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LSAT: Logical Reasoning Question #2

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Bruce: Almost a century ago, country X annexed its neighbor's western province, clearly an unjust act. It is the obligation of country X to return the province to its former possessors, even if doing so would involve great sacrifice on the part of those citizens of country X who are currently living within that province.

Linda: A nation's paramount responsibility is the well-being of its own citizens. Country X should make the sacrifice of returning the province only if it can be sure that such an act will provide some tangible benefit to the citizens of country X. The issue of whether the original annexation was just is a secondary consideration.

Question: Linda's reply to Bruce most closely conforms to which one of the following principles?

Choices:
A. A nation is obliged to make sacrifices only in order to fulfill its paramount responsibility.
B. Historical wrongs can properly be redressed only when all interested parties agree that a wrong has been committed .
C. No national sacrifice is too great, provided that it is undertaken in order to insure the future well-being of the nation.
D. The views of the entire nation should be consulted before the nation takes an action that involves considerable sacrifice from any part of the nation.
E. A nation is obligated to redress historical injustices only when such redress would involve minimal sacrifice from that nation.



The question wants the gist of Linda's response to Bruce's claim that regardless of the sacrifices entailed, country X should give back the province it annexed a century ago, on the grounds that the annexation was "unjust." Linda replies, in essence, "unjust, my foot." To her, the unjustness of the original act is beside the point; what matters is whether the return of the province will benefit country X's own citizens. (A), therefore, has it just right, Linda already having defined the enhancement of a country's well-being as that country's "paramount responsibility." She sees that well-being as a necessary condition of any act-such as the return of the province-that would require sacrifice.

Choices (C) and (E) go astray on the same issue-namely, the amount of sacrifice required. Linda never implies that there is no sacrifice too great for a nation to make (C), nor does she establish minimal sacrifice as a precondition (E). Her only concern is in first establishing the tangible benefit of a course of action before taking that action. Both choices have other problems, of course: (C)'s reference to "future well-being" is too far removed from the concept of "tangible benefit." And (E)-like (B), for that matter-errs in that Linda has no interest in righting historical wrongs; that's Bruce's department.

(D) Linda makes no appeal to consensus as a precondition for returning the province. We can't be sure how Linda thinks the "tangible benefit" would be determined, whether through a poll of the citizenry or by some other means.
 

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