Reading comp PrepTest 110 · Section 4 · Question 7
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Humanities
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- Scholars including Snell and Barbu argue that fifth century Greek tragedies by authors like Aeschylus allow protagonists to choose their own paths.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Fifth century Greek tragedies are the subject of a lot of scholarly debate (first sentence)
- Snell: Aeschylus’s dramas develop a model of individual autonomy (second sentence)
- Protagonist confronts paralyzing and fateful situation; examines their deepest motives, then acts according to own free will (third-fourth sentences)
- The central theme of the plays is personal autonomy (sixth sentence)
- Barbu: Aeschylean drama shows the emergence within Green civilization of individual free will (seventh sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “considerable scholarly debate” (first sentence); “deepest motives” (fourth sentence); “grave consequences” (fifth sentence); “tortured internal debate” (fifth sentence); “personal autonomy” (sixth sentence); “psychological conclusions” (seventh sentence)
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Rivier argues that the protagonists’ actions are dictated by the gods.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Rivier: divine forces are external to the protagonist and experienced as an internal compulsion to act in a certain way (second sentence)
- Protagonist has no free will; is aware of the impasse, and acts out of necessity along the only path that the gods have left open (third-fourth sentences)
- Protagonist merely “recognizes” there is only one course of action (fifth sentence)
- The fact that there is no room for free will is what makes the dramas truly tragic (first sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “misrepresents” (first sentence); “truly tragic dimension” (second sentence); “what are claimed to be” (second sentence); “necessity imposed by the deities” (third sentence); “necessity dictates a path” (fourth sentence)
- Rivier: divine forces are external to the protagonist and experienced as an internal compulsion to act in a certain way (second sentence)
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Lesky argues that, in Agamemnon, Agamemnon’s character chooses a path dictated by the gods because of his own desires.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Lesky: in Agamemnon, the title character is told that only the sacrifice of his daughter will bring a wind to blow his ships to battle (third sentence)
- Agamemnon knows goddess Artemis wants him to sacrifice his daughter (fourth sentence)
- He is also militarily ambitious and wants to win the battle (fifth sentence)
- He chooses to sacrifice his daughter because of his own desires, and happens to fall in with a course of action dictated by the gods (sixth sentence)
- Tragic action is a combination of human desire and supernatural forces (seventh sentence)
- Author’s Attitude: “disputes both views” (first sentence); “brutally sacrifice” (second sentence); “constrained” (fourth sentence); “deeply desires” (fifth sentence); “violence of his passion” (sixth sentence); “constant tension” (seventh sentence)
- Lesky: in Agamemnon, the title character is told that only the sacrifice of his daughter will bring a wind to blow his ships to battle (third sentence)
Main Point: There are many scholarly viewpoints about the extent to which the protagonists’ actions in fifth century Greek tragedy are influenced by free will on the one hand and divine necessity on the other.
Key Lines?Paragraph 1, Sentence 1 (P1 S1) - Introduces topic of passage
P1 S2 - Snell’s view
P1 S7 - Barbu’s view
P2 S4 - Rivier’s view
P3 S6 - Lesky’s view
Meta-Structure?Describing a Debate: This passage uses a Describing a Debate Meta-Structure. With respect to fifth-century Greek tragedy, including plays by Aeschylus, the passage highlights the differing views of four scholars on the topic of how much individual autonomy and divine necessity drive human action. Both Snell and Barbu believe that human free will is paramount, while Rivier believes that divine compulsion is the sole driving force behind the protagonists’ actions. Lesky’s view is somewhere in the middle, positing that it is tension between human and divine forces that drives tragic action in Aeschylus’s plays.
The minor Meta-Structure used in this passage is Comparison. The author is constantly comparing the views of these four scholars to each other. The author begins with Snell’s perspective, then defines each additional scholar’s views relative to the views of their colleagues that were described earlier.
The author’s viewpoint is entirely absent from this passage, so it is not possible to classify this passage as a “Resolving a Debate” passage.
Last Thoughts?The author of this passage works their way methodically and neutrally from one end of the continuum between human free will and divine necessity to the other, defining where each scholar falls on the spectrum. In some passages that describe a debate, it is possible to discern where the author falls in terms of their own viewpoint on the topic under discussion, but this passage is worded quite neutrally, so this kind of inference is not possible here. The focus in this passage is on how the views of the thinkers described relate to each other, rather than on how the author relates to the topic.
Question prompt
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: C
The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.
Question Type
Strategy Overview
Answer Anticipation
Answer choices
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AAgamemnon's motivations are identical Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A is not credited
(A) Does this answer choice express Lesky’s view of Agamemnon’s motivations and actions?
No. As Lesky says, Agamemnon is motivated by a desire for military victory (P3 S5), while the gods have chosen the path of the sacrifice of Agamemnon’s daughter “for their own reasons” (P3 S6). These two motivations are different, so this is the wrong answer choice.
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BThe nature of Agamemnon's Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
(B) Does this answer choice express Lesky’s view of Agamemnon’s motivations and actions?
No. Lesky makes clear that the gods chose the path of sacrifice “for their own reasons” (P3 S6); it happens that Agamemnon wants a military victory, and this necessitates his performance of the sacrifice (P3 S5-6). It is not merely Agamemnon’s character, but the gods’ desires, that dictate the action that he takes.
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CAgamemnon's decision–making is influenced Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C matches the stem
(C) Does this answer choice express Lesky’s view of Agamemnon’s motivations and actions?
Yes. Lesky says that “the violence” of Agamemnon’s “passion” indicates that he is acting in accordance with “desires that must be condemned by us, because they are his own” (P3 S6). This makes clear that Lesky thinks Agamemnon is acting to secure his military victory when he sacrifices his daughter.
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DAgamemnon is concerned only Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D is not credited
(D) Does this answer choice express Lesky’s view of Agamemnon’s motivations and actions?
No. As Lesky points out in P3 S5, Agamemnon “deeply desires a victorious battle.” He is not motivated solely by the desire to please Artemis, and it is primarily his desire to win the battle that results in his sacrificing his daughter to the gods (P3 S6).
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EAgamemnon is especially tragic Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E is not credited
(E) Does this answer choice express Lesky’s view of Agamemnon’s motivations and actions?
No. The author does not mention Agamemnon’s political position, nor do they mention that Lesky thinks this is significant to the character’s motivations or actions. This answer choice is a non sequitur.
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Discussion
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How does D tear the argument apart? 2 replies
Started by Tyler808