问答题
{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Read the following text carefully and then translate the
underlined segments into Chinese. Write your pieces of Chinese version in the
proper space on your Answer Sheet Ⅱ.
It is astonishing how little is known about the working of the
mind. But however little or much is known, it is fairly clear that the model of
the logic-machine is not only wrong but mischievous. There are people who
profess to believe that man can live by logic alone. If only they say, men
developed their reason, looked at all situations and dilemmas logically, and
proceeded to devise rational solutions, all human problems would be solved. Be
reasonable. Think logically. Act rationally. This line of thought is very
persuasive, not to say seductive. 1) {{U}}It is astonishing, however, how
frequently the people most fanatically devoted to logic and reason, to a cold
review of the "facts" and a calculated construction of the truth, turn out not
only to be terribly emotional in argumentation, but obstinate before any "truth"
is "proved"{{/U}} -- deeply committed to emotional positions that prove
rock-resistible to the most massive accumulation of unsympathetic facts and
proofs.
2) {{U}}If man's mind cannot be turned into a
logic-machine, neither can it function properly as a great emotional sponge, to
be squeezed at will.{{/U}} All of us have known people who gush as a general
response to life - who gush in seeing a sunset, who gush in reading a book, who
gush in meeting a friend. They may seem to live by emotion alone, but their
constant gushing is a disguise for absence of genuine feeling, a torrent rushing
to fill a vacuum. It is not uncommon to find beneath the gush a cold, analytic
mind that is astonishing in its meticulousness and ruthless in its
calculation.
Somewhere between machine and sponge lies the
reality of the mind - a blend of reason and emotion, of actuality and
imagination, of fact and feeling. 3) {{U}}The entanglement is so complete, the
mixture so thoroughly mixed, that it is probably impossible to achieve pure
reason or pure emotion, at least for any sustained period of time.{{/U}}
4) {{U}}It is probably best to assume that all our reasoning is fused with
our emotional commitments and beliefs, all our thoughts colored by feelings that
lie deep within our psyches.{{/U}} Moreover, it is probably best to assume that
this stream of emotion is not a poison, not even a taint, but is a positive
life-source, a stream of psychic energy that animates and vitalizes our entire
thought process. 5) {{U}}The roots of reason are embedded in feelings - feelings
that have formed and accumulated and developed over a lifetime of
personality-shaping.{{/U}} These feelings are not for occasional using but are
inescapable. To know what we think, we must know how we feel. It is feeling that
shapes belief and forms opinion. It is feeling that directs the strategy of
argument. It is our feelings, then, with which we must come to honorable
terms.