- Fri Nov 23, 2018 4:34 pm
#60744
I'll do my best, mjb514!
First, the question is asking for a principle, which you can understand to mean a rule or a guideline, that "underlies the arguments" in passage A and also in passage B. In other words, what rule or guideline did both authors follow?
Clearly the passages are in some sense in opposition. Passage A supports research done independently by trial judges, while Passage B opposes any such research being done by appellate judges. However, these two positions are not actually in conflict with each other, because they are each talking about different levels of the court system - trial vs. appeal. We are being asked here to find something that the passages had in common, some rule or guideline that they both followed, even though there were talking about somewhat different topics.
Answer C is a rule that both of our authors followed. The author of Passage A appears to believe that any independent research done by a trial judge should supplement, rather than replace, the evidence presented and discussed during the trial. That is the point of the entire final paragraph of Passage A. The author of Passage B clearly doesn't want research to supersede the evidence presented at trial, because he thinks appellate judges shouldn't do any such research. He also has a very high opinion of the trial process of cross-examination, calling it "the greatest legal engine ever invented for the discovery of truth."
So, both authors' arguments followed the rule laid out in answer C, that independent research should not supersede (replace, take precedence over, or outweigh) evidence presented in a trial.
I hope that helps make sense of things for you! Let us know if you need further elaboration, we're always here to help.
Adam M. Tyson
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