Library/PT 105/Sec 3/Reading Comp
Go to Platform
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

Read the second paragraph: it defines the second (retributive) rationale as justifying punishment by the severity of the crime, independent of societal benefit, and says retributivists ask whether a punishment is just or appropriate rather than whether it is beneficial. Key supporting lines: The second rationale is that a punishment is justified by the severity of the crime, independent of any benefit to society. From the retributivist point of view, the question to be asked about punishment is not whether it is beneficial, but whether it is just—that is, appropriate.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

Unlock Full Passage

14.

As described in the second paragraph, the second rationale for punishing criminals is most consistent with which one of the following principles?

Correct Answer
A
Choice A states that correctness depends not on consequences but on inherent fairness. This matches the passage's description of the second (retributive) rationale: punishment is justified by the severity of the crime, independent of any societal benefit, and the retributivist asks whether punishment is 'just—that is, appropriate' rather than whether it 'is beneficial.'
Upgrade Your Prep

Ready to go beyond free explanations?

LSAT Perfection is the #1 modern LSAT prep platform, trusted by thousands of students for comprehensive test strategies, advanced drilling, and full analytics on every PrepTest.

Detailed explanations for 59 PrepTests
Advanced drillset builder
Personalized analytics
Built-in Wrong Answer Journal
Explore Perfection Plus for full LSAT prep