Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages ask whether it’s okay to lie to someone who lies. Passage A says some people think lying back is fair because liars give up the right to honest treatment, but warns that lying hurts trust and so we shouldn’t automatically copy liars—even harmless liars aren’t always fair game. Passage B explains a Kantian idea: when someone acts wrongly they implicitly allow others to treat them the same way, so others have a right to respond in kind but are not required to do so.
Logic Breakdown
Compare the two passages to find an idea stated in Passage A but not in Passage B; look for explicit mention in A of harms resulting from treating people as they treated others.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.Which one of the following considerations is introduced in passage A but not in passage B?
Correct Answer
A
Passage A explicitly raises the possibility of harm from reciprocating lies: "For the harm to self, others, and general trust that can come from the practice of lying has to be taken into account in weighing how to deal with him, not merely his personal characteristics." Passage B, by contrast, focuses on Kantian authorization and rights/respect (e.g., "The Kantian argument leads to a right rather than a duty") and does not discuss harms that may follow from treating people as they treated others.
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