Library/PT 124/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

England’s common law is built on a long history, so students and lawyers study old cases and traditions; yet most legal scholars treat law as a fixed, logical system and downplay historical change because that view makes the law easier to explain and preserves faith in the system. Peter Goodrich argues the opposite: we should study common law like a story that keeps being rewritten, where memory, interpretation, and changing customs matter as much as formal rules.

Logic Breakdown

Locate the paragraph criticizing modern jurisprudence for treating law as a unified, ahistorical system (it "deemphasizes history"). Choose the option that paraphrases that omission.

Passage Stimulus

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13.

Which one of the following best describes the author's opinion of most modern academic theories of common law?

Correct Answer
B
The author states that modern jurisprudence "has consistently treated law as a unified system of rules that can be studied at any given moment in time as a logical whole" and that "the notion of jurisprudence as a system of norms or principles deemphasizes history in favor of the coherence of a system." The passage also says that "those interpretive theories that do acknowledge the antiquity of common law ignore the practical contemporary significance of its historical forms." These passages support B: most modern academic theories lack the historical/practical dimension that would make their account more accurate.
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