Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Denise Meyerson says the Critical Legal Studies (CLS) claim—that conflicts in law mean there is never a single right answer and judges must choose arbitrarily—is wrong. She argues judges can often resolve conflicts by deciding which value is more important (for example, a lawyer’s duty to keep a client’s secret might sometimes outweigh ordinary moral duties), and that choosing one reasonable option over another is not necessarily irrational. She also says that clear legal rules don’t automatically make the law morally justified—rules can pick a winner like game rules without people agreeing with them—and that purposes and policies can be treated as part of the rules rather than something outside them.
Logic Breakdown
Locate Meyerson's summary of the CLS position. The passage explicitly says CLS views conflicting legal values as producing no uniquely correct solution and treats choices between equally plausible answers as arbitrary; match that language to the answer choices.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage21.It can be inferred from the passage that proponents of the Critical Legal Studies movement would be most likely to hold which one of the following views about the law?
Correct Answer
C
Supported by the passage: "According to Meyerson, CLS proponents hold that the existence of conflicting values in the law implies the absence of any uniquely right solution to legal cases." And: "CLS argues that these conflicting values generate equally plausible but opposing answers to any given legal question, and, consequently, that the choice between the conflicting answers must necessarily be arbitrary or irrational." Option C — "It is insufficient in itself to determine the answer to a legal question" — restates this CLS view that the law alone does not yield a single determinate answer.
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