ACT真題每日一練1.20

2016/01/20 瀏覽次數:3 收藏
分享到:

  Reading Question for Wednesday, January 20th, 2016

SOCIAL SCIENCE: This passage is adapted from Leonard W.
Levy's Origins of the Fifth Amendment: The Right Against Self
Incrimination.
 (©1968 by Clio Enterprises Inc.).
      Community courts and community justice pre-
vailed in England at the time of the Norman Conquest 
[1066]. The legal system was ritualistic, dependent 
upon oaths at most stages of litigation, and permeated
5   by both religious and superstitious notions. The pro-
ceedings were oral, very personal, and highly con-
frontative. Juries were unknown. One party publicly 
"appealed," or accused, the other before the community 
meeting at which the presence of both was obligatory.
10   To be absent meant risking fines and outlawry. After 
the preliminary statements of the parties, the court ren-
dered judgment, not on the merits of the issue nor the 
question of guilt or innocence, but on the manner by 
which it should be resolved. Judgment in other words
15   preceded trial because it was a decision on what form 
the trial should take. It might be by compurgation, by 
ordeal, or, after the Norman Conquest, by battle. 
Excepting trial by battle, only one party was tried or, 
more accurately, was put to his "proof." Proof being
20   regarded as an advantage, it was usually awarded to the
accused party; in effect he had the privilege of proving
his own case.

    Trial by compurgation consisted of a sworn state-
ment to the truth of one's claim or denial, supported by
25   the oaths of a certain number of fellow swearers. 
Presumably they, no more than the claimant, would 
endanger their immortal souls by the sacrilege of false 
swearing. Originally the oath-helpers swore from their 
own knowledge to the truth of the party's claim. Later
30   they became little more than character witnesses, 
swearing only to their belief that his oath was trust-
worthy. If he rounded up the requisite number of com-
purgators and the cumbrous swearing in very exact 
form proceeded without a mistake, he won his case. A
35   mistake "burst" the oath, proving guilt.

    Ordeals were usually reserved for more serious 
crimes, for persons of bad reputation, for peasants, or 
for those caught with stolen goods. As an invocation of 
immediate divine judgment, ordeals were consecrated
40   by the Church and shrouded with solemn religious mys-
tery. The accused underwent a physical trial in which 
he called upon God to witness his innocence by putting 
a miraculous sign upon his body. Cold water, boiling 
water, and hot iron were the principal ordeals, all of
45   which the clergy administered. In the ordeal of cold 
water, the accused was trussed up and cast into a pool 
to see whether he would sink or float. On the theory 
that water which had been sanctified by a priest would 
receive an innocent person but reject the guilty, inno-
50   cence was proved by sinking—and hopefully a quick 
retrieval—guilt by floating. In the other ordeals, one 
had to plunge his hand into a cauldron of boiling water 
or carry a red hot piece of iron for a certain distance, in 
the hope that three days later, when the bandages were
55   removed, the priest would find a "clean" wound, one 
that was healing free of infection. How deeply one 
plunged his arm into the water, how heavy the iron or 
great the distance it was carried, depended mainly on 
the gravity of the charge.
 
60       The Normans brought to England still another 
ordeal, trial by battle, paradigm of the adversary 
system, which gave to the legal concept of "defense" or 
"defendant" a physical meaning. Trial by battle was a 
savage yet sacred method of proof which was also
65   thought to involve divine intercession on behalf of the 
righteous. Rather than let a wrongdoer triumph, God 
would presumably strengthen the arms of the party who 
had sworn truly to the justice of his cause. Right, not 
might, would therefore conquer. Trial by battle was
70   originally available for the settlement of all disputes 
but eventually was restricted to cases of serious crime.

    Whether one proved his case by compurgation, 
ordeal, or battle, the method was accusatory in char-
acter. There was always a definite and known accuser,
75   some private person who brought formal suit and 
openly confronted his antagonist. There was never any 
secrecy in the proceedings, which were the same for 
criminal as for civil litigation. The judges, who had no
role whatever in the making of the verdict, decided only
80   which party should be put to proof and what its form 
should be; thereafter the judges merely enforced an 
observance of the rules. The oaths that saturated the 
proceedings called upon God to witness to the truth of 
the respective claims of the parties, or the justice of
85  

their cause, or the reliability of their word. No one gave 
testimonial evidence nor was anyone questioned to test 
his veracity.

  The forms of trial discussed in the passage all assume that truth is best determined by:

  A. carefully questioning witnesses.

  B. carefully assessing physical evidence.

  C. an adversary proceeding, or battle.

  D. relying on the assistance of God.


  謎底:D

  【剖析】The best answer is D. Support for the answer is in the last paragraph, which compares the three kinds of trial: "The oaths that saturated the proceedings called upon God to witness to the truth of the ... claims ..., or the justice of their cause ..." (lines 82–85). The passage clearly identifies the assistance of God as necessary in each form of trial. Neither of the procedures described in A or B apply to the trials described in the passage, and C is only one type of the several trials described in the passage.

掃描二維碼,更多act備考材料一手控制!

  佳構推舉:

  2016寒假班熱報中 現報名送5000元!

  一對一說話培訓佳構課程!

  整日制高端學堂開課啦!