Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT122 S3 P3 Q19 Explanation

Women Doctors

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

TopicsLocal PurposeSociety

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Passage

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. Yet even from these fragments we can piece together a picture. The evidence shows that in ancient Greece and de Romana’s licensure to practice general medicine, the earliest known officially recorded occurrence of this sort.

The very nature of the scant evidence tells us something. There is no list of women doctors in antiquity, no direct comment on the fact that there were such people. Instead, the scattering of references to them indicates that, although their numbers were probably small, women doctors were an unremarkable part of pointing to something that everyone could already see—that there were female doctors as well as male.

Moreover, despite evidence that some of these women doctors treated mainly female patients, 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. Other references provide evidence of a broad scope to another describes her as “savior of all through her knowledge of medicine.”

Also pointing to a wider medical practice are the references in various classical medical works to a great number of women’s writings on medical subjects. Here, too, the very nature of the evidence tells us something, for Galen, Pliny the elder, and other ancient writers of encyclopedic medical works quote the opinions simply give excerpts from the female authority’s writing without biographical information or special comment.

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
19.

The tribute quoted at the end of the third paragraph is offered primarily as evidence that at least some women doctors

Answer choices

  1. Trap5% picked this

    acknowledged as authorities by other

  2. Trap3% picked this

    highly

  3. Trap15% picked this

    very effective at treating

  4. Correct72% picked this

    engaged in general medical

    Why this is right

    Answer D is correct.

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

  5. Trap6% picked this

    praised as highly as male

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