Comprehension
The passage below is accompanied by four questions. Based on the passage, choose the best answer for each question.
How can we know what someone else is thinking or feeling, let alone prove it in court? In his 1863 book, A General View of the Criminal Law of England, James Fitzjames Stephen, among the most celebrated legal thinkers of his generation, was of the opinion that the assessment of a person’s mental state was an inference made with “little consciousness.” In a criminal case, jurors, doctors, and lawyers could watch defendants—scrutinizing clothing, mannerisms, tone of voice— but the best they could hope for were clues. . . . Rounding these clues up to a judgment about a defendant’s guilt, or a defendant’s life, was an act of empathy and imagination. . . . The closer the resemblance between defendants and their judges, the easier it was to overlook the gap that inference filled. Conversely, when a defendant struck officials as unlike themselves, whether by dint of disease, gender, confession, or race, the precariousness of judgments about mental state was exposed. In the nineteenth century, physicians who specialized in the study of madness and the care of the insane held themselves out as experts in the new field of mental science. Often called alienists or mad doctors, they were the predecessors of modern psychiatrists, neurologists, and psychologists. . . . The opinions of family and neighbors had once been sufficient to sift the sane from the insane, but a growing belief that insanity was a subtle condition that required expert, medical diagnosis pushed physicians into the witness box. . . . Lawyers for both prosecution and defense began to recruit alienists to assess defendants’ sanity and to testify to it in court.
Irresponsibility and insanity were not identical, however. Criminal responsibility was a legal concept and not, fundamentally, a medical one. Stephen explained: “The question ‘What are the mental elements of responsibility?’ is, and must be, a legal question. It cannot be anything else, for the meaning of responsibility is liability to punishment.” . . . Nonetheless, medical and legal accounts of what it meant to be mentally sound became entangled and mutually referential throughout the nineteenth century. Lawyers relied on medical knowledge to inform their opinions and arguments about the sanity of their clients. Doctors commented on the legal responsibility of their patients. Ultimately, the fields of criminal law and mental science were both invested in constructing an image of the broken and damaged psyche that could be contrasted with the whole and healthy one. This shared interest, and the shared space of the criminal courtroom, made it nearly impossible to consider responsibility without medicine, or insanity without law. . . .
Physicians and lawyers shared more than just concern for the mind. Class, race, and gender bound these middle-class, white, professional men together, as did family ties, patriotism, Protestantism, business ventures, the alumni networks of elite schools and universities, and structures of political patronage. But for all their affinities, men of medicine and law were divided by contests over the borders of criminal responsibility, as much within each profession as between them. Alienists steadily pushed the boundaries of their field, developing increasingly complex and capacious definitions of insanity. Eccentricity and aggression came to be classified as symptoms of mental disease, at least by some.
Question: 1

The last paragraph of the passage refers to “middle-class, white, professional men”. Which one of the following qualities best describes the connection among them?

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When no option matches the passage perfectly, choose the one least contradicted by the text — but make sure you can justify why the others are clearly incorrect.
Updated On: Jul 1, 2026
  • The borders of criminal responsibility.
  • The opinions of family and neighbours.
  • Eccentricity and aggression.
  • Empathy and imagination.
Show Solution

The Correct Option is A

Solution and Explanation

Approach: Treat this as a scope-matching question. Each option points to a different paragraph of the passage; pick the one whose scope is the men in the final paragraph and the subject that unites both their professions.

Step 1: Tag each option to its home in the text. Family and neighbours belongs to paragraph 2 (the old way of sifting sane from insane). Empathy and imagination belongs to paragraph 1 (how officials judge a defendant). Eccentricity and aggression belongs to the last lines (symptoms alienists added). Only the borders of criminal responsibility is the running theme that both doctors and lawyers actually contest together.

Step 2: Apply a one-line filter, which concept could a physician and a lawyer both claim as their shared business? Not a juror's empathy, not the gossip of neighbours, not a symptom label. The one professional territory they jointly occupy is where responsibility begins and ends, that is, its borders.

Step 3: The passage even states they were divided by contests over these borders, which confirms this is the common ground they all stood on, even while disagreeing. Shared battlefield equals connection.

Answer: Option 1.
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Question: 2

According to the passage, who or what was an “alienist”?

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For definition-based questions, rely on explicit statements from the passage; avoid options that infer or distort beyond what the text says.
Updated On: Jul 1, 2026
  • Professionals who pushed the boundaries of their fields till they became unrecognisable in the nineteenth century.
  • Physicians who specialised in the study of madness and the care of the insane in the nineteenth century.
  • Physicians and lawyers who were responsible for the condition of immigrants or ‘aliens’ in the nineteenth century.
  • Physicians and lawyers who were responsible for examining accounts of extraterrestrials or ‘aliens’ in the nineteenth century.
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The Correct Option is B

Solution and Explanation

Approach: When a term sounds like a familiar word (alien), examiners plant two decoys built on that false meaning. Spot and kill the false-friend options first, then choose between what remains.

Step 1: Options 3 and 4 both rest on reading alien as foreigner or extraterrestrial. The passage is about madness and the law, so both are off-topic by theme alone. Strike them without even checking detail.

Step 2: That leaves Option 1 versus Option 2. Use a definition-versus-description test. A definition tells you what the thing IS; a description tells you what it DOES. Option 1 describes an action (pushing boundaries) and overstates it (unrecognisable). Option 2 states an identity, a kind of physician. The question asks who or what an alienist was, so it wants the identity.

Step 3: Option 2 also lines up exactly with the passage phrase study of madness and the care of the insane. Identity match plus theme match equals answer.

Answer: Option 2.
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Question: 3

Study the following sets of concepts and identify the set that is conceptually closest to the concerns and arguments of the passage.

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When matching conceptual sets to a passage, look for the ideas that appear repeatedly and form the backbone of the argument—not merely incidental references.
Updated On: Jul 1, 2026
  • Empathy, Prosecution, Knowledge, Business.
  • Judgement, Belief, Accounts, Patronage.
  • Assessment, Empathy, Prosecution, Patriotism.
  • Judgement, Insanity, Punishment, Responsibility.
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The Correct Option is D

Solution and Explanation

Approach: Score each set numerically. Give every word 1 if it is central to the passage and 0 if it is incidental, then pick the set with the highest, ideally perfect, total.

Step 1: Central vocabulary of the passage, drawn straight from Stephen's claim that responsibility means liability to punishment and from the focus on insanity in court: judgement, insanity, responsibility, punishment all score 1. Peripheral words that appear only in the social-ties list, business, patronage, patriotism, accounts, belief, score 0.

Step 2: Tally the sets. Option 1 = empathy(1) + prosecution(0) + knowledge(0) + business(0) = 1. Option 2 = judgement(1) + belief(0) + accounts(0) + patronage(0) = 1. Option 3 = assessment(1) + empathy(1) + prosecution(0) + patriotism(0) = 2. Option 4 = judgement(1) + insanity(1) + punishment(1) + responsibility(1) = 4.

Step 3: Option 4 alone scores a perfect 4, every word load-bearing.

Answer: Option 4.
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Question: 4

“Conversely, when a defendant struck officials as unlike themselves, whether by dint of disease, gender, confession, or race, the precariousness of judgments about mental state was exposed.” Which one of the following best describes the use of the word “confession” in this sentence?

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In older English, confession often referred to religious denomination. Always consider historical usage when interpreting words in historical passages.
Updated On: Jul 1, 2026
  • Referring to the practice of ‘confession’ in some faiths, here it is a metaphor for the religion of the defendant.
  • Referring to the gender, race or disease claimed as a defence by the defendant, here it is a synonym for ‘professing’ a gender, race, or disease.
  • Referring to the defendant’s confession of his or her crime as false, because ‘dint’ is an archaic form of ‘didn’t’ or ‘did not’.
  • The defendants struck out at the officials and then confessed to the act.
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The Correct Option is A

Solution and Explanation

Approach: Use the parallelism rule. In a list joined by or, all items share one grammatical and semantic role. Identify that role from the safe items, then force confession into it.

Step 1: The safe items are disease, gender, race, each a fixed attribute that can make a person seem unlike the officials. So the missing slot, confession, must also be such an attribute, a thing a person IS or HAS, not a thing a person DOES in court.

Step 2: This instantly kills the action-based readings. Option 3 (false confession of crime) and Option 4 (struck out, then confessed) both treat confession as a courtroom act, breaking the parallel. Out. Option 2 makes confession mean professing gender or race, which duplicates items already in the list, so it carries no new meaning. Out.

Step 3: Only Option 1 keeps confession as a personal attribute, namely religious affiliation (confession of faith), which slots cleanly beside disease, gender, and race and matches the passage's stress on Protestantism.

Answer: Option 1.
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