Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
People expect the law to do two opposite things: be a clear set of neutral rules everyone can rely on, and also be flexible enough to treat each person fairly given their real-life situation. These goals clash because strict rules can produce unfair results when people are unequal, and case-by-case fairness undermines stable rules. The author argues that you can’t have both unless society becomes much more equal, so trying to force both now is a mistake; the law should instead be adapted to social reality.
Logic Breakdown
Identify the author's conclusion (that formalism should be abandoned in conditions of social inequality because it cannot produce substantive justice) and pick the option that, if true, shows abandoning formalism would not improve substantive justice.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage1.Which one of the following would, if true, most seriously undermine the author's conclusion about formalism in legal systems?
Correct Answer
B
The author asserts that 'formalism cannot produce substantive justice until there is a reasonable degree of social equality' and that 'formalism should be abandoned so that the law can adapt to social reality' when that equality is lacking. Option B claims that nonformalist legal systems deliver substantive justice even less frequently than formalist systems. If true, B shows that abandoning formalism in favor of nonformalism would be unlikely to increase (and might decrease) the delivery of substantive justice, which directly undermines the author's recommendation to abandon formalism.
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