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the author argues that history shows well‑reasoned ideas can be ignored and judges sometimes overturn badly reasoned or outdated past decisions, so legal systems have some real intellectual authority alongside institutional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
Compare the passage's definitions and contrasts of intellectual vs. institutional authority; note the phrases that show institutions "may or may not possess intellectual authority" and that "some well-reasoned arguments never receive institutional imprimatur." The right answer will contradict the passage's allowance that institutions sometimes do accept well-reasoned arguments.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage12.Given the information in the passage, the author is LEAST likely to believe which one of the following?
Correct Answer
B
Relevant passage lines: "Intellectual authority is defined as the authority of arguments that prevail by virtue of good reasoning and do not depend on coercion or convention." Also: institutional authority "refers to the power of social institutions to enforce acceptance of arguments that may or may not possess intellectual authority." And: "Not all arguments accepted by institutions withstand the test of time, and some well-reasoned arguments never receive institutional imprimatur." These statements show that (1) intellectual authority is tied to good reasoning and (2) institutional authority can either accept or reject well-reasoned arguments. Therefore the categorical claim in B that institutional authority "never does" accept well-reasoned arguments directly contradicts the passage; B is the least likely belief.
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