsible for it. And Therefore, If it's a consequence of something you don't have control over, the you should be held responsible.
Then it says that everyone sometimes acts in ways that are a consequence of treatment they received as infants, so doesn't that make the inference that everyone sometimes acts in ways that they are shouldn't be held responsible for. So therefore, I don't understand how E is the correct answer but B is not supported. Because my thinking was that for E, it talks about adults only, and the stimulus says that everyone, including little children and like adolescents, sometimes acts in these ways that you shouldn't be held responsible for.
So doesn't that mean that you could have been like 12 and acted in some way that was a consequence of treatment you received as an infant, and then as an adult you never did that again. So how is B not the right answer because that's exactly the possible that it captures and E doesn't Also, for B, i was hesitant over its saying "commonly performed" but then, if everyone sometimes does it, that's commonly performed, is it not?
Comments
A, seemed attractive at first, but it goees way too far
B. to me was out of scoped as in introduced a new concept, plus we dont know about any exceptions, so I eliminated it.
C. Talks about adults who claim, so that is out of scope
D. Is a negation of the relationship, plus we dont know that.
E. Is the correct answer as it is supported because no adult can be held responsible for every action, because as the stimulus provided there are some actions we have no control over.
I think you are caught up in everyone vs adult vs people vs children.
We are looking for something that must be true if we we are following the facts stated in the stimulus.
With all of the fact given, B could be true, but it definitely is not a must be true component
The argument goes off in a bit of a tangent, shifting the language from more responsibility for things they have no control over, to do adults have control over the treatment they receive. It then tells us that babies do not have control over their treatment, so they are not morally responsible for that treatment, but for adults it is difficult to determine.
Sure but arent babies people? Or teenagers people? And it doesn't say that the adult must have done whatever action it was when they turned 18 or 21... maybe they did it when they were 12... but because of what we know from the stimulus an adult should not be held morally responsible for EVERY action EVER performed...
Does that help at all?