Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Some legal thinkers say judges need not truly believe the reasons they write because judges must juggle many practical institutional concerns. Supporters of honesty reply two ways: they say honesty produces better results (it gives clearer guidance and builds trust) and they say lying is wrong for moral reasons, not just because of outcomes. Another writer adds that honest reasons help limit judges' power—if judges could lie about motives, rules and criticism would lose force and public trust would drop. These ideas don’t prove judges must always be honest, but they create a strong default in favor of honesty.
Logic Breakdown
Compare the authors' positions on whether judicial candor is justified independently of prudential outcomes: Passage A defends candor as a moral duty (independent constraint), while Passage B endorses a strong presumption but says candor is "probably not" an unshakable obligation.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.The authors would be most likely to disagree over whether
Correct Answer
C
Passage A: "In our ordinary moral thinking, duties of truth telling are not justified merely when they produce good outcomes. Rather, the duty to speak truthfully and openly is an independent constraint on our actions." Passage B: "Do these points demonstrate that candor is an unshakable obligation of judicial behavior? ... Probably not." Passage A claims the duty to be candid is justified regardless of outcomes (a moral constraint); Passage B explicitly denies that candor is necessarily an unshakable obligation. Thus the two authors would most likely disagree over whether the duty to be candid is justified regardless of whether it produces good outcomes.
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