单选题
单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} There are 4 reading passages in this part. Each passage
is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there
are four choices marked A, B, C, and D. You should decide on the best choice and
mark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET by blackening the corresponding letter in
the brackets.{{B}}Passage 1{{/B}}
Despite their many differences of
temperament and of literary perspective, Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville,
and Whitman share certain beliefs. Common to all these writers is their
humanistic perspective. Its basic premises are that humans are the spiritual
center of the universe and that in them alone is the clue to nature, history,
and ultimately the cosmos itself. Without denying outright the existence either
of a deity or of brute matter, this perspective nevertheless rejects them as
exclusive principles of interpretation and prefers to explain humans and the
world in terms of humanity itself. This preference is expressed most clearly in
the transcendentalist principle that the structure of the universe literally
duplicates the structure of the individual self. Therefore, all knowledge begins
with self-knowledge. This common perspective is almost always
universalized. Its emphasis is not upon the individual as a particular European
or American, but upon the human as universal, freed from the accidents of times,
space, birth, and talent. Thus, for Emerson, the "American Scholar" turns out to
be simply "Man Thinking". While, for Whitman, the "Song of Myself" merges
imperceptibly into a song of all the "children of Adam" where "every atom
belonging to me as good belongs to you". Also common to all the
five writers is the belief that individual virtue and happiness depend upon
self-realization, which, in turn, depends upon the harmonious reconciliation of
two universal psychological tendencies. First, the self-asserting impulse of the
individual to withdraw, to remain unique and separate, and to be responsible
only to himself or herself. Second, the self-transcending impulse of the
individual to embrace the whole world in the experience of a single moment and
to know and become one with that world. These conflicting impulses can be seen
in the democratic ethic. Democracy advocates individualism, the
preservation of the individual's freedom and self-expression. But the democratic
self is torn between the duty to self, which is implied by the concept of
liberty, and the duty to society, which is implied by the concepts of equality
and fraternity. A third assumption common to the five writers is
that intuition and imagination offer a surer road to truth than does abstract
logic or scientific method. It is illustrated by their emphasis upon
introspection——their belief that the clue to external nature is to be found in
the inner world of individual psychology——and by their interpretation of
experience as, in essence, symbolic. Both these stresses presume an organic
relationship between the self and the cosmos of which only intuition and
imagination can properly take account. These writers' faith in the imagination
and in themselves as practitioners of imagination led them to conceive of the
writer as a seer and enabled them to achieve supreme confidence in their own
moral and metaphysical insights.
单选题From the living room and family auto to the supermarket and office, it"s impossible to escape the electronic revolution that is ______ the way people live and work.
单选题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 historians be alert to the negative instances that would refute their theses. Psychohistorians, convinced of the absolute lightness 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.
单选题With the awfully limited vocabulary to only a thousand words or fewer, the reader resembles a color blind artist who is only aware of a few colors and consequently his ability to create on canvas is
lamentably
restricted.
单选题Jack would rather his younger sister ______ in the same hospital as he does. A. worked B. works C. to work D. work
单选题The ______ has left for the Antarctic and it will come back in six months.
A. expedition B. execution C. exploration "D. delegation
单选题
单选题Those schools are so strapped for cash that Huckabee just slashed a planned teacher-salary increase from $3,000 to less than $600. A. shifted B. cut C. modified D. drafted
单选题There are a number of formats for reporting research, such as articles to appear in journals, reports addressed to funding agencies, theses or dissertations as part of the requirements for university degrees, and papers to be presented at conferences. These formats differ from one another mostly in their purposes and the audiences whom they address. We will now briefly describe them. The journal article is a way of reporting research for professional journals or edited collections. The research is reporting in a brief, yet informative way, focusing mostly on the main features of the research such as the purpose, review of the literature (often referred to as "background"), procedures used for carrying out the research accompanied by tables, charts, and graphs, and interpretations of the results (often referred to as discussion). The content and emphasis of the journal article will vary according to the intended readers (research or practitioners) and it is important for the researcher to be aware of the background and interest of the readers of the journal. Articles intended to be read by practitioners will emphasize the practical implications and recommendations of the research, while articles intended to be read by researchers will describe in detail the method used to collect data, the construction of data collection procedures, and the techniques used for analyzing the data. It is important for the novice researcher to be aware of the fact that articles submitted to journals go through a process of evaluation by experts who make a judgment and recommend whether they should be published or not. The thesis or dissertation is a format for reporting research which graduate students write as part of fulfilling the requirements for an advanced academic degree. The student is expected to describe in great detail all the phases of the research so it can be examined and evaluated carefully by the reader. Thus the thesis or dissertation includes the purpose and significance of the study, the rationale, a thorough review of the literature, detailed information as to the research tools and the procedures involved in their development, a description of data analysis and the results, and an interpretation of the results in the form of conclusions, implications, and recommendation. This detailed description of the process of the research is needed to provide the professors with an indication of the student's ability to carry out research. The conference paper is a way of reporting research at conferences, seminars and colloquia. At such meetings research papers are usually presented orally. They are similar to the research article since research is reported in a concise, yet informative way, focusing on the most essential elements of the research. Handouts and transparencies can also accompany the presentations. As with the research article, here too, the content and emphasis of the oral report will depend to a large extent on the type of audience present at the meeting, and whether they are researchers or practitioners.
单选题A Laser beam can be turned into a ______ weapon.
单选题Which of the following statements can be the best title for this passage?
单选题The______manuscripts are still able to tell a lot about the author who charmed the world with his works several hundred years ago.
单选题{{B}}Passage 4{{/B}}
The crucial years of the Depression, as
they are brought into historical focus, increasingly emerge as the decisive
decade for American art, if not for American culture in general. For it was
during this decade that many of the conflicts which had blocked the progress of
American art in the past came to a head and sometimes boiled over. Janus-faced,
the thirties look backward, sometimes as far as the Renaissance; and at the same
time forward, as far as the present and beyond. It was the moment when artists,
like Thomas Hart Benton, who wished to turn back the clock to regain the virtues
of simpler times came into direct conflict with others, like Stuart Davis and
Frank Lloyd Wright, who were ready to come to terms with the Machine Age and to
deal with its consequences. America in the thirties was changing
rapidly. In many areas the past was giving way to the present, although not
without a struggle. A Predominantly rural and small town society was being
replaced by the giant complexes of the big cities; power was becoming
increasingly centralized in the federal government and in large corporations.
Many Americans, deeply attached to the old way of life, felt disinherited. At
the same time, as immigration decreased and the population became more
homogeneous, the need arose in art arid literature to commemorate the ethnic and
regional differences that were fast disappearing. Thus, paradoxically, the
conviction that art, at least, should serve some purpose or carry some message
of moral uplift grew stronger as the Puritan ethos lost its contemporary
reality. Often this elevating message was a sermon in favor of just those
traditional American virtues, which were now threatened with obsolescence in a
changed social and political context. In this new context, the
appeal of the paintings by the regionalists and the American Scene painters
often lay in their ability to recreate an atmosphere that glorified the
traditional American values-self-reliance tempered with good-neighborliness,
independence modified by a sense of community, hard work rewarded by a sense of
order and purpose. Given the actual temper of the times, these themes were
strangely anachronistic, just as the rhetoric supporting political isolationism
was equally inappropriate in an international situation soon to involve America
in a second world war. Such themes gained popularity because they filled a
genome need for a comfortable collective fantasy of a God-fearing,
white-picketfence America, which in retrospect took on the nostalgic appeal of a
lost Golden Age. In this light, an autonomous art-for-art's sake
was viewed as a foreign invader liable to subvert the native American desire for
a purposeful art. Abstract art was assigned the role of the villainous alien;
realism was to personify the genuine American means of expression. The arguments
drew favor in many camps: among the artists, because most were realists; among
the politically oriented intellectuals, because abstract art was apolitical; and
among museum officials, because they were surfeited with mediocre imitations of
European modernism and were convinced that American art must develop its own
distinct identity. To help along this road to self-definition, the museums were
prepared to set up an artificial double standard, one for American art, and
another for European art. In 1934, Ralph Flint wrote in Art News, "We have today
in our midst a greater array of what may be called second-, third-, and fourth
string artists than any other country. Our big annuals are marvelous outpourings
of intelligence and skill; they have all the diversity and animation of a
fine-ring circus."
单选题It can be inferred from the passage that the advertisers' attitude is usually based on the hope that customers
单选题
单选题For years, doctors advised their patients that the only thing taking multivitamins does is give them extensive urine(尿). After all, true vitamin deficiencies are practically unheard of in industrialized countries. Now it seems that those doctors may have been wrong. The results of a growing number of studies suggest that even a modest vitamin shortfall can be harmful to your health. Although proof of the benefits of multivitamins is still far from certain, the few dollars you spend on them is probably a good investment. Or at least that's the argument put forward in the New England Journal of Medicine. Ideally, said Dr. Walter Willett and Dr. Meir Stampfer of Harvard, all vitamin supplements would be evaluated in scientifically rigorous clinical trials. But those studies can take a long time and often raise more questions than they answer. At some point, while researchers work on figuring out where the truth lies, it just makes sense to say the potential benefit outweighs the cost. The best evidence to date concerns folate(叶酸), one of the B vitamins. It's been proved to limit the number of defects in embryos(胚胎), and a recent trial found that folate in combination with vitamin B12 and a form of B6 also decreases the re-blockage of arteries after surgical repair. The news on vitamin E has been more mixed. Healthy folks who take 400 international units daily for at least two years appear somewhat less likely to develop heart disease. But when doctors give vitamin E to patients who already have heart disease, the vitamin doesn't seem to help. It may turn out that vitamin E plays a role in prevention but cannot undo serious damage. Despite vitamin C's great popularity, consuming large amounts of it still has not been positively linked to any great benefit. The body quickly becomes saturated with C and simply excretes(排泄)any excess. The multivitamins question boils down to this: Do you need to wait until all the evidence is in before you take them, or are you willing to accept that there's enough evidence that they don't hurt and could help? If the latter, there's no need to go to extremes and buy the biggest horse pills or the most expensive bottles. Large doses can cause trouble, including excessive bleeding and nervous system problems. Multivitamins are no substitute for exercise and a balanced diet, of course. As long as you understand that any potential benefit is modest and subject to further refinement, taking a daily multivitamin makes a lot of sense.
单选题The new laws threaten to ______ many people of the most elementary freedom.
单选题Think of the ocean on a calm day. Ignoring the rise and fall of the waves, you might imagine the surface was dead flat the whole way across. You'd be wrong. Hills and valleys are as much as a feature of the sea as the land, although on a much smaller scale. These undulations have a variety of causes. Tides, currents, eddies, winds, river flow and changes in salinity and temperature push the sea level up in some places and down in others by as much as 2 meters. Ever tried swimming uphill? How do we map these oceanic hills and valleys? First, we need to know what the planet would look like without them. This is where the geoid (大地水准面) comes in. It is a surface where the Earth's gravitational potential is equal and which best fits the global mean sea level. It is approximately an ellipsoid, though uneven distribution of mass within the Earth means that it can vary from this ideal by up to 150 meters. The geoid represents the shape the sea surface would be if the oceans were net moving and affected only by gravity. Thus it can be used as a reference to measure any deviations in the ocean surface height that aren't caused by gravity—the hills and valleys, for instance, or any regional increase in sea level. So how do you measure the geoid and the ocean's irregular topography? It's complicated. Geophysicists calculate the geoid using data on variation in gravitational acceleration from several dozen satellites. The hills and valleys of the oceans are all very interesting, but can the geoid tell us anything more significant about the state of the planet? It certainly can. Knowing accurately where the geoid lies and how the Ocean surface deviates from it will help meteorologists spot changes in Ocean currents associated with climate change. The circumpolar current around Antarctic is one they are particularly interested in. It can also predict local climate variations produced by events such as El Nino, El Nino keeps warm water that would normally move westwards close to the coast of South America, deprives Southeast Asia of its monsoon rains, and increases rainfall on the west coast of the Ametlca. Since temperature changes cause changes in sea level, geoid-watchers should be able to prepare us before it strikes.
单选题In the post Cold War world few articles have influenced how Western policymakers view the world more than Samuel Huntington's 1993 article, "The Clash of Civilizations. " Suggesting that the world was returning to a civilization dominated world where future conflicts would originate from clashes between " civilizations" , the theory has been broadly criticized for oversimplification, ignoring local conflicts and for incorrectly predicting what has happened in the decade since its publication. The claim made by many that September the 11th has vindicated Huntington is simply not supported by the evidence. Huntington's thesis outlines a future where the " great divisions among 9 humankind and the dominating source of conflict will be cultural. " He divides the world's cultures into seven current civilizations, Western, Latin American, Confucian, Japanese, Islamic, Hindu and Slavic-Orthodox. In addition he judged Africa only as a possible civilization depending on how far one viewed the development of an African consciousness had developed. These civilizations seem to be defined primarily by religion with a number of ad hoc exceptions. Huntington predicts conflict occurring between states from different civilizations for control of international institutions and for economic and military power. He views this mix of conflict as normal by asserting that nation-states are a new phenomenon in a world dominated for most of its history by conflicts between civilizations. This is a dubious statement as inter-civilizational conflict driven mainly by geo-political factors rather than cultural differences is an equally if not more persuasive way to view much of history. The theory at least differentiates between non-Western civilizations rather than grouping them together. He also explains how the West presents pro-Western policies as positive for the entire world and that the very idea of a universal culture is a Western idea. However, his escape from a Eurocentric bias is only temporary. He completely fails to account for local cultures even though one can argue they collectively comprise a separate civilization. The article also predicts future conflicts will be started by non-Western civilizations reacting to Western power and values ignoring the equally plausible situation where Western states use their military superiority to maintain their superior positions. The policy prescriptions he suggests to counter this perceived threat equate to increasing the power of the West to forestall any loss of the West's pre-eminence. Thus he suggests the Latin American and Orthodox-Slavic civilizations be drawn further into the Western orbit and the maintenance of Western military superiority.
