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 an abstract, general framework for property justice (acquisition, transfer, rectification) without case-specific details. Passage B presents a specific context (the Nonintercourse Act) and then sketches a commonly made argument for Native American land claims, introduced as "one natural ... way of reasoning," signaling description rather than necessary endorsement.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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27.

Which one of the following most accurately describes the difference in approach taken by passage A as compared to passage B?

Correct Answer
A
Passage A espouses a general view without providing details: "There are two principles that are fundamental to a theory of justice regarding property" and then lists abstract points (1–3). It further generalizes rectification: "A principle of rectification would use historical information ... to produce a description of the property ownership that should have resulted." Passage B sketches, without committing to endorse, a particular argument: "One natural (one might almost say obvious) way of reasoning about Native American claims ... is this: Native Americans were the first human occupants..." The author signals it is a characterization rather than a personal endorsement by framing it as a "natural ... way of reasoning."
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