Reading comp PrepTest 156 · Section 3 · Question 4
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Legal
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- Author on the first of two conflicting demands (the law as "formalist": law is rules-based, predictable, objective)
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author’s attitude
- Cause-and-effect relationship, according to the author:
- Two conflicting demands we place on the law cause the law to fail to deliver what we want it to (first sentence)
- List of two competing demands on law, according to the author:
- First item: Law should be "formalist" — rational, consistent, understandable, reliable, and blind to socioeconomic differences (second through last sentence)
- Author's attitude: "troubling conflict" (first sentence); "frequent failure" (first sentence); "formalist system" (second sentence); "rational and rule-based" (second sentence); "deliver us from arbitrariness, irrationality, and caprice in a coherent, reasoned way" (second sentence); "should be ... capable of understanding and generally able to depend on" (third sentence); "imperative" (last sentence); "rational, consistently applied, and blind to the differing social and economic situations" (last sentence)
- Cause-and-effect relationship, according to the author:
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Author on the second of two conflicting demands ("substantive": law adapts to particular contexts to promote fairness/justice)
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author’s attitude
- List of two competing demands on law, according to the author (continued from the previous paragraph):
- Second item: Law shouldn't be an example of "extreme formalism"; instead, it should adapt to particular contexts of individual cases and derive from subjective experience to promote fairness and justice (first through last sentences)
- Comparison, according to the author:
- "[M]erely procedural" law is contrasted with substantive (fair and equitable) law (second sentence)
- Example of our demand that law must adapt to particular cases, according to the author:
- The strict application of unchangeable rules should not decide cases (fifth sentence)
- Author's attitude: "sensitive to the particular contexts" (first sentence); "of little use" (second sentence); "cannot deliver" (second sentence); "need not" (third sentence); "must" (fourth sentence); "can accept as legitimate and justifiable according to some common understanding of fairness and justice" (fourth sentence); "should not ... based strictly on the application of unalterable rules" (fifth sentence); "extreme formalism" (sixth sentence); "speaks little to the substance of justice" (sixth sentence); "imperative" (last sentence); "derive from and relate to subjective experience" (last sentence)
- List of two competing demands on law, according to the author (continued from the previous paragraph):
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Author's reconciliation (we can't reconcile both until there is true equality, so we should abandon formalism)
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author’s attitude
- Author's view:
- Trying to reconcile formalism and substantive justice in a society that lacks social equality is bound to fail or even promote injustice (first through third sentences)
- Therefore, we should abandon formalism so the law can adapt to social realities (fourth through last sentences)
- Author's attitude: "seems" (first sentence); "irreconcilable tension" (first sentence); "bound to fail" (second sentence); "cannot" (second sentence); "may very well" (third sentence); "required" (fourth sentence); "formalism should be abandoned" (fourth sentence); "misguided project" (last sentence)
- Author's view:
Main Point: The law cannot promote both formalist and substantive justice in an unequal world, so we should abandon our expectations that the law be formalist.
Paradox/Resolution: This passage uses one of the rarer Meta-Structures on the LSAT — the Paradox/Resolution Meta-Structure*. In such a passage, the author will describe a situation or belief that is paradoxical, discrepant, or counterintuitive. In this passage, the author uses the first two paragraphs to describe the conflicting, paradoxical demands we place on the law. We expect the law to be both "formalist" (rules-based, predictable, objective) and "substantive" (adaptable, equitable, subjective). The author ultimately resolves this paradox in the last paragraph. The author claims that trying to reconcile formalism and substantive justice in a society that lacks true equality is bound to fail or even promote injustice. So, the author concludes that we should no longer demand that the law promotes "formalism" so we can allow the law to adapt to social realities.
In a Paradox/Resolution passage, the main point is typically the author's resolution. To identify the main point, we can look for the part of the passage where the author summarizes their resolution. The author uses the passage's last two sentences to summarize their resolution, so we can use those to answer any question that requires us to know the main point. Or, we can use our summary of that resolution, as we did for our anticipated main point: "The law cannot promote both formalist and substantive justice in an unequal world, so we should abandon our expectations that the law be formalist."
*That said, a few other Meta-Structures could apply to this passage. One can reasonably claim this is a Problem/Solution passage (problem: the conflicting demands of formalist and substantive justice; solution: abandon formalism). One could also claim that this is a Resolving a Debate passage (even if the debate in such a passage will typically be two arguments offered by two different groups, not two demands we place on the same thing). If you classified this passage as either, you'd still develop a helpful understanding of the passage's main point and organization.
List: As is often the case with a Paradox/Resolution passage, the two sides of the paradox are presented as two items on a list. So, this list is the passage's most prominent minor Meta-Structure. The author describes the two items on the list, the formalist and substantive demands we place on the law, in the first and second paragraphs. We should refer to our notes on those paragraphs (and the paragraphs themselves, if necessary) to answer the inevitable questions about those two items.
This is the first passage in the section, so it will probably be the easiest passage of the four. It also has only five questions — the fewest a Reading Comp passage will have. If you are attempting to finish all four passages, it's imperative (to use one of this passage's author's favorite words) that you only dedicate six or seven minutes to this passage. We don't recommend reading the passage faster or abandoning any tasks that help you answer the questions accurately. Instead, try to speed up as you answer the questions. Make anticipations, avoid re-reading the passage as much as possible, and choose the first answer that matches your anticipation.
Question prompt
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.
Strategy Overview
Answer Anticipation
Answer choices
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Aemphasize the systemic nature Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A is not credited
Does this say that the author uses this reference to clarify that substantive justice won't result in decisions that benefit every party?
Nope. So, we can cross off (A). Besides, a quick glance at our third paragraph's note will show that the author emphasizes the systemic tension between formalism and substantive justice in the third paragraph, not the second.
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Bimply that, invariably, someone Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
Does this say that the author uses this reference to clarify that substantive justice won't result in decisions that benefit every party?
This is very tempting! However, this slightly mischaracterizes the author's point. The author says substantive justice will result in outcomes that some parties don't want (P2, S3), not outcomes that some parties think are unfair. That's an important difference! After all, if I'm being tried for a crime I know I committed, I might want to be found not guilty even if I know that outcome isn't fair. If I'm found guilty, it'll be the outcome I don't want, even if I must acknowledge that it's fair. Therefore, this answer choice ever-so-slightly changes the point the author makes.
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Csuggest that the flaws Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C is not credited
Does this say that the author uses this reference to clarify that substantive justice won't result in decisions that benefit every party?
Nope. In the second paragraph, the author doesn't discuss formalism's flaws. The second paragraph describes our desire for the law to promote substantive justice. Insofar as the author criticizes formalism, they do so only in the third paragraph. Since this answer choice misdefines the pose of the second paragraph, it can't correctly define the purpose of a detail in the second paragraph, either.
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Dstress that substantive justice Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D matches the stem
Does this say that the author uses this reference to clarify that substantive justice won't result in decisions that benefit every party?
Yes! This matches our anticipation, so we can confidently select (D) and advance to the following question. As discussed in the Answer Anticipation section, the author uses this reference to stress that substantive justice won't result in decisions that benefit every party. That's the same as saying that substantive justice cannot be expected to produce outcomes that favor every participant.
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Eforeshadow the author's conclusion Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E is not credited
Does this say that the author uses this reference to clarify that substantive justice won't result in decisions that benefit every party?
Nope. This doesn't match our anticipation, so we can quickly toss this answer choice away. As our note for the second paragraph shows, the second paragraph only attempts to describe our belief that the law should promote substantive justice. A quick review of our notes will show that the author doesn't discuss the "ultimate irreconcilability" of formalism and substantive justice until the third paragraph.
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