Library/PT 128/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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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

Compare the passages' level of abstraction and tone. Passage A treats 'cosmic justice' as a conceptual, theoretical idea and discusses human epistemic limits, while Passage B uses concrete legal examples and more evaluative wording. Supporting quotes from Passage A: "'Cosmic justice,' as Sowell uses the term, refers to the perfect justice that only an omniscient being could render—rewards and punishments that are truly deserved when all relevant things are properly taken into consideration." and "Deservedness necessarily focuses on a consideration of inputs... the best we can reasonably do is judge primarily based upon outputs, or consequences, rather than inputs."

Passage Stimulus

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22.

Passage A differs from passage B in that passage A is more

Correct Answer
A
Passage A is more abstract because it focuses on defining the concept of 'cosmic justice' and on general, theoretical claims about human limitations in dispensing such justice (see: "'Cosmic justice,' as Sowell uses the term, refers to the perfect justice..." and "Deservedness necessarily focuses on a consideration of inputs..."). Passage B, by contrast, draws on concrete legal examples ("A defendant in a criminal case... under fair rules and with an impartial judge and jury") and contains sharper evaluative language ("cosmic justice foolishly seeks"), so Passage A is correctly described as more abstract.
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