- Wed Aug 19, 2020 6:44 pm
#78231
Hi bella,
The reason answer choice D is the best answer here is that the primary question the author spends the passage answering is why we should continue to think of physicians as professionals, rather than as members of a trade (as consumer groups and others are trying to view them, from the first sentence of the passage).
That question is posed in the first paragraph: "Why should physicians (or indeed all sensible people) resist such efforts to give the practice of medicine a new meaning?" The author then spends the rest of the passage talking about why we should stick to the old meaning attached to the practice of medicine, i.e. why it should be viewed as a "profession." Ultimately, as the author concludes the passage, "[a] profession engages one's character and heart, not merely one's mind and hands." So since medicine is a discipline engaging the character and heart, it is appropriately thought of as a profession.
What answer choice E is missing is any reference to the nature of medicine as a profession, which is the main theme of the passage that the author spends significant space discussing in every paragraph. An additional minor problem with answer choice E is that it is not physicians who the author is worried about having departed from this ethical view. Rather, the author is concerned with those outside the medical field who are trying to put it in a smaller (inappropriate) box. You can see this in the first paragraph, where the author says that physicians need to "resist" this outside view (not necessarily "reorient" themselves).
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant