Library/PT 114/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

{"stimulusAnalysis":"Intellectual authority means people accept an idea because it’s based on good reasoning; institutional authority means people accept something because an institution (like a court) enforces it. The passage asks whether courts have real intellectual authority or only institutional power. Critics say judicial authority is just institutional, but the author argues that history shows well‑reasoned ideas can be ignored and judges sometimes overturn badly reasoned or outdated past decisions, so legal systems have some real intellectual authority alongside institutional force.","correctAnswer":"","correctExplanation":"","wrongAnswerExplanations":{"A":"","B":"","C":"","D":"","E":""},"questionType":"Reading Comprehension","difficulty":"easy"}

Logic Breakdown

Identify the author's basis for claiming legal systems have intellectual authority (judges' willingness to reconsider and revise prior decisions) and pick the option that most directly defeats that mechanism.

Passage Stimulus

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11.

Which one of the following, if true, most challenges the author's contention that legal systems contain a significant degree of intellectual authority?

Correct Answer
E
The author's claim rests on judges' willingness to revisit and correct badly reasoned or outdated decisions: "But the critics miss the crucial distinction that when a judicial decision is badly reasoned, or simply no longer applies in the face of evolving social standards or practices, the notion of intellectual authority is introduced: judges reconsider, revise, or in some cases throw out the decision." And: "The conflict between intellectual and institutional authority in legal systems is thus played out in the reconsideration of decisions, leading one to draw the conclusion that legal systems contain a significant degree of intellectual authority..." If judges are rarely willing to rectify faulty reasoning when reviewing prior decisions, the key mechanism the author cites for intellectual authority would be absent, directly challenging the author's contention.
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