Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
By the late 1700s Bentham noticed that evidence rules were often strange and kept helpful facts out of court—for example, people in a case were sometimes not allowed to testify and hearsay was excluded even when it was reliable. These technical rules and lawyers’ love of tradition made it hard to find the truth. Bentham said most evidence that helps decide a case should be allowed, with only a few narrow exceptions (when it’s too costly or clearly harmful). Modern evidence law mostly follows his basic idea: admit relevant evidence unless there is a strong policy reason to exclude it.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: Find the author's main point by locating statements that describe Bentham's proposed 'nonexclusion' reform, the passage's acknowledgement of its problems, and the account of its influence on later evidence law. Supportive lines: 'Bentham's prescription was revolutionary: virtually all evidence tending to prove or disprove the issue in dispute should be admissible.'; 'One difficulty with Bentham's nonexclusion principle is that some kinds of evidence are inherently unreliable or misleading.'; 'Despite concerns such as these, the approach underlying modern evidence law began to prevail soon after Bentham's death: relevant evidence should be admitted unless there are clear grounds of policy for excluding it.'
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage23.Which one of the following is the main idea of the passage?
Correct Answer
B
The passage's central idea is that Bentham proposed a revolutionary nonexclusion principle—admitting virtually all relevant evidence—while acknowledging some limits and problems, and that his approach, though imperfect, was beneficial and influenced modern evidence law. Support: 'Bentham's prescription was revolutionary: virtually all evidence tending to prove or disprove the issue in dispute should be admissible.' The author then notes objections: 'One difficulty with Bentham's nonexclusion principle is that some kinds of evidence are inherently unreliable or misleading,' and records Bentham's limited concessions and later influence: 'Despite concerns such as these, the approach underlying modern evidence law began to prevail soon after Bentham's death... This clear-grounds proviso allows more exclusions than Bentham would have liked, but the main thrust of the current outlook is Bentham's own nonexclusion principle, demoted from a rule to a presumption.' These points together show Bentham's reform was imperfect but ultimately beneficial—exactly answer B.
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