Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT124 S4 P2 Q9 Explanation

British Common Law

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

TopicsApplicationLaw

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Passage

In England the burden of history weighs heavily on common law, that unwritten code of time-honored laws derived largely from English judicial custom and precedent. Students of contemporary British law are frequently required to study medieval cases, to interpret archaic Latin maxims, or to confront doctrinal principles whose validity is based solely of the English people, common law cannot properly be understood without taking a long historical view.

Yet the academic study of jurisprudence has seldom treated common law as a constantly evolving phenomenon rooted in history; those interpretive theories that do acknowledge the antiquity of common law ignore the practical contemporary significance of its historical forms. The reasons for this omission are partly theoretical and partly political. In theoretical determined facts. To suggest otherwise would be dispiriting for the student and demoralizing for the public.

Legal historian Peter Goodrich has argued, however, that common law is most fruitfully studied as a continually developing tradition rather than as a set of rules. Taking his cue from the study of literature, Goodrich sees common law as a sort of literary text, with history and tradition serving as the text's forms, but also the continuous rewriting of those forms to adapt them to contemporary legal circumstances.

What this question is testing

Application

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
9.

Which one of the following would best exemplify the kind of interpretive theory referred to in the first sentence of the second

Answer choices

  1. Opposite12% picked this

    a theory that traced modern customs involving property ownership to their origins

    This does connect the past to the present. We needed a theory that acknowledges the past but doesn't connect it to the present.

  2. Opposite4% picked this

    a theory that relied on a comparison between modern courtroom procedures and

    This connects past to present. We want something that fails to do that.

  3. Correct73% picked this

    a theory that analyzed medieval marriage laws without examining their relationship

    Why this is right

    This does acknowledge antiquity, but fails to connect it to the present.

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

  4. Nothing About Past8% picked this

    a theory that compared the development of English common law in the twentieth century with simultaneous developments in German common law without examining the

    This is just comparing one modern system to another. We don't have "acknowledging antiquity".

  5. Nothing About Past vs. Present2% picked this

    a theory that compared rules of evidence in civil courts with those

    This is about civil vs. criminal.

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