Library/PT 141/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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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 general theoretical framework for property justice: principles of acquisition, transfer, and rectification of past injustices. Passage B discusses a specific legal context (the Indian Nonintercourse Act) and concrete claims by Native American tribes, advocating restoration where feasible. Thus, B exemplifies or applies the general framework of A to a particular case.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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25.

Based on what can be inferred from their titles, the relationship between which one of the following pairs of documents is most analogous to the relationship between passage A and passage B?

Correct Answer
E
Passage A presents fundamentals: "There are two principles that are fundamental to a theory of justice regarding property" and introduces rectification: "A principle of rectification would use historical information... Actual ownership of property must then be brought into conformity with this description." Passage B is a specific application: it cites a particular law and cases—"In 1790, the United States Congress passed the Indian Nonintercourse Act... Several suits have been initiated by Native American tribes for recovery of lands"—and advocates remedy: "Ideally, the land should be restored to its rightful owners... returning the land... wherever that is feasible." This mirrors a general-to-specific relationship, like a fundamentals text paired with an engineering report on repairs to a particular building.
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