Library/PT 111/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Dworkin says judges often choose legal positivism because they fear the other option, natural law, which would let judges decide cases by their personal morals. Legal positivism says laws mean whatever people agree they mean. Dworkin points out that judges act as if there are correct answers even when people disagree, so he offers a middle view: the law has its own built-in logic and general principles (like fairness) that guide interpretation. Judges may use moral intuition to help find an interpretation, but only if it fits those legal principles—not to impose personal views.

Logic Breakdown

Locate the topic sentence(s) of paragraph 2 to see whether the paragraph defines, evaluates, or advocates a view; paragraph 2 primarily describes what legal positivism claims about law, meaning, and consensus.

Passage Stimulus

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22.

What is the main purpose of the second paragraph?

Correct Answer
D
D is correct. Paragraph 2 sets out the basic tenets of legal positivism: it defines the theory and explains how positivists view disagreement and the judge's role. Support from the paragraph: 'Legal positivism, the more popular of the two theories, holds that law and morality are wholly distinct.'; 'The meaning of the law rests on social convention in the same way as does the meaning of a word.'; 'Dworkin's view is that legal positivists regard disagreement among jurists as legitimate only if it arises over what the underlying convention is, and it is to be resolved by registering a consensus, not by deciding what is morally right.'; 'The judge's interpretive role is limited to discerning this consensus, or the absence thereof.' These sentences show the paragraph's descriptive purpose of identifying positivism's core claims.
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