Business law case questions and answers.For foundation
Answers
Answer:
Explanation:
I’ve been teaching law to undergraduates for about 15 years and the biggest jump for most students is learning critical thinking. What that means is that most people spend their lives thinking that their feelings count as opinions without ever thinking them through. Lawyers and those who are employed in the legal field are, hopefully, taught how to focus on the law and the facts and then to analyze what is there rather than decide what they think should happen first and then make up a bunch of stuff to back it up. This ability to analyze separates critical thinkers from those who can be influenced by an angry speech, sentiments based on pity or outright trickery. We need more of you critical thinkers, Greg! So pay attention!
Never say, “I think” or “I feel” – your job is like a reporter’s, it is to figure out what the law states and keep your own feelings out of it. Just report back what you have found (your analysis) as objectively as you can.
As an example, let’s say the test question involves these facts: a plaintiff consulted a doctor about extreme headaches he was suddenly experiencing.