- Mon Oct 08, 2012 12:54 pm
#6035
(A) is wrong for a slightly different reason. The author states that medical coursework risks disconnecting students from the personal and ethical aspects of doctoring, not from giving adequate emphasis to courses in medical ethics. The author never argued that students are somehow ignoring the training in ethics they receive in medical school; the point is that such training is inadequate, because it relies heavily on traditional philosophical ethics. This proves (E) to be correct: neither scientific training, nor traditional philosophical ethics, can adequately prepare doctors to deal with the emotional dimension of patients' needs - hence the need for narrative literature, which is uniquely suited to the development of flexible ethical thinking (lines 32 - 34).
Nikki Siclunov
PowerScore Test Preparation