Addiction Equals Involuntary
This trap appears as a wrong-answer choice in 1 active question. Spotting how it is built is the repair: read each example's “why it's attractive” before the “why it's wrong.”
Subject distribution
- Criminal Law1
Example wrong choices
14635_barnabas_aspirin_capsule · CRIMINAL_LAW · Choice AEvidence that Paul is addicted to this stimulant and has an overwhelming urge to consume it.
Why it's attractive
Addiction and overwhelming urge sound involuntary in ordinary language.
Why it's wrong
Addiction and urge do not answer the involuntary-ingestion axis.
Spot it next time
Ask whether Paul knowingly consumed the stimulant.
14635_barnabas_aspirin_capsule · CRIMINAL_LAW · Choice CEvidence that Stephen taunted Paul about his use of the stimulant immediately before Paul struck him.
Why it's attractive
Taunting makes the strike feel morally explained.
Why it's wrong
Taunting answers a provocation story, not the requested intoxication instruction.
Spot it next time
Restate the call: what helps the intoxication instruction?
14635_barnabas_aspirin_capsule · CRIMINAL_LAW · Choice DExpert testimony that a reasonable person, on consuming this stimulant, may experience uncontrollable rages.
Why it's attractive
Uncontrollable rage directly matches the requested acquittal instruction and was the dominant wrong answer.
Why it's wrong
Uncontrollable rage proves drug effect, not involuntary ingestion.
Spot it next time
Mark the stem fact that drug effect is already conceded; hunt for involuntary ingestion.
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