Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Scholars argue whether Greek tragedies show characters acting freely or being driven by gods. Snell says Aeschylus’s heroes make painful, personal choices after inner debate; Rivier says the gods actually determine the outcome and the heroes only recognize what is inevitable; Lesky says both are true—Agamemnon is constrained by a god but also follows his own violent desire, so the plays show a struggle between human will and divine power.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: Determine whether Barbu treats Aeschylean drama as evidence of a social change (i.e., reflecting how Greeks perceived autonomy) or as the originator/introducer of that change. Relevant passage sentences: "According to Snell, this decision is \"free\" and \"personal\" and such personal autonomy constitutes the central theme in Aeschylean drama... Drawing psychological conclusions from this interpretation, another scholar, Z. Barbu, suggests that \"[Aeschylean] drama is proof of the emergence within ancient Greek civilization of the individual as a free agent.\""
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage12.The quotation at the end of the first paragraph suggests that Barbu assumes which one of the following about Aeschylean drama?
Correct Answer
D
Barbu's statement that "[Aeschylean] drama is proof of the emergence within ancient Greek civilization of the individual as a free agent" treats the plays as evidence that Greek society had begun to view individuals as autonomous. That implies he assumes the dramas accurately reflect how personal autonomy was perceived in ancient Greek society, which is exactly what D says.
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