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Directions: There is a sentence that is missing in the paragraph below. Look at the paragraph and decide in which blank (option 1, 2, 3, or 4) the following sentence would best fit.  Sentence: It is a striking feature, however, of most societies that they deny people the choice to die at the very point when they most rationally desire it.Paragraph: The harsh reality is that most of us will find that death comes - in Williams’s phrase - either ‘too early or too late’. _____ (1) _____.  Too early, if we are not yet ready to go. _____ (2) _____. Too late, if we’ve gotten to the point where life is already not worth living anymore. _____ (3) _____. Indeed, we hardly need philosophers to convince us that, for many people, there are fates worse than death: assisted dying clinics in countries such as Switzerland demonstrate that many people will choose to die rather than carry on in gross physical pain or continued indignity, especially when there is no prospect of recovery. ______ (4) _____. Immortality is, obviously enough, an impossible fantasy - hence it cannot be a genuine solution to the unfortunate yet elemental facts of the human condition, nor an answer to the fraught complexities surrounding euthanasia as regards both social policy and moral judgment.

Question

Directions: There is a sentence that is missing in the paragraph below. Look at the paragraph and decide in which blank (option 1, 2, 3, or 4) the following sentence would best fit.  Sentence: It is a striking feature, however, of most societies that they deny people the choice to die at the very point when they most rationally desire it.Paragraph: The harsh reality is that most of us will find that death comes - in Williams’s phrase - either ‘too early or too late’. _____ (1) _____.  Too early, if we are not yet ready to go. _____ (2) _____. Too late, if we’ve gotten to the point where life is already not worth living anymore. _____ (3) _____. Indeed, we hardly need philosophers to convince us that, for many people, there are fates worse than death: assisted dying clinics in countries such as Switzerland demonstrate that many people will choose to die rather than carry on in gross physical pain or continued indignity, especially when there is no prospect of recovery. ______ (4) _____. Immortality is, obviously enough, an impossible fantasy - hence it cannot be a genuine solution to the unfortunate yet elemental facts of the human condition, nor an answer to the fraught complexities surrounding euthanasia as regards both social policy and moral judgment.

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Solution

The sentence "It is a striking feature, however, of most societies that they deny people the choice to die at the very point when they most rationally desire it." fits best in the blank (3). The sentence provides a transition between the discussion of personal experiences and feelings about death and the societal and philosophical considerations of euthanasia. It also directly relates to the following sentence about the existence of assisted dying clinics, making it a logical bridge between these two ideas.

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