Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
People hoped AI could give legal advice, but it hasn’t worked because law needs human interpretation. Early systems treated law as fixed rules to apply to facts, which breaks down when terms are vague or situations are unclear (e.g., is a mobile home a house or a vehicle). Newer systems compare past cases, but they use similarity tests set by designers, so they still can’t figure out on their own what makes cases truly alike.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: Identify the passage's central claim about automated legal-reasoning programs and the reasons the author gives for their failure. Key supporting sentences: 'But the practical benefits of such automated reasoning systems have fallen short of optimistic early predictions and have not resulted in computer systems that can independently provide expert advice about substantive law.'; 'Such systems underestimated the problems of interpretation that can arise at every stage of a legal argument.'; '...the criteria for similarity among cases are system dependent and fixed by the designer...'.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage21.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
A
Choice A captures the passage's main point: the author argues that attempts to model legal reasoning with computers have not lived up to early expectations because of interpretive difficulties and problems identifying appropriate precedents. Support: the author states that automated systems 'have fallen short of optimistic early predictions and have not resulted in computer systems that can independently provide expert advice about substantive law.' For rule-based systems the author notes that 'Such systems underestimated the problems of interpretation that can arise at every stage of a legal argument.' For case-based systems the author observes that 'the criteria for similarity among cases are system dependent and fixed by the designer,' which prevents systems from discovering the relevant factors that make cases similar. Together these statements map directly onto A's claim about interpretation and precedent-identification problems.
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