Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages debate whether judges should do their own scientific research. Passage A says trial judges’ worries (that researching is unfair and they might use bad sources) are understandable but not enough to ban the practice: judges can use outside science to correct biased expert testimony, scientific rulings affect many future cases, and the trial setting (live evidence and the parties’ role) keeps judges from going too far. Passage B says appellate courts should not do independent research because they don’t have live witnesses or cross‑examination to test scientific claims, so using outside literature on appeal would be unreliable and would usurp the trial court’s job.
Logic Breakdown
Look for a claim that both authors endorse: compare Passage A's defense of trial judges' independent research with Passage B's objections to appellate research; both emphasize the constraining role of trial procedures (live testimony, cross-examination, trial structure).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage22.It can be inferred that each author would agree that if judges conduct independent research, that research
Correct Answer
A
Both authors emphasize that the trial setting supplies the structure or tools that should govern independent research. Passage A states, "Second, a trial provides a structure that guides any potential independent research, reducing the possibility of a judge's reaching outlandish results," and also that "Independent research supplements, rather than replaces, the parties' presentation of the evidence, so the parties always frame the debate." Passage B highlights that appellate courts "do not hear live testimony" and that "these events can only occur at the trial level," noting that literature first considered on appeal "is not subject to live comment by practicing experts and cannot be tested in the crucible of the adversarial system." Together these passages support the inference that any judicial independent research should be constrained by the structure of a trial.
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