Library/PT 150/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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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

Determine that 'lack the wherewithal' means an inability to do first-rate research (risking use of discredited or poor-quality materials). Then find the Passage B phrase that expresses a similar worry about courts producing or relying on unreliable research—scan for wording about 'questionable' or unreliable results.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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23.

Which one of the following phrases is used by the author of passage B to express a concern that is most closely related to the concern expressed by the author of passage A using the phrase "lack the wherewithal" (final sentence of the first paragraph of passage A)?

Correct Answer
D
Both passages express the same worry about courts producing or relying on poor-quality research. Passage A: "Another fear is that judges lack the wherewithal to conduct first-rate research and may wind up using outlier or discredited scientific materials." Passage B: "When an appellate court goes outside the record to determine case facts, it ignores its function as a court of review, and it substitutes its own questionable research results for evidence that should have been tested in the trial court." The phrase "questionable research results" in Passage B directly parallels the concern in Passage A about judges' inability to conduct first-rate research and therefore using discredited or unreliable materials.
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