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
Find the phrase in Passage B that exemplifies an 'input' as defined in Passage A — i.e., a background fact or antecedent about a person/situation, not a trial procedure or a consequence.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage24.In passage B, which one of the following is an example of "inputs" as that term is used in the second paragraph of passage A?
Correct Answer
D
Passage A defines inputs as background factors relevant to deservedness: 'Deservedness necessarily focuses on a consideration of inputs.' Passage B gives a clear example of such a background factor: 'before a murderer is sentenced, the law permits his traumatic childhood to be taken into account.' Therefore 'traumatic childhood' is an 'input' in the sense used in Passage A.
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