- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#37371
Complete Question Explanation
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (C)
The stimulus contains a fact set. On one hand, judges try to avoid misinterpretation of their
decisions, which is why their writing is rarely of high literary quality. On the other, it is not
uncommon to find writing of high literary quality in dissenting judicial opinions, which are
sometimes included when a panel of judges decides on a case. The question stem asks us to resolve
this apparent discrepancy.
Note that the stimulus does not contain a true paradox, just an odd situation that is presented
without explanation. The correct answer must explain how the situation came into being while
allowing both sides of the situation to be factually correct. More specifically, it must explain why
the literary quality of dissenting opinions differs from that of judicial opinions that are intended as
determinations of law.
Answer choice (A): It is irrelevant many judges have an influence on the way a dissenting opinion is
written. This answer choice cannot explain the difference in literary styles between the two types of
judicial opinions being compared.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice may seem attractive, because it explains why most legal
opinions might be of relatively low literary quality—they rely heavily on the use of technical
terminology. However, this answer choice provides only a partial explanation of the phenomenon
described in the stimulus, as it fails to account for the high literary quality of dissenting opinions.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. If the law were not determined by
dissenting opinions, then their authors would have no obligation to write them in a manner that
averts misinterpretation. Such authors would be at liberty to express themselves as they see fit,
including through high literary prose. As this answer choice explains the difference in literary styles
between the two types of judicial opinions, it is correct.
Answer choice (D): As with answer choice (B), this statement provides only a partial explanation as
to why legal opinions might be of relatively low literary quality. After all, if judges spend little time
reading works of high literary quality, no wonder their own writing lacks such quality. Unfortunately,
this observation fails to explain why dissenting opinions differ from most other judicial opinions.
This answer choice attempts to explain a difference with a similarity, which is never correct in a
Resolve question.
Answer choice (E): How widely judicial decisions are read is immaterial to the issue at hand. Even
if decisions issued by panels of judges are more widely read than are decisions issued by a single
judge, this would not explain why the dissenting opinions included in cases heard by a panel of
judges are different from the rest. This answer choice deviates from the discrepancy we need to
explain: the question is not why the decisions issued by panels of judges are different from the
decisions issued by a single judge.
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (C)
The stimulus contains a fact set. On one hand, judges try to avoid misinterpretation of their
decisions, which is why their writing is rarely of high literary quality. On the other, it is not
uncommon to find writing of high literary quality in dissenting judicial opinions, which are
sometimes included when a panel of judges decides on a case. The question stem asks us to resolve
this apparent discrepancy.
Note that the stimulus does not contain a true paradox, just an odd situation that is presented
without explanation. The correct answer must explain how the situation came into being while
allowing both sides of the situation to be factually correct. More specifically, it must explain why
the literary quality of dissenting opinions differs from that of judicial opinions that are intended as
determinations of law.
Answer choice (A): It is irrelevant many judges have an influence on the way a dissenting opinion is
written. This answer choice cannot explain the difference in literary styles between the two types of
judicial opinions being compared.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice may seem attractive, because it explains why most legal
opinions might be of relatively low literary quality—they rely heavily on the use of technical
terminology. However, this answer choice provides only a partial explanation of the phenomenon
described in the stimulus, as it fails to account for the high literary quality of dissenting opinions.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. If the law were not determined by
dissenting opinions, then their authors would have no obligation to write them in a manner that
averts misinterpretation. Such authors would be at liberty to express themselves as they see fit,
including through high literary prose. As this answer choice explains the difference in literary styles
between the two types of judicial opinions, it is correct.
Answer choice (D): As with answer choice (B), this statement provides only a partial explanation as
to why legal opinions might be of relatively low literary quality. After all, if judges spend little time
reading works of high literary quality, no wonder their own writing lacks such quality. Unfortunately,
this observation fails to explain why dissenting opinions differ from most other judicial opinions.
This answer choice attempts to explain a difference with a similarity, which is never correct in a
Resolve question.
Answer choice (E): How widely judicial decisions are read is immaterial to the issue at hand. Even
if decisions issued by panels of judges are more widely read than are decisions issued by a single
judge, this would not explain why the dissenting opinions included in cases heard by a panel of
judges are different from the rest. This answer choice deviates from the discrepancy we need to
explain: the question is not why the decisions issued by panels of judges are different from the
decisions issued by a single judge.