Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages ask whether people really have free will and what that means for the law. Passage A says brain science suggests our actions are mostly driven by biology, so blaming people is unfair and courts should stop focusing on who is at fault and instead concentrate on predicting and preventing future bad behavior. Passage B answers that even if free will is false, blaming is a deep, useful human habit—people keep judging others and the public resisted past attempts to remove blame—so the legal system should learn from neuroscience but also respect why people blame and keep some blame-related practices.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: Find A's explicit policy prescription and compare it with B's stance. Passage A: 'Blameworthiness should thus be removed from the legal argot.' 'Instead of debating culpability, the legal system has to become forward looking, and address how an accused lawbreaker is likely to behave in the future.' Passage B: 'My sense is that blaming performs some useful social function ... try to continue to respect the underlying social needs.' So pick the choice that endorses forward-looking use of motives to predict future behavior while removing culpability (E).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.Which one of the following conforms to the policy advocated by the author of passage A but not advocated by the author of passage B?
Correct Answer
E
Passage A explicitly argues for removing blameworthiness from legal language and adopting a forward-looking approach: it says 'Blameworthiness should thus be removed from the legal argot' and that the system should 'address how an accused lawbreaker is likely to behave in the future.' Option E matches this: it allows courts to use motives to assess likelihood of reoffending but not to determine culpability. Passage B, in contrast, defends blaming as socially useful ('My sense is that blaming performs some useful social function' and the system should 'continue to respect the underlying social needs'), so B would not endorse removing culpability or limiting consideration of motives to future-risk assessments.
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