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
Spot the conditional: antecedent = the sacrifice will loose/bring winds to move the ships to battle; consequent = it is permissible to desire the sacrifice. Identify what 'it' refers to and choose the option that preserves both the condition and the object of desire.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage8.Which one of the following paraphrases most accurately restates the quotation from Agamemnon found in the middle of the last paragraph?
Correct Answer
C
The passage explains that 'A message from the deity Artemis has told him that only the sacrifice will bring a wind to blow his ships to an important battle' and then quotes Agamemnon: 'If this sacrifice will loose the winds, it is permitted to desire it fervently.' The quoted conditional links the sacrifice's effect (bringing the winds to move the ships to battle) to the permissibility of fervently desiring the sacrifice itself. Option C accurately restates this: if the sacrifice is the way to get the wind to move the ships to battle, then it is appropriate to deeply desire the sacrifice.
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