Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
People often think some punishments don’t fit the crime—either too lenient for serious crimes or too harsh for minor ones. The passage gives two reasons for punishment: to benefit society (by deterring crime or removing dangerous people) and to punish in proportion to the crime (retribution). The benefit-based view could, in theory, justify any punishment that helps society, while retribution demands that punishment match the crime; but some argue our sense that a punishment is "appropriate" actually comes from weighing societal benefit against how much the punishment harms the offender, so even retributive ideas may be based on benefit.
Logic Breakdown
Go to the final paragraph and locate the sentence that contrasts harm to the criminal with benefit to society; match that wording to the answer choices.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.The author states that our intuition of the injustice of an overly harsh punishment may be based on which one of the following notions?
Correct Answer
C
The author writes: "our intuition of the injustice of an overly harsh punishment is based on our sense that such a punishment is more harmful to the criminal than beneficial to society." Option C paraphrases this idea by saying the punishment "benefits society less than it harms the criminal," which is equivalent.
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