Library/PT 141/Sec 1/Reading Comp
Go to Platform
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 outlines a theory of justice in property with two core principles: justice in acquisition (initial ownership) and justice in transfer (justified transfers), plus a separate principle of rectification for past injustices. Passage B describes the Indian Nonintercourse Act, which requires federal approval for transfers of Native American lands to prevent fraud. From A’s framework, the Act’s described purpose aligns with preventing unjust transfers (violations of justice in transfer), not legitimizing holdings, clarifying laws, ensuring just acquisition, or implementing rectification.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

Unlock Full Passage

26.

The author of passage A would be most likely to characterize the purpose of the Indian Nonintercourse Act as which one of the following?

Correct Answer
D
Passage B states the Act "requires that all transfers of lands from Native Americans to others be approved by the federal government" and that "It was meant to guarantee security to Native Americans against fraudulent acquisition by others." From Passage A’s framework, this is about preventing unjust transfers: "The principle of justice in transfer specifies the conditions under which the transfer of property from one person to another is justified." Fraud is explicitly a violation of just transfer ("Some people steal from others or defraud them, for example"). Thus, the purpose is prevention of violations of the principle of justice in transfer.
Upgrade Your Prep

Ready to go beyond free explanations?

LSAT Perfection is the #1 modern LSAT prep platform, trusted by thousands of students for comprehensive test strategies, advanced drilling, and full analytics on every PrepTest.

Detailed explanations for 59 PrepTests
Advanced drillset builder
Personalized analytics
Built-in Wrong Answer Journal
Explore Perfection Plus for full LSAT prep