September 2017 LSAT
Section 3
Question 14
Emil-Kunkin on June 18, 2023
Hi, I think that passage A eventually does agree that candor is needed, but not because of the prudential defense. The author offers two possible defenses, for judicial candor: prudential and an appeal to moral principles. The author actually spends most of their time talking about the prudential defense (candor leads to good outcomes), but eventually rejects that view in favor of the view that we should use the moral principle that "lying is bad" to support judicial candor, instead of supporting candor because of its good outcomes. Am I making sense how I put that?