填空题
[A] Human history contains great stories that can help us appreciate more
about past life.
[B] The great achievement can provide motivation for
learners.
[C] Making us more human, more than anything else, is the purpose
of studying history.
[D] Learning history can lead a more colorful
life.
[E] History can tell us when we should give up.
[F] History can
teach us a lesson from its mistakes.
The speaker alleges
that studying history is valuable only insofar as it is relevant to our daily
lives. I find this allegation to be specious. It wrongly suggests that history
is not otherwise instructive and that its relevance to our everyday lives is
limited. To the contrary, studying history provides inspiration, innumerable
lessons for living, and useful valueclarification and perspective—all of which
help us decide how to live our lives.
41.______
To begin with, learning about great human achievements of the past
provides inspiration. For example, a student inspired by the courage and
tenacity of history's great explorers might decide as a result to pursue a
career in archeology, oceanography, or astronomy. This decision can, in turn,
profoundly affect that student's everyday life—in school and beyond. Even for
students not inclined to pursue these sorts of careers, studying historical
examples of courage in the face of adversity can provide motivation to face
their own personal fears in life. In short, learning about grand accomplishments
of the past can help us get through the everyday business of living, whatever
that business might be, by emboldening us and lifting our spirits.
42.______
In addition, mistakes of the past can teach us
as a society how to avoid repeating those mistakes. For example, history can
teach us the inappropriateness of addressing certain social issues, particularly
moral ones, on a societal level. Attempts to legislate morality invariably fail,
as aptly illustrated by the Prohibition experiment in the U.S. during the 1930s.
Hopefully, as a society we can apply this lesson by adopting a more enlightened
legislative approach toward such issues as free speech, criminalization of drug
use, criminal justice, and equal rights under the law.
43.______
Studying human history can also help us
understand and appreciate the mores, values, and ideals of past cultures. A
heightened awareness of cultural evolution, in turn, helps us formulate informed
and reflective values and ideals for ourselves. Based on these values and
ideals, students can determine their authentic life path as well as how they
should allot their time and interact with others on a day-to-day
basis.
44.______
Finally, it might be tempting
to imply from the speaker's allegation that studying history has little
relevance even for the mundane chores that occupy so much of our time each day,
and therefore is of little value. However, from history we learn not to take
everyday activities and things for granted. By understanding the history
of money and banking we can transform an otherwise routine trip to the bank into
an enlightened experience, or a visit to the grocery store into an homage to the
many inventors, scientists, engineers, and entrepreneurs of the past who have
made such convenience possible today. And, we can fully appreciate our freedom
to go about our daffy lives largely as we choose only by understanding our
political heritage. In short, appreciating history can serve to elevate our
everyday chores to richer, more interesting, and more enjoyable
experiences.
45.______
In sum, the speaker fails
to recognize that in all our activities and decisions--from our grandest to our
most rote--history can inspire, inform, guide, and nurture. In the final
analysis, to study history is to gain the capacity to be more human--and I would
be hard- pressed to imagine a worthier end.