Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Passage A says property is justly owned only if someone got it fairly to begin with or received it through a fair transfer, and when past wrongs have messed up who owns what, we should look at the history to figure out what ownership should be and then fix today’s holdings to match. Passage B applies this idea to Native American land: a long-standing U.S. law was meant to stop unfair land deals, and the common argument is that because Native Americans were the first occupants and much land was taken from them unlawfully, justice calls for returning it where feasible or finding practical remedies.
Logic Breakdown
Passage A lays out a theory of justice in property: just acquisition and just transfer determine entitlement, and where past injustices (e.g., theft, fraud) have shaped current holdings, a principle of rectification should use historical information to describe the ownership that should have resulted and bring actual ownership into conformity with that description. Passage B’s second paragraph argues that Native Americans were the first occupants, their land was illicitly taken, and it should ideally be restored to its rightful owners, or returned where feasible. Thus, Passage A’s rectification framework conceptually supports the remedial conclusion advanced in Passage B’s second paragraph.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage24.Which one of the following is true of the relationship between passage A and the second paragraph of passage B?
Correct Answer
D
Passage A explicitly endorses rectifying past injustices in property: "The existence of past injustice raises the issue of the rectification of injustice" and "Actual ownership of property must then be brought into conformity with this description." Passage B’s second paragraph advances precisely such a rectificatory conclusion: "the land was illicitly taken from them" and "Ideally, the land should be restored to its rightful owners"; "the original wrong can most easily be righted by returning the land to them—or by returning it wherever that is feasible." Therefore, Passage A presents a theory that tends to support the argument in Passage B’s second paragraph.
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