Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT1 S1 P4 Q28 Explanation

Professionals

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsLocal PurposeSociety

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Passage

Outside the medical profession, there are various efforts to cut medicine down to size: not only widespread malpractice litigation and massive governmental regulation, but also attempts by consumer groups and others to redefine medicine as a trade rather than as a profession, and the physician as merely a technician for hire under insufficient; publicly declaring devotion to plumbing or auto repair would not turn these trades into professions.

Some believe that learning and knowledge are the diagnostic signs of a profession. For reasons probably linked to the medieval university, the term “profession” has been applied to the so-called learned professions—medicine, law, and theology—the practices of which are founded upon inquiry and knowledge rather than mere “know-how.” Yet it is not of the learned variety, but its professional quality is rooted in something else.

Some mistakenly seek to locate that something else in the prestige and honor accorded professionals by society, evidenced in their special titles and the special deference and privileges they receive. But externalities do not constitute medicine a profession. Physicians are not professionals because they are honored; rather, they are honored because of and in that which warrants and impels making a public confession to a way of life.

Professing oneself a professional is an ethical act because it is not a silent and private act, but an articulated and public one; because it promises continuing devotion to a way of life, not merely announces a present preference or a way to a livelihood; because it is an activity in service profession engages one’s character and heart, not merely one’s mind and hands.

What this question is testing

Local Purpose

Your task

Identify why the author included the referenced detail at that point in the passage — its function, not its content.

Common trap

Answers that merely repeat or summarize the topic of the detail instead of describing the role it plays.

Winning move

Ask what job the detail does for the paragraph, then for the passage's broader point.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
28.

Which one of the following best describes the author’s purpose in the highlighted section

Answer choices

  1. Trap8% picked this

    The author locates the “something else” that truly constitutes

  2. Trap6% picked this

    The author dismisses efforts to redefine the meaning of the

  3. Correct63% picked this

    The author considers, and largely criticizes, several definitions of what constitutes

    Why this is right

    Answer C is correct.

    Skill tested: Local Purpose · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  4. Trap20% picked this

    The author clarifies the meaning of the term “profession” by advocating a return to its

  5. Trap4% picked this

    The author distinguishes trades such as plumbing and auto repair from professions such as medicine,

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