Reading comp PrepTest 124 · Section 4 · Question 11

Passage

Questions 7-14  .        In England the burden of history weighs heavily  . on common law, that unwritten code of Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Legal


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Background on English common law (old unwritten laws) and the author on the role of history (need to know history to understand, old things still relevant today)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Definition of "common law": Unwritten legal code developed from custom (first sentence)
    • Author's view:
      • Common law can't be understood without history, as old cases, terms, and principles are still used today (first through last sentences)
    • Author's attitude: "weighs heavily" (first sentence); "archaic" (second sentence); "based solely" (second sentence); "Centuries-old custom" (third sentence); "not only ... but also with the cultural history" (last sentence); "cannot properly be understood without" (last sentence)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Phenomenon (studies don't acknowledge history) and two explanations (theoretical: ignore changes to treat law as a coherent whole; philosophical: history would make the law seem less logical)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • List of two reasons why the study of common law doesn't focus on history (or doesn't focus on the practical contemporary significance of history), according to the author:
      • Theoretical reason: Modern jurisprudence treats common law as a logical whole, so acknowledging its changes through history would make common law seem less coherent (third through fifth sentences)
      • Philosophical reason: We must believe the law is logical and fair, and historical examples showing it's not fair would be discouraging to law students and the public (sixth and last sentences)
    • Author's attitude: "seldom" (first sentence); "ignore the practical contemporary significance" (first sentence); "partly theoretical and partly political" (second sentence); "consistently" (third sentence); "deemphasizes" (fourth sentence); necessary" (sixth sentences); "history shows the legal tradition to be far from unitary and seldom logical" (sixth sentences); "requires" (sixth sentence); "would be dispiriting for the student and demoralizing for the public" (last sentence)

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Goodrich's solution (study common law as an evolving tradition, incorporating fiction, perception, and memory)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Goodrich's view:
      • Common law is "most fruitfully" studied as continually developing tradition (first sentence)
    • Comparisons, according to Goodrich:
      • The study of common law can be analogized to studying literature (second sentence)
      • In Goodrich's approach, fiction is as important as analysis, perception is as important as rules, and memory is as important as argument (third sentence)
      • Both historical rules and the rewriting/adaptation of those rules for modern times are included in studying law as a tradition (last sentence)

Main Point: English common law is steeped in history that must be considered, but academics rarely acknowledge its historical context due to theoretical and political reasons; however, one legal historian suggests a way to change that.

Meta-Structure?

Phenomenon/Explanation and Problem/Solution: This passage uses two major Meta-Structures — a rarity on the LSAT. However, it's hard to fully capture this passage without referencing both. The first paragraph provides background information on English common law and the importance of history in studying common law. The second paragraph is a Phenomenon/Explanation paragraph.* The author establishes a phenomenon — academics almost never acknowledge the importance of history when studying English common law, even though a long historical view is necessary to fully understand the common law (P2, S1). The author provides two explanations: a political one and a theoretical one (P2, S2). Then, in the third paragraph, the author switches gears and introduces a Problem/Solution Meta-Structure.** If we consider the second paragraph's phenomenon a problem, a legal historian (Peter Goodrich) proposes a solution. He wants to treat the study of common law as a continually developing tradition and use some of the tools of literary analysis to understand its history (P3, S1-S4).

When a passage uses a Phenomenon/Explanation Meta-Structure, the author's opinion on the explanation(s) is the main point. When a passage uses a Problem/Solution Meta-Structure, the author's opinion on the solution(s) is the main point. When a passage uses both Meta-Structures, we'll need to incorporate both, as we did in our anticipated main point.

*We could also consider this a Paradox/Resolution paragraph, as academia's failure to address history when studying common law despite history's obvious importance is a major discrepancy that needs disentangling. 

**We could also consider this a Reporting a Viewpoint paragraph, as the author presents Goodrich's approach without much commentary (if anything, she must have a slightly positive view of it to present it in the light she does).

Last Thoughts?

This is an interesting passage in that its development from paragraph to paragraph is logical, but those paragraphs don't really "gel" into a single argument the way that we normally see an RC passage come together. The first paragraph talks about the importance of history in common law; the second presents a related phenomenon and two explanations; and the third describes one historian's solution to better study common law. This Frankenstein's monster-like nature of the passage is reflected in our three-part Main Point anticipation.

However, this odd structure will help us as we progress through the questions. Because each paragraph has such a distinct role, we'll be able to quickly locate any information needed to anticipate what the correct answer will say or verify that an answer choice is supported.

Question prompt

Which one of the Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: D

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

Question Type

Legal

Strategy Overview

Review the purpose of the second paragraph, then use that big-picture context to define it in its immediate context

Answer Anticipation

the second paragraph is where we said the author presented the paradox surrounding the study of common law and history, and the author presented two explanations that both contribute to resolving it. One of those explanations involved "political" considerations, and this is what we have to define.There are two things in its immediate context we can use to help define it.First, the other explanation is "theoretical," and so we know that "political" considerations must be different from them. Those theoretical considerations had to do with treating common law as a logical whole - so it deals with how well the common law itself holds together.The political considerations (Lines 30-39) are tied to the "necessary part of believing in [the law's] fairness." If the legal system is seen to be illogical and subjective, then people and law students will be demoralized.So "political" in this case has to do with people's faith in the system - whether people believe that the English legal system is fair and objective. Let's find an answer reflecting that.And let's also keep in mind the theoretical - there is likely going to be at least one wrong answer that will present a description of that explanation.

Answer choices

  1. A
    concerned with the ways Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited

    (A) (Lines 38-39) The author does bring up how certain suggestions would lead law students to become dispirited, but it's not tied to their career advancement. They may just become dispirited with the law, which they believed to be logical, consistent, and objective!

  2. B
    concerned with the covert Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (B) Huh? This answer comes out of nowhere - there's not a discussion of "covert and possibly unethical" methods the government uses.

  3. C
    having to do with Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C is not credited

    (C) (Lines 31-32) While the passage does mention fairness, which could be argued is an ethical determination, it doesn't tie this to ethical standards for lawyers. And the only connection it draws between lawyers and the citizenry is when it says both might be dispirited if the law isn't viewed as logical. There's also the discussion of the "prestige of the legal institution," which isn't the same as talking about ethical standards for lawyers.

  4. D
    having to do with Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D matches the stem

    (D) (Lines 31-32; Lines 34-37) The author says that people have to believe in the logic of the law if they're to believe in its fairness, and for the legal institution to maintain its prestige it must be believed that it applies known rules to objective facts. That all has to do with maintaining people's faith in a working legal system, and thus its ability to be effective, so this is the correct answer.

  5. E
    having to do with Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) Radical theorists? This answer can be eliminated based on that alone - there's no such viewpoint in the passage.

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 4%
  2. B 10%
  3. C 20%
  4. D Credited 63%
  5. E 3%

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