Library/PT 110/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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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

Find the sentences that describe Snell's view (paralysis, dissolution of prior notions, reexamination of motives, two grave alternatives, tortured internal debate, decision described as free/personal). The correct EXCEPT is the choice not supported by those lines (i.e., anything about restoring harmony with the gods).

Passage Stimulus

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13.

All of the following statements describe Snell's view of Aeschylus' tragic protagonists, as it is presented in the passage, EXCEPT:

Correct Answer
B
B is correct because Snell's account emphasizes protagonists' autonomous, personal decision-making reached after internal struggle and makes no claim that those decisions restore harmony with supernatural forces. Support in the passage: the protagonists "invariably confront a situation that paralyzes them, so that their prior notions about how to behave or think are dissolved," they "are given only two alternatives, each with grave consequences, and they make their decision only after a tortured internal debate," and Snell describes the decision as free and personal and as central to Aeschylean drama. Nowhere in Snell's description is it asserted that the protagonists' final choices serve to restore harmony with the gods.
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