Ten Steps Impr4
Ten Steps Impr4
Ten Steps Impr4
All people are concerned about a few great questions: the existence of God, the purpose
of life, the existence of an afterlife, and morality. About the first, science has nothing to say:
no test tube has either proved or disproved Gods existence. As to the purpose of life,
although science can provide a definition of life and describe the characteristics of living
organisms, it has nothing to say about ultimate purpose. Regarding an afterlife, science can
offer no information, for it has no tests that it can use to detect a hereafter. As for the
question of morality, science can demonstrate the consequences of behavior but not the
moral superiority of one action compared with another. Science cannot even prove that loving
your family and neighbor is superior to hurting and killing them.
In the paragraph, all the details are about science and great
human concerns, so that must be the topic.
What is the main point the author is trying to make about that topic?
Science alone cannot tell us about the four main concerns that all
people have.
Does all or most of the material in the paragraph support this
main idea?
Yes. Every sentence is about the great questions people are
concerned about and the lack of information science provides
about them.
Chapter Review
In this chapter, you learned the following:
At times authors imply, or suggest, a main idea
without stating it clearly in one sentence. In such
cases, you must figure out that main idea by
considering the supporting details.
To find implied central points in longer reading
selections, you must again look closely at the
supporting material.
The next two chaptersChapters 5 and 6will explain
common ways that authors organize their material.