Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Sowell contrasts cosmic justice, meaning perfect fairness that only an all-knowing being could give, with traditional justice, which focuses on fair procedures and rules. He argues humans cannot achieve cosmic justice because we do not have enough knowledge to judge what people truly deserve, so our laws should rely on fair processes and observable outcomes instead. Trying to enforce cosmic justice—for example, reducing a murderer's sentence because of a traumatic childhood—can weaken punishment's deterrent effect and ultimately harm innocent people.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: Summarize each passage's main point and match titles. Passage A argues that human legal systems cannot dispense 'cosmic justice' because humans lack the knowledge/omniscience required; Passage B contrasts traditional justice as an impartial process with 'cosmic' justice that pursues outcomes and can reduce deterrence. Supporting quotes: 'But our human legal systems should not try to dispense cosmic justice since we do not know all the critical relevant facts...'; 'With all the limitations that we face as mere humans, the best we can reasonably do is judge primarily based upon outputs, or consequences, rather than inputs.'; 'traditional justice is about impartial processes rather than either results or prospects.'; 'Cosmic justice foolishly seeks to correct...unmerited disadvantages...'; 'If punishment is meant to deter crime, then mitigating that punishment in pursuit of cosmic justice presumably reduces that deterrence...'
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage20.Which one of the following pairs of titles would be most appropriate for passage A and passage B, respectively?
Correct Answer
A
Correct. Passage A's central claim is that humans cannot render 'cosmic justice' because we lack the omniscience required (e.g., 'But our human legal systems should not try to dispense cosmic justice...' and 'With all the limitations that we face as mere humans...'). The title 'Cosmic Justice Meets Human Limitations' neatly captures that thesis. Passage B's main point is the contrast between traditional justice as impartial process and cosmic justice's concern with results and correcting disadvantages (e.g., 'traditional justice is about impartial processes rather than either results or prospects' and 'Cosmic justice foolishly seeks to correct...unmerited disadvantages...'), so the title 'Fairness as Process versus Cosmic Fairness' precisely describes that contrast. Together these two titles map directly onto the passages' primary focuses.
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