Library/PT 136/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

The passage explains philosophical anarchism, the view that people don’t have a moral duty to obey laws just because they are laws. Critics say this would mean all governments are equally bad and people could do anything, but the author rejects those points. Even if laws aren’t morally binding, we can still judge governments as better or worse by their actions, and people still have basic duties not to harm others, so obvious crimes and acts that would endanger innocent people remain wrong.

Logic Breakdown

Paraphrase 'counterintuitive' by looking at the two implications the commentators attribute to philosophical anarchism and pick the choice that says those implications conflict with common or commonly held beliefs.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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23.

By attributing to commentators the view that philosophical anarchism has implications that are "counterintuitive" (second-to-last sentence of the first paragraph), the author most likely means that the commentators believe that

Correct Answer
A
Correct. The passage first states a common view—'we generally have a moral duty to obey a law simply because it is the law.' It then reports: 'Some commentators have rejected this position because of what they take to be its highly counterintuitive implications: (1) that no existing government is morally better than any other ... and (2) that, lacking any moral obligation to obey any laws, people may do as they please without scruple.' Together these show the commentators view those implications as running counter to common beliefs, which is exactly what choice A says.
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