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
Determine the passage's overall aim by reading the opening sentence and noting that each paragraph summarizes a different scholar's position on autonomy versus divine power.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage14.The primary purpose of the passage is to
Correct Answer
C
The passage's primary purpose is to present aspects of an ongoing scholarly debate. The opening sentence states this explicitly: 'Tragic dramas written in Greece during the fifth century B.C. engender considerable scholarly debate over the relative influence of individual autonomy and the power of the gods on the drama's action.' The body of the passage summarizes multiple opposing positions: 'One early scholar, B. Snell, argues that Aeschylus, for example, develops in his tragedies a concept of the autonomy of the individual.' 'To A. Rivier, Snell's emphasis on the decision made by the protagonist, with its implicit notions of autonomy and responsibility, misrepresents the role of the superhuman forces at work.' And 'A. Lesky, in his discussion of Aeschylus' play Agamemnon, disputes both views.' These lines and the passage structure show the author is reporting and comparing different scholarly interpretations rather than advocating a single view.
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