Surviving sources of information about women doctors in ancient Greece and Rome are fragmentary: some passing mentions by classical authors, scattered references in medical works, and about 40 inscriptions on tombs and monuments. ███
Intro to Topic ·Not a lot of evidence about ancient female doctors
Premise ·Scant written evidence indicatives that presence of women doctors were taken for granted
Author seems to be claiming that if it was such an odd thing for women to be doctors that surely there would have been more written about this. But that there wasn't is taken to be evidence that women doctors were nothing special.
Example ·Plato's The Republic refers to women doctors
He's was not arguing that women ought to be doctors. From his argument, we can infer that he and his society simply took it for granted that women already were doctors.
Premise ·Medical texts cited female doctors without special comment
Author takes this to be evidence that the presence of women doctors were taken for granted, that it wasn't special.
Passage Style
Single position
16.
The primary function of the █████ █████████ ██ ███ ███████ ██ ██
Question Type
Purpose of paragraph
Structure
The purpose of P3 is to further the argument that there were women doctors in the ancient world. P3 clarifies that women doctors had “a broad scope of practice;” they weren’t only midwives.
a
provide additional support ███ ███ ████████ █████████ ██ ███ █████ █████████
The argument presented in P1 is that there were women doctors in the ancient world. P3 provides additional support for this argument by showing that women really were doctors; they weren’t only midwives.
b
suggest that the ████████████ ██ ███ ████████ █████████ ██ ███ █████ █████████ ███ █████████████ █████
The argument presented in P1 is that there were women doctors in the ancient world. P3 doesn’t suggest that the implications of this argument are too broad. Instead, it clarifies that women doctors had “a broad scope of practice;” they weren’t only midwives. In other words P3 tries to broaden the implications of the argument in P1.
The conclusion defended in P2 is that women doctors were an unremarkable part of ancient life. P3 doesn’t mention any exceptions to this. Instead, P3 furthers the argument made in P1.
P1 and P2 argue that there were women doctors in the ancient world and they were an unremarkable part of ancient life. P3 does not address the “historical importance” of these arguments. It just provides more support for the argument in P1.
P3 describes some evidence— important texts and inscriptions, an epitaph, and a tribute. But these are not cited in P1 and P2. Instead, they’re cited in P3 to provide support for the argument that there were women doctors in the ancient world.
Difficulty
87% of people who answer get this correct
This is a slightly challenging question.
It is significantly easier than other questions in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%130
141
75%153
Analysis
Purpose of paragraph
Structure
Humanities
Single position
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
87%
164
b
1%
156
c
3%
156
d
5%
157
e
5%
157
Question history
You don't have any history with this question.. yet!
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