Discussion

One should apologize only to a person one has wronged, and only for having wronged that person. To apologize sincerely is to acknowledge that one has acted wrongfully. One cannot apologize sincerely unless one intends not to repeat that wrongful act. To accept an apology sincerely is to acknowledge a wrong, but also to vow not to hold a grudge against the wrongdoer. The statements above, if true, most strongly support which one of the following?
(A) If one apologizes and subsequently repeats the wrongful act for which one has apologized, then one has not apologized sincerely.
(B)...
(C)...
(D)...
(E)...
(F)...
*This question is included in June 2013 LSAT (PT69): Logical Reasoning A, question #12

The solution is

Posted: 10/24/2014 22:22
What about A? Isn't the sentence in the middle that says one repeats the wrongful act does not apologize sincerely suggesting A? Thank you!

You need to be signed in to perform that action.

Sign In