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
Focus on explicit statements about official records and the fragmentary nature of the evidence. Key supporting lines: "Surviving sources of information about women doctors in ancient Greece and Rome are fragmentary..." and that Francesca de Romana's 1321 licensure is "the earliest known officially recorded occurrence of this sort."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage20.The passage most strongly supports which one of the following inferences about women in ancient Greece and Rome?
Correct Answer
C
The passage repeatedly emphasizes the lack of formal records and the fragmentary evidence: "Surviving sources of information about women doctors in ancient Greece and Rome are fragmentary" and "There is no list of women doctors in antiquity, no direct comment on the fact that there were such people." It then states that even "in 1321 with Francesca de Romana's licensure to practice general medicine" this is "the earliest known officially recorded occurrence of this sort." Those statements together most strongly support the inference that there is no known official record that any ancient women were licensed to practice general medicine.
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