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
Ask what role paragraph 3 plays relative to the earlier paragraphs: does it add evidence, qualify a claim, or summarize sources? Scan for sentences that give concrete examples or explicit statements about scope of practice (e.g., 'not limited to midwifery' and the epitaphs).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.The primary function of the third paragraph of the passage is to
Correct Answer
A
Paragraph 3 provides additional evidentiary support for the passage's claim that women in antiquity served as medical practitioners and that their practice extended beyond midwifery. Support from the passage: 'their practice was clearly not limited to midwifery.' 'Both Greek and Latin have distinct terms for midwife and doctor, and important texts and inscriptions refer to female practitioners as the latter.' Concrete examples: the epitaph 'You delivered your homeland from disease.' and the tribute calling one 'savior of all through her knowledge of medicine.' These sentences function as further evidence backing the argument made in paragraph 1.
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