Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: if both I and II are implicit.
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:
A court instructs the executive to take “all necessary measures” to stop hazardous effluents entering a river. What must be true for such a directive to make sense?
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:
Orders to act usually presuppose (a) the existence of a problem (or serious risk), and (b) a gap in current effort sufficient to justify judicial intervention.
Step-by-Step Solution:
Assumption I: If contamination (or imminent threat) did not exist, ordering action would be ungrounded. Hence I is necessary.Assumption II: If the state machinery had already taken adequate measures, further direction would be redundant. The court’s order implies insufficiency to date. Thus II is necessary.
Verification / Alternative check:
If either assumption were false (no contamination or adequate measures already in place), the directive would lack purpose.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Single-assumption options omit one pillar of the order’s logic; “neither” contradicts the premise of intervention; “either” is insufficient.
Common Pitfalls:
Missing that judicial directions typically imply both a problem and inadequate status quo response.
Final Answer:
if both I and II are implicit.
Discussion & Comments