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
Scan the passage for the author's evaluation of extremely harsh penalties for minor offenses—look for explicit evaluative language (e.g., 'penalty far outweighs the crime', 'intuitively wrong, or unjust').
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage13.As expressed in the passage, the author's attitude toward very harsh penalties for minor offenses is most accurately described as
Correct Answer
E
The author characterizes very harsh penalties for minor offenses as morally objectionable: 'Yet something leads us to say that in such cases the penalty far outweighs the crime. That is, there appears to be something intuitively wrong, or unjust, about these punishments.' This wording indicates implicit disapproval of their moral injustice rather than approval or neutrality.
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