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

Focus on Dworkin's critique of legal positivism and his positive account that judges may consult moral intuitions constrained by the law's internal logic; choose the option that paraphrases that view.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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25.

The passage suggests that Dworkin would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements?

Correct Answer
E
E is correct. Dworkin criticizes legal positivists for treating law and morality as separate and for limiting judges to discerning social consensus ("Legal positivism, the more popular of the two theories, holds that law and morality are wholly distinct."; "The judge's interpretive role is limited to discerning this consensus, or the absence thereof."). He argues instead that the law has an "internal logic" and that "Since these general principles may involve such moral concepts as justice and fairness, judges may be called upon to consult their own moral intuitions in arriving at an interpretation." He also calls out "The positivist's mistake... is assuming that the meaning of the law can only consist in what people think it means, whether these people be the original authors of the law or a majority of the interpreter's peers." Together these passages show Dworkin would agree that legal positivists misunderstand the role of moral intuition in legal interpretation.
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