Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT108 S1 P2 Q16 Explanation

Non-Objectivist Discourse

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

TopicsAnalogyLaw

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Passage

In recent years, a growing belief that the way society decides what to treat as true is controlled through largely unrecognized discursive practices has led legal reformers to examine the complex interconnections between narrative and law. In many legal systems, legal judgments are based on competing stories about events. Without having witnessed in law from selective perception, or from subjective judgments based on prior experiences, values, and beliefs.

The societal harm caused by the assumption of objectivist principles in traditional legal discourse is that, historically, the stories judged to be objectively true are those told by people who are trained in legal discourse, while the stories of language of the law are rejected as false.

Legal scholars such as Patricia Williams, Derrick Bell, and Mari Matsuda have sought empowerment for the latter group of people through the construction of alternative legal narratives. Objectivist legal discourse systematically disallows the language of emotion and experience by focusing on cognition in its narrowest sense. These legal reformers propose replacing such by overcoming differences in background and training and forming a new collectivity based on emotional empathy.

What this question is testing

Analogy

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

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

The question
16.

Those who reject objectivism would regard “the law’s quest for truth,” mentioned in the first paragraph, as most similar to which

Answer choices

  1. Correct78% picked this

    a hunt for an imaginary

    Why this is right

    Answer A is correct.

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

  2. Trap10% picked this

    the search for a valuable mineral among

  3. Trap5% picked this

    the painstaking assembly of a jigsaw

  4. Trap3% picked this

    comparing an apple with an

  5. Trap5% picked this

    the scientific analysis of a chemical

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