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: Passage A argues that humans cannot reliably evaluate 'inputs' or complex causal relationships and so cannot determine what people truly 'deserve.' Apply that principle to Passage B's murderer example: the passage supports the view that the degree to which a traumatic childhood mitigates culpability is beyond human adjudicators. Supporting lines from Passage A: 'we do not know all the critical relevant facts or understand all the complex causal interrelationships involved,' 'Whether somebody truly deserves something is a very difficult thing for us to determine,' 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
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage25.Passage A most strongly supports which one of the following inferences regarding the example of the murderer in passage B?
Correct Answer
D
Passage A emphasizes that deservedness depends on inputs and that humans lack the necessary facts and cognitive capacity to assess those inputs and their causal interrelationships (e.g., 'we do not know all the critical relevant facts or understand all the complex causal interrelationships involved' and 'Whether somebody truly deserves something is a very difficult thing for us to determine'). Because judges and juries are human, Passage A supports the inference that determining the extent (if any) to which the murderer's childhood mitigates his culpability is beyond their ability. Choice D restates this point directly and is therefore the best-supported inference.
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