Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
“Stealing thunder” is when a lawyer admits a client's bad fact before the other side brings it up. Lawyers do this only if the other side is likely to mention the fact, because mock trials and psychology suggest it often helps: it can make the lawyer seem honest, warn jurors so they resist the opponent’s later arguments, make the evidence seem less new and therefore less persuasive, and let the lawyer present the fact in a less damaging way. But if the fact is very damaging, saying it early can create a strong negative first impression that shapes how jurors view everything else.
Logic Breakdown
For a main-point question, quickly find the sentence that captures the author's central claim (look for the paragraph that ties experimental findings to psychological explanations). Then check each answer against that sentence and eliminate choices that add unsupported details or overstate the passage.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage9.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
C
Choice C accurately restates the passage's main point. The passage explicitly says, 'Lawyers' commonly held belief in the value of stealing thunder is not only corroborated by those experimental findings; it is also supported by several psychological explanations of why the technique should work.' It also notes that 'studies involving simulated trial situations have suggested that the technique is, in fact, effective' and then describes psychological mechanisms (credibility, forewarning/counterargument formation, scarcity, framing) that explain how the strategy may influence jurors.
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