Reading comp PrepTest 109 · Section 2 · Question 24

Passage

Questions 23-28  .        By the time Bentham turned his interest to the  . subject, late in the eighteenth century, Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Legal Studies


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Evidence laws in the 18th century (assembled but some weird rules like the prohibition on parties testifying)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Author's view:
      • Common-law evidence laws in the 18th century had principles that are now considered bizarre (second sentence)
    • Example of a bizarre common-law evidence rule, according to the author:
      • Parties to a case were not allowed to testify (second and last sentences)
    • Author's attitude: "bizarre" (second sentence)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • More on evidence laws in the 18th century (mechanically excluded evidence, like hearsay, without exceptions)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Comparison, according to the author:
      • Although the prohibition on party testimony was more irrational than most evidence laws, most laws were similar to that rule in other ways (first sentence)
    • Example of evidence that was excluded:
      • Hearsay (out-of-court statements), even when it was relevant and reliable, like when the speaker is dead (third and last sentences)
    • Author's attitude: "extreme in its irrationality" (first sentence), "quite typical" (first sentence), "rational grounds" (second sentence), "mechanically excluded" (last sentence)

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Evidence laws' problems (truth unlikely) and Bentham's revolutionary recommendation (allow all evidence with only exceptions)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Author's view:
      • All these technicalities made it hard for trials to get to the truth, and change was resisted by legal people's reverence for tradition (first and second sentences)
    • Bentham's views:
      • Allow all evidence that's relevant with only a few narrow exceptions (third sentence)
    • Examples of exceptions:
      • Evidence that is too problematic/expensive, religious confessions (last sentence)
    • Author's attitude: "morass of "evidentiary technicalities" (first sentence), "unlikely that the truth would emerge" (first sentence), "frustrated" (second sentence), "revolutionary" (third sentence)

Paragraph 4

  • Paragraph note
    • Author's criticism of Bentham's "nonexclusion principle" (some evidence is inherently misleading)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Author's view:
      • One problem with Bentham's "nonexclusion principle" is that some evidence is inherently unreliable and more likely to produce a false verdict (first, second, fourth sentences)
      • Bentham also acknowledged that some evidence should be excluded (sixth sentence)
    • Bentham's view:
      • The jury should be trusted to weigh the evidence (third sentence)
    • Examples of evidence that is unreliable, according to the author:
      • Evidence of a defendant's previous crimes (fifth sentence)
    • Examples of evidence that should be treated the same as sacramental based on social interests, according to the author:
      • Conversations between social workers and clients, or between children and parents (last sentence)
    • Author's opinion: "difficulty" (first sentence), "inherently unreliable or misleading" (first sentence), "actually more likely to produce a false jury verdict" (fourth sentence), "prejudicial character of the evidence substantially outweighs its value" (fifth sentence), "why not" (last sentence)

Paragraph 5

  • Paragraph note
    • Author on Bentham's legacy (Bentham's ideas became close to the standard)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Author's view:
      • The method underlying Bentham's approach caught on after his death (first sentence)
    • Comparison, according to the author:
      • Although it has more exceptions than they would have liked, the current approach to evidence laws is mainly based on Bentham's philosophy (last sentence)
    • Author's attitude: "main thurst ... is Bentham's own" (last sentence)

Main Point: Bentham's nonexclusion principle was an imperfect but important idea that contributed to the development of modern evidence laws.

Meta-Structure?

Innovative Subject: This passage most closely matches an Innovative [Subject] Meta-Structure.* In such structures, the author describes why a particular person, artistic work, law or legal accomplishment, scientific breakthrough, etc. was unique, pioneering, or disruptive. The "[Subject]" is a stand-in for the innovative figure or concept in the passage. So, this passage could be understood as an "Innovative Approach to Evidence Law" passage.

In passages with an Innovative [Subject] Meta-Structure, the main point will be the author's opinion on the innovative subject. The final paragraph gives us a succinct summary of our author's opinion on Bentham's work. So our main point will be similar to the information in that section – something like: "Bentham's nonexclusion principle was an imperfect but important idea that contributed to the development of modern evidence laws."

*But if you wanted to argue that this is an Importance of [Subject] or Old Approach/New Approach passage, we wouldn't exclude your testimony. Those Meta-Structures would certainly help you summarize the main point and map the passage's structure.

Examples: The author lists several examples that illustrate the 18th-century approach to evidence law, Bentham's approach, and the author's issues with Bentham's approach. These examples will definitely come up in a question or two, so highlighting them will help us answer those questions efficiently.

Last Thoughts?

It's OK for an author to have concerns about the topic of an Innovative Subject passage. As you might in real life, authors can have multi-faceted perspectives on their subjects. In other words, our author can think that Bentham is innovative while still harboring some reservations about their philosophy.

Question prompt

The author's attitude toward Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: B

The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.

Question Type

Legal

Strategy Overview

Review the main point, and use notes or highlighted/underlined text in the passage to recall the author's attitude on this topic, and find the answer that best reflects your understanding of the main point/author's attitude

Answer Anticipation

For Author's Attitude questions, the answer choices tend to fall into one of two categories: two-word answer choices or opinion + detail answer choices. The former generally capture only the direction (positive/negative/neutral) and strength of the author's opinion. The latter generally captures the direction and strength in one word, then fills in some details in the passage. This one falls in the former camp, even if the answer choices only have one word.In this case, since lawyers don't show up in our notes, we can use our notes or the CTRL/Command + F search function to find where the author describes eighteenth-century lawyers. We'll review that part of the passage to determine whether the author had a positive, negative, or neutral attitude and how strongly the author held that view. In the third paragraph, the author says that the lawyers' "vested interests" and "reverence for tradition and precedent" prevented antiquated evidentiary laws from being fixed (P2, S2). The word "frustrated" is used to show that these lawyers impeded progress, evidencing the author's critical attitude toward these lawyers. Based on this information, we know that the author has a negative attitude toward these lawyers. Let's see if we can find an answer choice that matches this.

Answer choices

  1. A
    sympathetic
    Why choice A is not credited

    (A) Does this match the author's negative attitude towards eighteenth-century lawyers?

    Nope. The passage doesn't give us any reason to think that the author sympathizes with them. (A) is out.

  2. B
    critical
    Why choice B matches the stem

    (B) Does this match the author's negative attitude towards eighteenth-century lawyers?

    Yes! The author is definitely critical of how the lawyers resisted necessary change to evidence laws (P2, S2). (B) is our answer!

  3. C
    respectful
    Why choice C is not credited

    (C) Does this match the author's negative attitude towards eighteenth-century lawyers?

    Nope. The passage doesn't give us any reason to think that the author respects them. (C) is out.

  4. D
    scornful
    Why choice D is not credited

    (D) Does this match the author's negative attitude towards eighteenth-century lawyers?

    Not quite. This answer choice is too strong. We know that the author disagrees with these lawyers, but the passage doesn't describe that disagreement as hateful or impassioned in the ways that we could expect from someone who is "scornful." We'd need stronger tonal words than "frustrated" to support this answer choice!

  5. E
    ambivalent
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) Does this match the author's negative attitude towards eighteenth-century lawyers?

    Nope. The author doesn't show any mixed feelings about these lawyers, so (E) is out.

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 8%
  2. B Credited 67%
  3. C 8%
  4. D 6%
  5. E 11%

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Discussion

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