Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Courts often pick which of several stories about an event is true and act as if one neutral, objective version exists. But people always interpret events through their own experiences and beliefs, so “objective” judgments usually reflect the training and language of judges and lawyers and tend to dismiss those who do not speak legalese. Scholars such as Patricia Williams, Derrick Bell, and Mari Matsuda say using personal, emotional stories instead of abstract legal talk can help judges feel empathy for outsiders and lead to fairer, more inclusive legal decisions.
Logic Breakdown
Note that critics of objectivism view the law's 'quest for truth' as an attempt to locate a single neutral description that, according to them, does not exist. Choose the answer that best parallels searching for something nonexistent.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.Those who reject objectivism would regard "the law's quest for truth" (middle of the first paragraph) as most similar to which one of the following?
Correct Answer
A
'Objectivism holds that there is a single neutral description of each event that is unskewed by any particular point of view and that has a privileged position over all other accounts.' 'The law's quest for truth, therefore, consists of locating this objective description, the one that tells what really happened, as opposed to what those involved thought happened.' 'The serious flaw in objectivism is that there is no such thing as the neutral, objective observer.' These sentences show critics treat the law's quest as seeking an objective description that cannot be found—so it is best compared to a hunt for an imaginary animal.
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