Library/PT 159/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

The passage explains three ways lawyers think about ownership. One view says ownership is a bundle of separate rights (like the rights to lease, sell, or tax), so there is no single right that defines ownership. The older boundary view says ownership simply means the right to exclude others, but critics say that only tells us who is not allowed to use something and doesn’t explain what makes owners special. The agenda-setting view says ownership really means the owner has the main power to decide how a thing is used, and the law protects that decision-making role by balancing other people’s interests with the owner’s choices.

Logic Breakdown

Locate the passage's explicit critique of the boundary theory's method—look for the sentences that describe its 'process of elimination' and that it 'fails to explain crucial features of ownership.'

Passage Stimulus

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23.

According to the author, the boundary theory's method for distinguishing owners from nonowners

Correct Answer
C
"But while the boundary theory properly recognizes that there is a concept of ownership that constrains legal decisions, it fails to explain crucial features of ownership." Also: "The boundary theory, in effect, relies on a process of elimination to distinguish owners from nonowners: an owner is the last person left after the exclusion of everyone else from the object owned. ... But this provides only the weakest possible account of the owner's special position: by default the owner is the only one at liberty to use the object after the exclusion of others." These statements show the author believes the boundary theory's method of distinguishing owners from nonowners leaves unexplained the special rights and responsibilities unique to ownership, which matches choice C.
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