- Tue Nov 22, 2016 1:23 am
#30785
TigerJin,
You need to focus on the question itself here and the topic that it considers, namely how would the author of Passage A object to Passage B's contention that jury nullification could serve as a safety valve in the event that the jury deems the case too trivial to warrant a conviction?
This question is analogous to a Logical Reasoning question, in fact a rather interesting combination of a Weaken and a Method of Reasoning question. You are to hurt the claim in Passage B that jury nullification could serve as a safety valve in the event that the jury deems the case too trivial. You are to do so by finding reasoning in Passage A that would undermine the utility of jury nullification in this case.
Start by being completely clear about the claim: Jury nullification could serve as a safety valve in the event that the jury deems the case too trivial.
Now you have to find some aspect of the first passage that could give you a reason why a jury might be ill-equipped to judge whether a case is in fact trivial.
For example, in lines 26-28, you find one possible reason, that juries may not be capable of judging the effects that a non-conviction could have on others.
Consider the answer choices you have suggested. Answer choice (D) suggests that juries may not be able to judge the strengths or weaknesses of a case. There is no evidence in Passage A to suggest anything about this ability of juries as germane to using this skill wisely. However, answer choice (E) describes a scenario outlined in lines 17-20 of Passage A, that juries may not be aware of the circumstances that led to the case's prosecution in the first place, considerations that may make the particular case appear inconsequential, but not so in light of the overarching circumstances of which the jury is not aware.