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 sentences that define the "bundle-of-rights" view (ownership "arises from individual judicial decisions" and the "set of rights ... is ... open ended") and infer what those statements imply about whether different owners must hold the same rights.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage24.Which one of the following is most strongly implied by the bundle-of-rights theory expressed in the passage?
Correct Answer
A
A is most strongly implied. The passage describes ownership as a "bundle of rights" "arising from individual judicial decisions in widely diverse cases (e.g., the rights to lease, sell, subdivide, and tax)" and says "the set of rights corresponding to ownership is itself a product of earlier judicial decisions and is open ended." Those sentences together imply that ownership consists of varying rights assembled by precedent, so two owners of distinct properties might not possess the same rights.
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