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Instructions

Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow.

In an epoch intoxicated by its own technological omnipotence, humanity has transformed health into a quantifiable pursuit - fitness metrics, calorie counters, heart-rate monitors, and serotonin graphs. The ancient art of healing has been supplanted by the commerce of treatment; hospitals resemble corporations, and the physician, once a custodian of empathy, now negotiates uneasily between profit and protocol. Longevity has become the new paradigm. In chasing endless life, we seem to have forgotten how to live.

Dr. Ira Sen, an eminent neuroscientist renowned for her pioneering work on cognitive architecture, abandoned her illustrious career after discerning a paradox science could not address — that despair has no neural coordinates and health and wellness cannot be manufactured through chemistry or machine learning. She withdrew to a secluded Himalayan valley where medicine was whispered through silence, ritual, and communion with the natural world. There she discovered that recovery was not an act of conquest but of reconciliation — a restoration of resonance between the self and its environment.

Years later, as societies convulsed under an epidemic of psychic exhaustion — a collective weariness untouched by pharmacology — governments began legislating tranquility, prescribing mindfulness as if serenity could be decreed by law. The irony was tragic: compassion turned into a compliance form, and empathy became a performance metric on corporate dashboards.

In her final treatise, The Anatomy of Wholeness, Dr. Sen argued that civilization’s deepest pathology was ideological — the delusion that health could exist apart from harmony. Her words, dismissed once as metaphysical indulgence, later ignited a quiet revolution in medical ethics.

Question 4

Which of the following best captures the central theme of the passage?

The pursuit of material well-being has not been balanced with ethical values in modern healthcare, as quantifying emotions is not helpful in improving a person's emotional well-being. Thus, option B is not correct.

The mechanisation of medicine has led to increased longevity, but not empathetic healthcare, since emotions like compassion and empathy have been reduced to metrics in dashboards. Thus, option C is not correct.

The rise of technology has revolutionised the field of medicine and improved emotional well-being is incorrect too, since the passage does not mention any positive correlation between the rise of technology and the emotional well-being of people.

A balance between health and harmony is essential to a person's well-being. The obsession with scientific control has alienated humanity from the true essence of healing, which is consistent with the passage and is therefore the correct option.

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