单选题
{{B}}Passage 1{{/B}}
Man's puzzlement and preoccupation with time both derive ultimately from his unique relationship to it. All animals exist in time and are changed by it; only man can control it.
Like Proust, the French author whose experiences became his literary capital, man can recapture the past. He can also summon up things to come, displaying imagination and foresight alone with memory. It really can be argued, that memory and foresightedness are the essence of intelligence: that man's ability to manipulate time, to employ both past and future as guides to present action, is what makes him human.
To be sure, many animals can react to time after a fashion A rat can learn to press a lever that will, after a delay of some 25 seconds, reward it with a bit of food. But if the delay stretches beyond 30 seconds, the animal is stumped. It can no longer associate the reward so "far" in the future with the present lever-pressing.
Monkeys, more smart than rats, are better able to deal with time. If one of them is allowed to see food being hidden under one of two cups, it can pick out the right cup even after 90 seconds have passed. But after that time interval, the monkey's hunt for the food is no Better than chance predicts.
With the apes, man's nearest cousins, "time sense" takes a big step forward. Even under laboratory conditions, quite different from those they encounter in the wild, apes somemnes show remarkable ability to manipulate the present to obtain a future goal. A chimpanzee, for example, can learn to stack two boxes, one on the other, as a platform from which it can reach a hanging banana. Chimpanzees, indeed, carry their ability to deal with the future to the threshold of human capacity: they can make tools. And it is by the making of tools— physical tools as crude as a stone chopper, mental tools as subtle as a mathematical equation—that man characteristically prepares for future {{U}}contingencies{{/U}}.
Chimpanzees in the wild have been seen to strip a twig of its leaves to make a probe for extracting termites from their hole. Significantly, however, the ape does not make his tool before setting out on a termite hunt, but only when it actually sees the insects or their nest. Here, as with the banana and the crates, the ape can cope only with a future that is immediate and visible — and thus halfway into the present
单选题 According to the article, which of the following statements ts TRUE?
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】细节题。本题为细节比对题。[A]与第一段后一句的意思及第五段描述的内容不符,[B]与第五段第一句的意思不符,该句只是说大猩猩是人类的近亲,并没有说人类由它们进化而来;[C]与第二段最后一句的意思相符;[D]根据常识即可判定为错误。
单选题 From the sentence "Like Proust. the French author whose experiences became his literary capital, man can recapture the past', you can tell that Proust ______.
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】句意推测题。由该句中的whose experiences became his literary capital(他的经历成了他文学作品的主题)即可推知这一句中的recapture the past(重新抓住过去)指的就是他的作品主要描写他过去的经历,因此答案为[D]。
单选题 It is significant that chimpanzees make tools, but it is more important that ______.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】细节题。答案的依据在于最后一段第二句:Significantly...or their nest,即是说大猩猩不会提前准备好工具,因此选[A]。
单选题 The word "contingencies" in the fifth paragraph means ______.
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】词义推测题。由该词前的动词prepare(准备)、修饰语future(未来)及最后一段的意思可知应选[D]。contingency指“(可能发生的)意外事件,可能性”。
单选题 This article is about ______.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】主旨题。文章首先提出人类可以掌握和控制时间,然后分别用人和动物的例子进行了分析,说明掌握时间是人类智力发展、区别于其他动物的一个重要特征,因此[B]是对的。