Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Although the surviving evidence is small—some passing mentions, medical texts, and about 40 inscriptions—it shows that women in ancient Greece and Rome did work as actual doctors, not just midwives. Writings (including Plato), tomb inscriptions, and medical authors who quote female practitioners alongside men show women treated various illnesses and were a recognized, if not numerous, part of ancient medical life long before modern times.
Logic Breakdown
Look for the author's central claim that ties together the examples: despite fragmentary surviving sources, the passage argues that women in ancient Greece and Rome served as medical practitioners and were an accepted (if not numerous) part of society.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage14.Which one of the following most accurately states the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
A
Choice A best captures the passage's main point. The author repeatedly emphasizes that, although the sources are fragmentary, they collectively show that female medical practitioners existed and were an unremarkable part of ancient life. Support from the passage: "The evidence shows that in ancient Greece and Rome there were, in fact, female medical personnel who were the ancient equivalent of what we now call medical doctors." And: "the scattering of references to them indicates that, although their numbers were probably small, women doctors were an unremarkable part of ancient life." The passage then cites examples (epitaphs such as "You delivered your homeland from disease" and medical writers who "quote the opinions and prescriptions of male and female doctors indiscriminately") to support that central claim.
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