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

Locate where the author evaluates critics and states what should be retained or dismissed; determine whether the response is hostile, neutral, or a measured rebuttal.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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13.

Which one of the following can most accurately be used to describe the author's attitude toward critics of the Hippocratic oath?

Correct Answer
C
The author disagrees with critics but does so in a measured, reasoned way. For example: "This historical issue may be dismissed at the outset as irrelevant to the oath's current appropriateness." The author continues with a substantive rebuttal: "More importantly, even the more substantive, morally based arguments concerning contemporary values and newly relevant issues cannot negate the patients' need for assurance..." and offers a balanced prescription: "To fulfill that need, 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 passages show the author offering logical counterarguments and proposing modifications rather than endorsing the critics or reacting with sarcasm, which fits "reasoned disagreement."
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