Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT104 S2 P2 Q7 Explanation

Canon Lawyer Oversight

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsMain PointLaw

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Passage

By the mid-fourteenth century, professional associations of canon lawyers (legal advocates in Christian ecclesiastical courts, which dealt with cases involving marriage, inheritance, and other issues) had appeared in most of Western Europe, and a body of professional standards had been defined for them. One might expect that the professional associations would play enforcement, the initiative for disciplinary action apparently came from a dissatisfied client, not from fellow lawyers.

At first glance, there seem to be two possible explanations for the rarity of disciplinary proceedings. Medieval canon lawyers may have generally observed the standards of professional conduct scrupulously. Alternatively, it is possible that deviations from the established standards of behavior were not inefficient that most delinquents escaped detection and punishment.

Two considerations make it clear that the second of these explanations is more plausible. First, the English civil law courts, whose ethical standards were similar to those of ecclesiastical courts, show many more examples of disciplinary actions against legal practitioners than do the records of church courts. This discrepancy could well indicate especially since there was some overlap of personnel between the civil bar and the ecclesiastical bar.

Second, church authorities themselves complained about the failure of advocates to measure up to ethical standards and deplored the shortcomings of the disciplinary system. Thus the Council of Basel declared that canon lawyers failed to adhere to the ethical prescriptions laid down in numerous papal constitutions and directed Cardinal Cesarin to address failure of the disciplinary system to reform unethical practices were very common.

Such criticisms seem to have had a paradoxical result, for they apparently reinforced the professional solidarity of lawyers at the expense of the enforcement of ethical standards. Thus the profession’s critics may actually have induced advocates to organize professional associations for self-defense. The critics’ attacks may also have persuaded lawyers to assign nonprofessionals than to disciplining wayward members within their own ranks.

What this question is testing

Main Point

Your task

Capture the passage's overall primary point — the claim everything else supports.

Common trap

Answers that are true but too narrow (a single paragraph) or too broad (beyond the passage's scope).

Winning move

Summarize the whole passage in one sentence first, then match it to a choice.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
7.

Which one of the following best states the main conclusion of

Answer choices

  1. Contradicted9% picked this

    Professional organizations of medieval canon lawyers probably only enforced ethical standards among their own members when provoked to

    The final paragraph is saying that when these professional organizations of church lawyers got outside criticism, "it seems to have had a paradoxical result" and led to less enforcement of ethical standards. The lawyers within these associations banded together to protect each other, rather than disciplining wayward members.

  2. Contradicted: stricter standards9% picked this

    Professional organizations of medieval civil lawyers seem to have maintained stricter ethical standards for their own members than did professional

    It probably feels like the Wrong Emphasis as soon as we see this answer start by talking about the civil lawyers. They're not the central topic. The church lawyers are. We're trying to solve a mystery about why the church lawyers weren't disciplined much by their professional associations. This answer is also contradicted because the beginning of the 3rd paragraph says that "civil law courts [had] ethical standards similar to those of ecclesiastical courts", whereas the answer says that civil courts had stricter standards.

  3. Correct80% picked this

    Professional organizations of medieval canon lawyers apparently served to defend their members against critics’ attacks rather than

    Why this is right

    The passage was trying to solve the mystery of why church lawyers were rarely disciplined by their professional associations, and its answer was that the associations were inefficient and protective of their members, so most delinquents escaped detection and punishment. This answer certainly isn't trying to be our friend, but it's the best available answer that centers on the idea that these professional organizations were not effectively policing their wayward members. The idea that they "apparently served to defend their members against critics' attacks" aligns with the discussion in the final paragraph. And the idea they "didn't serve to enforce ethical standards" aligns with the idea at the end of the 2nd that "most delinquents escaped detection and punishment".

    Skill tested: Main Point · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  4. Wrong Emphasis: papal constitutions1% picked this

    The ethical standards maintained by professional associations of medieval canon lawyers were chiefly laid down

    This answer is just pulling a detail from the passage and pretending like it's the main point. This passage was not trying to the answer the question, "what was the #1 place where professional associations of church lawyers got their ethical standards?" If the author could only get us to take away one sentence from this passage, it would be, "the reason that church lawyers were rarely disciplined by their professional associations is that the associations were inefficient and protective of their members, so most delinquents escaped detection and punishment."

  5. Wrong Emphasis2% picked this

    Ethical standards for medieval canon lawyers were not laid down until professional organizations for these

    Wrong Emphasis: origin of ethical standards Too Strong: not until This answer has nothing to do with answering the central question of "how come canon lawyers weren't disciplined more by their professional organizations?" And it makes a claim that isn't even found in the passage, that there were no ethical standards for canon lawyers laid down until professional organizations were formed.

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