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
Look for the choice that mirrors "cosmic justice": using individuals' background or other input factors to change evaluative outcomes rather than relying on impartial processes or observable outputs.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage23.Which one of the following is most analogous to the kind of approach both authors criticize?
Correct Answer
B
Both passages criticize adjusting outcomes on the basis of individuals' background "inputs." Passage A says, "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 B characterizes cosmic justice as seeking to "correct... unmerited disadvantages in general, from whatever source they may arise," and gives the example that "before a murderer is sentenced, the law permits his traumatic childhood to be taken into account... It is only from a cosmic perspective that it could have any bearing on the crime." Option B (a teacher who takes background factors unique to students into account when assigning grades) is directly analogous because it alters evaluative outcomes (grades) on the basis of individualized background inputs — exactly the practice both authors criticize.
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