Distinguishing Points of View
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LSAT Reading › Distinguishing Points of View
Passage A
Some economists contend that expanding occupational licensing—requirements such as exams, fees, or mandated training—protects consumers by ensuring minimum competence among service providers. They note that in fields like medicine and aviation, stringent licensing is widely accepted. In addition, licensing boards sometimes discipline practitioners for fraud or unsafe practices, a detail frequently cited in legislative hearings. Nevertheless, critics argue that many licensed occupations involve low risk and that licensing can function as a barrier to entry.
A qualified defense of licensing maintains that its desirability depends on the magnitude of potential harm and on the availability of less restrictive alternatives. For example, voluntary certification or targeted inspections might address quality concerns without limiting supply as severely. Even defenders of licensing concede that requirements can be poorly calibrated: mandating hundreds of hours of training for hair braiding may do little for safety while raising prices. Thus, the central policy question is not whether licensing is ever justified, but how to design rules that balance consumer protection against competition and mobility.
Passage B
Debates about occupational licensing often treat “quality” as the pivotal metric, but empirical research has struggled to find consistent quality improvements attributable to licensing in many service sectors. What licensing reliably does is reduce the number of providers and increase wages for those already in the occupation. From this perspective, licensing resembles a labor-market cartel that uses the language of consumer protection to secure economic advantage.
Accordingly, reformers argue that the burden of proof should fall on proponents of licensing to demonstrate concrete, occupation-specific risks that cannot be addressed by market mechanisms. Online reviews, liability rules, and private warranties can discipline low-quality providers, especially when consumers can easily compare options. While extreme cases may warrant regulation, reformers contend that defaulting to licensing is misguided: it entrenches incumbents, restricts interstate mobility, and disproportionately harms low-income entrepreneurs who cannot afford training fees.
The author of Passage A and the author of Passage B would most likely disagree about
whether some licensing requirements, such as extensive training mandates for low-risk services, may be poorly calibrated
whether the default policy stance should be skepticism toward licensing unless proponents can show occupation-specific necessity
whether licensing boards sometimes discipline practitioners for fraud or unsafe practices
whether licensing can ever be justified in occupations where the potential harm to consumers is substantial
whether voluntary certification and targeted inspections are examples of less restrictive alternatives to licensing
Explanation
This distinguishing points of view question asks about the core disagreement between two approaches to occupational licensing policy. Passage A presents a qualified defense, arguing that licensing can be justified when properly calibrated to potential harm and when less restrictive alternatives are inadequate. The author suggests the central question is how to design rules that balance consumer protection against competition. Passage B takes a much more skeptical stance, arguing that the burden of proof should fall on licensing proponents to demonstrate concrete, occupation-specific risks that market mechanisms cannot address. The fundamental disagreement is about the default policy position: should we start from skepticism toward licensing (Passage B) or from a more neutral balancing approach (Passage A)? Choice (A) is tempting since both acknowledge licensing might sometimes be justified for high-harm occupations, but this represents convergence rather than the core philosophical disagreement about presumptions.
According to the passage, which statement best distinguishes the author's account from both the formalist and the customary schools described?
Legal outcomes emerged from iterative negotiation in which imperial scripts and local practices were selectively invoked and recombined, producing hybrid institutions that varied across contexts.
Local customary law, because it was rooted in community norms, invariably overrode imperial courts in everyday disputes.
Implementation of law across regions followed a uniform pattern set by the metropole, with deviations representing mere administrative error.
Imperial edicts, when properly enforced, were the sole determinants of provincial legal outcomes, regardless of local practice.
Imperial law had little to no effect outside port cities, where commerce demanded stricter adherence to metropolitan codes.
Explanation
The author emphasizes negotiated hybridity and variation shaped by actors translating between imperial and local norms, which E captures. A and D echo the formalist position, B aligns with the customary view, and C overgeneralizes a geographic limit the author does not assert.
Which of the following statements would the author and safety advocates most likely both agree with?
Traffic growth from autonomous vehicles is inevitable and cannot be mitigated by policy.
Cities should ban autonomous vehicles until they eliminate all crashes.
Curbside parking must be preserved even if it reduces space for protected lanes.
Lower design speeds and self-enforcing geometry reduce injuries regardless of automation.
Technology vendors, not cities, should set street-design priorities during the transition.
Explanation
Both the author and safety advocates emphasize design-speed and self-enforcing features as effective independent of automation. The other options either adopt extreme prohibitions, prioritize parking over safety, or cede policy control to vendors, none of which the author endorses.
According to the passage, the author's view differs from that of platform engineers who favor better classifiers in that the author
maintains that virality is inherently unmeasurable and thus not a viable governance target.
prioritizes governing the distribution and speed of amplification through friction and accountability, viewing classifiers as necessary but insufficient.
supports nationalizing major platforms to ensure public control over recommendation algorithms.
endorses removing all controversial posts regardless of context to eliminate risk.
aligns with civil libertarians in opposing any intervention that affects the visibility of lawful content.
Explanation
The author emphasizes reach governance and accountability for amplification, while engineers center on classifier accuracy; classifiers are treated as helpful but insufficient. The other choices misstate the author's stance or attribute extreme positions the author rejects.
The passage indicates that the author's view differs from that of the engineers in that the author
doubts that algorithmic systems can be audited at all, whereas engineers believe they can be audited under strict controls.
denies that adversarial manipulation is a real concern, whereas engineers maintain that it is a serious risk.
insists on publishing complete source code for high-stakes systems, whereas engineers prefer to keep model details proprietary.
contends that limited, regulator-only access can be both safe and beneficial, whereas engineers view any external access as too risky.
prioritizes privacy over fairness, whereas engineers prioritize fairness over privacy.
Explanation
The author advocates a tiered regime with confidential regulator and auditor access, which engineers are depicted as rejecting categorically. The other choices attribute positions the author explicitly avoids.
Which of the following best describes how the author's position differs from that of activists calling for immediate, unconditional repatriation?
The author contends that the logistics of moving artifacts make repatriation generally impractical.
The author endorses restitution as the default but favors structured shared-custodianship and capacity building rather than unconditional transfers.
The author, unlike the activists, believes museums should permanently retain ownership of contested works.
The author, unlike the activists, rejects provenance research as a meaningful criterion for return.
The author agrees with the activists that donor preferences should be the primary determinant of outcomes.
Explanation
The author supports return but distinguishes the view by advocating shared custodianship and investments that accompany return, unlike activists' call for unconditional transfer. The other choices misattribute to the author positions the passage explicitly rejects.
The passage suggests that pragmatists would most likely disagree with originalists over which of the following claims?
Courts should not abdicate their role in interpreting statutes.
Agencies sometimes possess superior technical expertise relevant to ambiguous statutory terms.
Judicial opinions should articulate reasons for the interpretive weight afforded to agency views.
The degree of deference may appropriately vary based on contextual factors such as complexity or procedural rigor.
Deference should be categorically curtailed as inconsistent with the judicial duty to interpret the law.
Explanation
Pragmatists reject a categorical curtailment, favoring context-sensitive deference. They agree courts interpret law (A), acknowledge agency expertise (C), support variable deference (D), and would not oppose reason-giving (E).
Which viewpoint, as presented in the passage, would be most likely to endorse the claim that a company's purchase of offsets may be justified only if its absolute emissions are declining on a verifiable trajectory?
The author of the passage proposing stringent guardrails on offset use
Policymakers in low-capacity jurisdictions seeking simpler accounting rules
Market-oriented economists favoring broad fungibility in cap-and-trade
An industry consortium advocating flexible pathways to meet pledges
An NGO implementing community projects that rely on offset revenue
Explanation
The author explicitly conditions any offset use on a verified, declining emissions trajectory. The other viewpoints emphasize flexibility, funding streams, fungibility, or administrative simplicity, not such a strict prerequisite.
The passage indicates that the author's perspective differs from that of traffic engineers mainly in that the author
believes a single, contiguous flagship park is the only effective solution, whereas traffic engineers prefer many small interventions.
prioritizes the co-benefits of living canopy and warns that high-albedo surfaces can create glare and pedestrian discomfort, whereas traffic engineers emphasize reflectivity metrics and speedy procurement.
rejects any role for changes to pavement and roofing materials in urban heat mitigation, whereas traffic engineers regard such changes as indispensable.
would defer decisions entirely to budget officers to minimize maintenance costs, whereas traffic engineers favor more expensive approaches.
agrees with technology entrepreneurs that movable shade structures should replace trees in most high-traffic areas, whereas traffic engineers oppose deploying such technology.
Explanation
The author supports a shade-centric, tree-forward approach that acknowledges but limits high-albedo treatments due to glare and comfort concerns, unlike engineers who prioritize reflectivity. The other answers misstate the author's support for supplemental material changes, distributed solutions, and skepticism about replacing trees with technology.
The author's view differs from that of strict descriptivists primarily in holding that
empirical usage data are unreliable guides to how people actually write and speak.
language change is generally harmful and should be slowed.
grammar rules are unchanging and should be enforced universally.
standardization has no role in education and should be avoided.
decisions about standards should be assessed partly by their effects on access and social power.
Explanation
The author accepts descriptive data but adds that norms must be evaluated for their distributional consequences, a consideration strict descriptivists downplay. The other options attribute prescriptivist or anti-empirical positions the author explicitly rejects.