Library/PT 135/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Both passages discuss threats to reveal private or criminal facts to get money. Passage A says modern U.S./Canadian law finds blackmail puzzling because telling a fact and asking for money are each legal, yet together they’re criminal; this leads to vague laws, and the author argues blackmail is wrong because it uses a third party (like the state or the public) as leverage to pressure the victim. Passage B explains Roman law treated such disclosures by asking whether revealing the shame would harm the victim; if it would, the person who threatened disclosure had to show a legitimate public reason—truth alone didn’t make disclosure lawful.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: compare the claims in Passage A and Passage B and pick the statement asserted in A but contradicted or absent in B. Passage A explicitly states the blackmail paradox: 'the heart of the problem—known as the blackmail paradox—is that two acts, each of which is legally permissible separately, become illegal when combined.' Passage B, by contrast, emphasizes a harm-based evaluation and notes that 'Classical Roman law had no special category for blackmail' and that Roman jurists judged actions 'by considering whether the action caused harm, not by considering the legality or illegality of the action itself.'

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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17.

Which one of the following is a statement that is true of blackmail under Canadian and U.S. common law, according to passage A, but that would not have been true of blackmail in the Roman legal context, according to passage B?

Correct Answer
A
Choice A is correct because Passage A explicitly describes blackmail as the 'blackmail paradox'—'the heart of the problem—known as the blackmail paradox—is that two acts, each of which is legally permissible separately, become illegal when combined.' Passage B, however, explains that Roman jurists evaluated acts by whether they caused harm (and had 'no special category for blackmail'), not by treating blackmail as a paradoxical combination of two otherwise legal acts. Thus the combination-of-legal-acts claim is true in A but would not have been the Roman characterization in B.
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