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

Look for the author's evaluative language about Dworkin (words like 'correctly', 'mistake', and phrases that attribute agreement); use those signals to determine whether the author endorses, questions, or is neutral toward Dworkin's claims.

Passage Stimulus

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23.

Which one of the following most accurately characterizes the author's attitude toward Dworkin's theory?

Correct Answer
A
The author consistently frames Dworkin's theory positively and accepts its core claims. Support: 'The theory he proposes seeks to validate this practice without falling into what Dworkin correctly sees as the error of natural law theory.' and 'Once we realize, as Dworkin does, that the law has an internal logic of its own that constrains interpretation, we open up the possibility of improving upon the interpretations not only of our contemporaries but of the original authors.' The use of phrases like 'correctly sees' and 'as Dworkin does' signals the author's confident endorsement of Dworkin's central assertions about law's internal logic and judges' constrained interpretive role.
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