复合题

Traditionally, the study of history has had fixed boundaries and focal points—periods, countries, dramatic events, and great leaders. It also has had clear and firm notions of scholarly procedure: how one inquires into a historical problem, how one presents and documents one’ s findings, what constitutes admissible and adequate proof.

Anyone who has followed recent historical literature can testify to the revolution that is taking place in historical studies. The currently fashionable subjects come directly from the sociology catalog: childhood, work, leisure. The new subjects are accompanied by new methods. Where history once was primarily narrative, it is now entirely analytic. The old questions “What happened?’ ’ and “How did it happen?” have given way to the question “Why did it happen?” Prominent among the methods used to answer the question "Why" is psychoanalysis, and its use has given rise to psychohistory.

Psychohistory does not merely use psychological explanations in historical contexts. Historians have always used such explanations when they were appropriate and when there was sufficient evidence for them. But this pragmatic use of psychology is not what psychohistorians intend. They are committed, not just to psychology in general, but to Freudian psychoanalysis. This commitment precludes a commitment to history as historians have always understood it. Psychohistory derives its “facts” not from history, the detailed records of events and their consequences, but from psychoanalysis of the individuals who made history, and deduces its theories not from this or that instance in their lives, but from a view of human nature that transcends history. It denies the basic criterion of historical evidence: that evidence be publicly accessible to, and therefore assessable by, all historians. And it violates the basic tenet of historical method: that historian be alert to the negative instances that would refute their theses. Psychohistorians, convinced of the absolute rightness of their own theories, are also convinced that theirs is the “deepest” explanation of any event, that other explanations fall short of the truth.

Psychohistory is not content to violate the discipline of history (in the sense of the proper mode of studying and writing about the past) ; it also violates the past itself. It denies to the past an integrity and will of its own, in which people acted out of a variety of motives and in which events had a multiplicity of causes and effects. It imposes upon the past the same determinism that it imposes upon the present, thus robbing people and events of their individuality and of their complexity. Instead of respecting the particularity of the past, it assimilates all events, past and present, into a single deterministic schema that is presumed to be true at all times and in all circumstances.

问答题 According to this passage, how does psychohistory differ from traditional history in treating past events?
【正确答案】Psychohistory usually denies to the past an integrity and will of its own, rids people and events of their individuality and complexity and doesn’ t respect the particularity.
【答案解析】根据题意定位至文章第四段。 该段提到心理历史学对待过去的方式。 心理历史学不把过去看作一个整体和自己的意志, 去除了人们和事件的独立性和复杂性, 同时不考虑过去的特点。 
问答题 What does the author of the passage probably intend to convey by putting the word "deepest” (in Paragraph 3) in quotation marks?
【正确答案】The author may intend to signal her reservations about the accuracy of psychohistorians’ claims for their work.
【答案解析】文章第三段提到心理历史学家们相信他们自己的理论的绝对正确性, 他们认为自己的解释最为“深刻” , 其他的解释缺乏真实性。由此可见这只是心理历史学家们自己的观点, 而其解释是否真的深刻还有待证明。 因此该处使用引号表示作者的不确定性。