Library/PT 118/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

The Hippocratic oath has long been medicine’s basic moral rule—do good for patients, avoid harm, and keep confidences. Critics now say it’s old-fashioned, too rigid, and ignores modern issues, patient rights, and how healthcare is organized today. The author replies that who originally wrote the oath doesn’t matter because each generation can judge and update it; its central idea of putting patients’ welfare first should stay, while less important parts can be revised or reinterpreted (for example, the old ban on 'cutting for the stone' is now read as a rule to only perform procedures within one’s skill).

Logic Breakdown

Ask what the author’s overall aim is across both paragraphs: identify whether the passage primarily defends, attacks, or proposes changes to the Hippocratic oath.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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10.

The author's primary purpose in the passage is to

Correct Answer
A
The author’s main aim is to affirm the continuing need for a code that embodies core medical principles while allowing limited updates. Support: the passage calls the oath "the immutable bedrock of medical ethics"; it insists that critics cannot negate "the patients' need for assurance that physicians will pursue appropriate goals in treatment in accordance with generally acceptable standards of professionalism." The author then states that "the core value of beneficence... should be retained, with adaptations at the oath's periphery by some combination of revision, supplementation, and modern interpretation." These statements show the author defends retaining the oath's essential moral principles (beneficence) while permitting peripheral adaptation, which matches choice A.
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