Library/PT 141/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

People often think government should protect people from risks they didn’t choose (like plane crashes) but leave chosen risks (like mountain climbing) to individuals. Experts, however, focus on how many lives can be saved overall. Whether a risk is “voluntary” is often unclear or just a cover for disliking the activity (people won’t fund safer skydiving but will for firefighters). Because “voluntary” is fuzzy and misleading, policy should focus on saving the most lives with the resources available and on the real reasons people object, not on the voluntary/involuntary label.

Logic Breakdown

The passage contrasts lay and expert approaches to risk: laypeople emphasize whether a risk is undertaken voluntarily, while policy experts "tend to focus on aggregate lives at stake." The author argues that voluntariness is often ambiguous or a proxy for other judgments and therefore should not drive regulatory decisions; instead policy should aim to save as many lives as resources allow.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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24.

It can be inferred from the passage that the author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements?

Correct Answer
B
"Policy experts tend to focus on aggregate lives at stake; laypeople care a great deal whether a risk is undertaken voluntarily." This shows experts do not base regulatory decisions primarily on whether victims chose the risky activity. The author further states that "Departures from this principle should be justified not by invoking the allegedly voluntary or involuntary nature of a particular risk," supporting the inference that experts would treat a passenger's choice to fly as largely irrelevant to air-safety regulation.
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