- Wed Aug 19, 2020 6:58 pm
#78232
Hi bella,
The problem with answer choice D is that the author doesn't actually advocate a return to the historic and linguistic roots of the meaning of "profession." The historic and linguistic roots of the word are mentioned in lines 16-20: "the word "profession" itself traces to an act of self-conscious and public—even confessional—speech. "To profess" preserves the meaning of its Latin source, "to declare publicly; to announce, affirm, avow."" But the author rejects this meaning, saying, "announcement seems insufficient; publicly declaring devotion to plumbing or auto repair would not turn these trades into professions." So rather than advocate for a return to the linguistic roots of profession as being something one "professes" (in speech), the author rejects such a turn.
Answer choice E is too narrow, since the author only refers to plumbing and auto repair in line 24. Answer choice E is also not accurate, because the author doesn't explicitly distinguish them from medicine, law, and theology. Medicine, law, and theology are only mentioned in the next paragraph, where they aren't explicitly being discussed because they are different from plumbing or auto-repair. Rather they're mentioned because they are "learned professions," and the author never explicitly says plumbing and auto repair aren't "learned professions."
Answer choice C is a great answer, because in lines 18-42, the author considers three meanings of "profession," the speech meaning in lines 18-22, the "learned" meaning in lines 26-30, and the "prestige/honor" meaning in lines 38-40. As answer choice C says, each is criticized by the author: the first in lines 22-25, the second in lines 33-37, the third in lines 41-42.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
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