Library/PT 142/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Both passages ask whether our brains fully control our actions and what that means for blame and punishment. Passage A says neuroscientists view behavior as caused by brain activity, which challenges the idea of punishing people for freely chosen wrongs and suggests the law should focus on preventing future harm and sometimes use lighter punishments. Passage B describes Alfred Ayer’s “soft determinism,” which says that even if actions are caused, they can still be free so long as they come from a person’s own will rather than from outside forces or brain disorders, so determinism doesn’t automatically remove freedom or responsibility.

Logic Breakdown

For tone/attitude questions I read Passage B to identify whether its language is descriptive/academic or prescriptive/engaged, then compare that stance to Passage A. I look for cue verbs: 'should/suggests' = engaged/normative; 'argued/distinguished' = detached/expository.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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20.

Passage B differs from passage A in that passage B displays an attitude toward the ideas it discusses that is more

Correct Answer
C
Passage B is more detached because it neutrally explains a philosophical view and distinguishes concepts without advocating policy. Support: "It has long been argued, however, that the concept of free will can coexist with determinism." and "Ayer distinguished between free actions and constrained actions." By contrast, Passage A takes an advocacy stance and recommends legal change: "This insight suggests that the criminal-justice system should abandon the idea of retribution" and "Instead, the law should focus on deterring future harms." The contrast between B's explanatory, academic language and A's prescriptive, reform-oriented language makes 'detached' the best choice.
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