by ohthatpatrick Thu May 09, 2013 11:50 pm
I'm having a hard time seeing how "being unambiguous" means the same thing as "overlooking its complexity".
Can you go into more detail about how you saw those two relating or try to put that section into your own words?
To me, 'being unambiguous' means 'being clear'.
It sounds like a good thing, and it doesn't seem to connect in any way to issues of complexity.
There are a couple other things we could say about (B), though.
1. Even if this were an accurate paraphrase of lines 44-45, how would we elevate that line to the main point?
Beware that on main point questions, there is normally one trap answer that is true but too narrow.
Meyerson has a whole series of complaints about CLS, so it would be hard to pick any answer choice that focuses on one specific complaint and call that the main point.
2. (B) is saying that, according to Meyerson, CLS "overlooks complexity".
You were comparing that to "being unambiguous". Did Meyerson say that CLS is being unambiguous?
No, that's distorting the context of those lines.
Legal formalism, i.e. orthodox legal theory, considers the law to be unambiguous ... the law is clear ... there is a method capable of giving solutions to legal problems.
CLS says that if legal formalists believe that, then they must believe that the legal process has moral authority.
Meyerson says, "No it doesn't, CLS. You can consider the law unambiguous without assigning moral authority to the law."
That's when she launches into her analogy to flesh out that point.
So the phrase you have in mind, "being unambiguous" is a phrase that legal formalists apply to the law.
The phrase "overlooks the complexity" in (B) is something Meyerson is applying to CLS.
So even if those ideas meant the same thing, they wouldn't be applying to the same nouns.
It would be like if the passage said:
Sally is pretty.
and we picked an answer saying
(B) Karen is attractive.
Even though 'pretty' and 'attractive' are somewhat synonymous, the things they're being applied to are different in the passage vs. the answer choice.
Hope this helps. Feel free to clarify your interpretation of the text.