Bentham's Solution ·Inclusion is the rule, exclusion is the exception
If relevant, then include. Narrow exceptions made for exclusion. Flips the status quo of evidence law (exclusion rule, inclusion exception) on its head.
Example ·Evidence of defendant's past bank robberies
Sure, it's relevant. But it also prejudices the jury (meaning it makes jury think that being a bank-robber is in his character) and so hurts the jury's ability to decide correctly in this case.
Problem / Critique ·Bentham's exceptions are inconsistently applied
Bentham concedes that there can be other values more important than admitting relevant evidence. That's why he excludes sacramental confessions. Okay, but that same reason should also apply to exclude other privileged communications.
Despite the concerns raise, Bentham's idea of admitting evidence by default and excluding evidence only when there are clear reasons for doing so is now the standard.
Make sure to read the surrounding lines to help understand the purpose of this example. Before mentioning social workers and their clients, the author points out that Bentham allowed some exceptions to his nonexclusionary rule. Although under the rule, all relevant evidence should be admissible, Bentham conceded that some kinds of evidence, such as sacramental confessions should be inadmissible, because of competing social interests. The author brings up social workers and their clients as another circumstance in which competing social interests would seem to justify making relevant evidence inadmissible.
This best captures the purpose as explained above. Bentham’s rule is the “nonexclusion principle.” The author suggests we might not want to apply this rule to conversations between social workers and their clients.
b
cite an example ██ ██████████ ████ ████ ██████ ██ █████████ ████████ ██████
We don’t know that these objections “were raised” to Bentham’s proposed reform. P4 describes the author’s own criticism; but the author never indicates whether people at the time Bentham’s rule was being considered also raised these same criticisms.
c
illustrate the conflict ███████ █████████ ██████ █████████
The purpose relates to how Bentham’s nonexclusionary rule should apply. Although the author would acknowledge that there are competing social interests, this isn’t why the author brings up the example.
d
demonstrate the difference ███████ ██████ █████████ ███ ██████ ██████
The purpose relates to how Bentham’s nonexclusionary rule should apply. Also, it’s not clear how conversations between social workers and their clients illustrate the difference between interests and values.
Actually, Bentham’s exceptions to the nonexclusion principle did not include conversations between social workers and clients. The author’s point at the end of P4 is that Bentham’s reasoning for allowing some exceptions justified allowing other exceptions that he did not actually allow.
Difficulty
61% of people who answer get this correct
This is a very difficult question.
It is similar in difficulty to other questions in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%145
161
75%176
Analysis
Purpose in context (of word, phrase, or idea)
Structure
Critique or debate
Law
Problem-analysis
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
61%
168
b
10%
164
c
18%
166
d
3%
159
e
8%
164
Question history
You don't have any history with this question.. yet!
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