- Mon Dec 16, 2024 2:06 pm
#111080
Hi jasmine,
The question asks for which factor would the author consider "generally necessary for the justification of rules compelling coordination of activities" (my emphasis). The word "justification" here refers to moral justification. In other words, what is necessary for these types of rules to be morally justified, or "fair."
The key idea in this passage is that the goal of preventing harm can be used to justify laws against certain nonconforming behaviors. This is stated in lines 7-11 and in the correct Answer E to question 22 regarding the Main Point of the passage.
The key lines that answer help answer this question are 21-25. "On the assumption that all people would voluntarily agree to be subject to a coordination rule backed by criminal sanctions, if people could be assured that others would also agree, it is argued to be legitimate for a legislature to impose such a rule" (my emphasis).
The important point to note in this sentence is that the necessary part (or factor) for the rule to be legitimate is that everyone "voluntarily agree," not that the rule is backed by criminal sanctions. While the criminal sanctions may be necessary to enforce the rule as you point out, they are not what morally justify the rule. For example, if a government passed a law that everyone must wear yellow clothes on Tuesdays and backed the rule by criminal sanctions, this would not be morally justified (unless everyone agreed to such a rule).
Notice that the word "consent" in the answer is a synonym for "voluntarily agree" in the passage and the word "legitimate" is basically a synonym for "justified." The test makers often used synonyms in the correct answers to "hide" them.