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
Focus on the passage's overall claim: common law is deeply historical but has been seldom studied as an evolving tradition; Goodrich argues it should be viewed as continually developing.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage7.Which one of the following statements best expresses the main idea of the passage?
Correct Answer
D
Choice D captures the passage's main idea. Support from the passage: para 1 — "common law cannot properly be understood without taking a long historical view." Para 2 — "Yet the academic study of jurisprudence has seldom treated common law as a constantly evolving phenomenon rooted in history; those interpretive theories that do acknowledge the antiquity of common law ignore the practical contemporary significance of its historical forms." Para 3 — "Legal historian Peter Goodrich has argued, however, that common law is most fruitfully studied as a continually developing tradition rather than as a set of rules." Together these sentences state that common law is historically rooted, that academic jurisprudence rarely treats it as developing, and that Goodrich proposes studying it as a continually evolving tradition.
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