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 argues that labels like "voluntary" and "involuntary" are unreliable guides to regulation: voluntariness is often a matter of degree, stems from confusion or selective attention, and frequently masks other antecedent judgments. As a result the author says these labels are of little use in shaping policy and that policy should rely on saving lives and on the specific considerations behind voluntariness.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage25.The author's use of the phrase "no special magic" (second to last sentence of the third paragraph) is most likely meant primarily to convey that notions like "voluntary" and "involuntary"
Correct Answer
E
"They are thus of little utility in guiding policy decisions." and "In short, there is no special magic in notions like \"voluntary\" and \"involuntary.\" Therefore, regulatory policy should be guided by a better understanding of the factors that underlie judgments about voluntariness." These sentences state directly that such notions are not reliable bases for regulation; option E restates this idea by saying they "provide a flawed mechanism for making public policy decisions relating to risk reduction."
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