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
Focus on how the passage defines the second (retributive) rationale and how it is contrasted with the social-benefit rationale—look for language about 'appropriate' punishments and 'proportionality.' Key supporting lines: 'the question to be asked about punishment is not whether it is beneficial, but whether it is just—that is, appropriate.' and 'the notion of appropriateness is absent from the first rationale, which could conceivably allow for any sort of punishment as long as it benefits society.'
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage12.It can be inferred from the passage that the author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following characterizations of the second rationale for punishing criminals?
Correct Answer
B
The passage characterizes the second rationale (retributivism) as judging punishments by justice/appropriateness rather than by social benefit: 'the question to be asked about punishment is not whether it is beneficial, but whether it is just—that is, appropriate.' It contrasts this with the first rationale, which 'could conceivably allow for any sort of punishment as long as it benefits society' and thus might justify very harsh penalties for minor offenses. Retributive considerations 'allow for proportionality between punishments and crimes,' which prevents the kind of unfairly severe punishments the first rationale could permit. Therefore the author would accept the characterization that the second rationale 'does not have the same potential unfairness as the first rationale.'
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