Library/PT 108/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Many people blame corporations for social problems because companies focus on making money even if it harms the public. Economists respond that corporations aren’t people and CEOs must act for owners’ profits, which they say usually ends up helping society. The author disagrees: chasing profit doesn’t always help and can clearly harm the public (for example, a paper mill could cut down a forest or pollute a lake to boost profits), and CEOs still have a personal moral duty to refuse profitable actions that damage the public even if owners punish them.

Logic Breakdown

Find the moral standard the author assumes by noting what he uses as the yardstick for judging corporate actions. Key supporting sentences: '...extends to the basic corporate practice of making decisions based on what will maximize profits without regard to whether such decisions will contribute to the public good.' and 'The CEO ... could make a case to the owners that certain profitable courses of action should not be taken because they are likely to detract from the public good.'

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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20.

The conception of morality that underlies the author's argument in the passage is best expressed by which one of the following principles?

Correct Answer
A
Choice A matches the author's implicit standard: the author evaluates corporate actions in terms of whether they contribute to the public good. The passage explicitly contrasts profit-maximizing decisions made 'without regard to whether such decisions will contribute to the public good' with the idea that profitable actions might need to be rejected because they 'are likely to detract from the public good.' These statements show the author treats contribution to the public good as the relevant moral criterion.
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