Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Medical students often focus so much on science that they can lose touch with patients' feelings, so they need ways to stay caring and make better moral choices. Traditional ethics classes are too abstract to show how people really act in everyday situations. Reading stories helps because it puts students in other people's shoes, teaches them to see different points of view, and trains them to think flexibly about right and wrong. This doesn't mean abandoning moral rules; stories give a deeper sense of human nature that helps doctors apply ethical principles more wisely.
Logic Breakdown
This is an EXCEPT question — identify claims the passage explicitly makes about narrative literature (eliminate choices supported by the text) and select the option not stated or implied.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage25.The passage ascribes each of the following characteristics to the use of narrative literature in ethical education EXCEPT:
Correct Answer
E
E is correct because the passage never claims that narrative literature 'insulates' future doctors from the shock of ethical dilemmas. Instead the passage emphasizes engagement and preparation: 'Ethics courses drawing on narrative literature can better help students prepare for ethical dilemmas precisely because such literature attaches its readers so forcefully to the concrete and varied world of human events.' It also describes active engagement with conflict: 'Giving oneself over to the ethical conflicts in a story requires the abandonment of strictly absolute, inviolate sets of moral principles.' Those statements imply immersion and confronting dilemmas, not being insulated from their shock.
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