Library/PT 143/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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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

Approach: Identify Passage A's distinction between forfeiture and justification. Passage A acknowledges that liars may 'forfeit the right to be dealt with honestly' but explicitly denies that forfeiture alone justifies lying: "But his tall tales would not constitute sufficient reason to lie to him." Also note: "For the harm to self, others, and general trust that can come from the practice of lying has to be taken into account." Use these lines to match the answer that expresses that forfeiture need not justify mistreatment.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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18.

The author of passage A would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements?

Correct Answer
C
Passage A distinguishes forfeiture from automatic justification. It concedes that ‘‘liars forfeit the right to be dealt with honestly,’’ yet immediately adds that ‘‘But his tall tales would not constitute sufficient reason to lie to him’’ because one must consider ‘‘the harm to self, others, and general trust that can come from the practice of lying.’’ Choice C paraphrases this exact point: even if someone has forfeited a right, it can still be unjustified to treat that person in that way. Thus C captures the author's view.
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