Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Some legal thinkers say governments should only punish people to stop them from hurting others, not to force people to act for their own good or to enforce social norms. But rules that get everyone to agree on how to behave can also prevent harm: for example, everyone driving on the same side of the road avoids dangerous confusion even though driving on the other side isn’t always directly harmful. Likewise, banning steroids in sports protects athletes who would otherwise have to choose between risking their health or losing. So laws that look like they force people for their own good can be justified when they prevent harm by keeping people coordinated.
Logic Breakdown
Compare the final sentence to the earlier examples (driving convention; steroids). The phrase describes the nature of the author's justificatory reasoning—specifically that harm-prevention applies indirectly in these coordination cases.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage27.In the final sentence of the passage, the author uses the expression "somewhat complex " primarily to describe reasoning that
Correct Answer
C
The author uses 'somewhat complex' to indicate that the appeal to preventing harm is indirect: the prohibited act itself is not inherently harmful, but harm results from the absence of coordination or from others' actions. Support: 'the act that is forbidden (driving on the other side of the road) is not inherently harm-producing...; instead, it is the lack of a coordinating rule that would be harmful.' And: 'If some competitors use steroids, others have the option of either endangering their health or losing their fair opportunity to win. Thus they would be harmed either way.' Choice C correctly captures that the harm to be prevented is indirectly related to the act being prohibited.
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