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 Roman law (which treats threatened public revelation of shameful private information as prima facie unlawful unless there is a legitimate/public-authority purpose) with Canadian/U.S. common law (which protects such disclosures as free speech unless paired with an extortionate demand). Key supporting lines: "But the right to free speech protects my right to make such a disclosure, and, in many circumstances, I have a legal right to seek money."; "Their assumption—true enough, it seems—was that a victim of blackmail would be harmed if shameful but private information were revealed to the world."; "Just because something shameful happened to be true did not mean it was lawful to reveal it."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage18.Based on what can be inferred from the passages, which one of the following acts would have been illegal under Roman law, but would not be illegal under Canadian and U.S. common law?
Correct Answer
E
Passage B explains that classical Roman law treated the threatened revelation of shameful private information as prima facie unlawful and placed the burden on the revealer to show a legitimate purpose or public-authority interest: "Their assumption... was that a victim of blackmail would be harmed if shameful but private information were revealed to the world," "then prima facie the threatened act of revelation was unlawful," and "the party who had or threatened to reveal shameful facts had to show positive cause for the privilege of revealing the information." Passage B also states that truth alone does not make disclosure lawful: "Just because something shameful happened to be true did not mean it was lawful to reveal it." By contrast, Passage A says that under Canadian/U.S. common law the mere disclosure is protected by free speech and becomes criminal only when combined with a demand for money (blackmail): "But the right to free speech protects my right to make such a disclosure" and "If I threaten to expose... unless I am paid money, I have committed blackmail." Option E (revealing a prominent politician's past adulterous affair to the public) is a shameful private disclosure made to the public with no indicated legitimate public-authority purpose and no demand for money—so it fits Roman law's prohibition but would be permissible under modern common-law free-speech principles. Therefore E is correct.
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