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单选题Material culture refers to the touchable, material "things"—physical objects that can be seen, held, felt, used—that a culture produces. Examining a culture's tools and technology can tell us about the group's history and way of life. Similarly, research into the material culture of music can help us to understand the music-culture. The most vivid body of "things" in it, of course, is musical instrument. We cannot hear for ourselves the actual sound of any musical performance before the 1870s when the phonograph was invented, so we rely on instruments for important information about music-cultures in the remote past and their development. Here we have two kinds of evidence: instruments well preserved and instruments pictured in art. Through the study of instruments, as well as paintings, written documents, and so on, we can explore the movement of music from the Near East to China over a thousand years ago, or we can outline the spread of Near Eastern influence to Europe that resulted in the development of most of the instruments on the symphony orchestra. Sheet music or printed music, too, is material culture. Scholars once defined folk music-cultures as those in which people learn and sing music by ear rather than from print. But research shows mutual influence among oral and written sources during the past few centuries in Europe, Britain and America. Printed versions limit variety because they tend to standardize any song, yet they stimulate people to create new and different songs. Besides, the ability to read music notation has a far-reaching effect on musicians and, when it becomes widespread, on the music-culture as a whole. Music is deep-rooted in the cultural background that fosters it. We now pay more and more attention to traditional or ethnic features in folk music and are willing to preserve the folk music as we do with many traditional cultural heritages. Musicians all over the world are busy with recording classic music in their country for the sake of their unique culture. As always, people's aspiration will always focus on their individuality rather than universal features that are shared by all cultures alike. One more important part of music's material culture should be singled out: the influence of the electronic media—radio, record player, tape recorder, and television, with the future promising talking and singing computers and other developments. This is all part of the "information-revolution", a twentieth century phenomenon as important as the industrial revolution in the nineteenth. These electronic media are not just limited to modern nations; they have affected music-cultures all over the globe.
单选题{{B}}Text 4{{/B}}
In 1998 consumers could purchase
virtually anything over the Internet. Books, compact discs, and even stocks were
available from World Wide Web Sites that seemed to spring up almost daily. A few
years earlier, some people had predicted that consumers accustomed to shopping
in stores would be reluctant to buy things that they could not see or touch in
person. For a growing number of time-starved consumers, however, shopping from
their home computer was proving to be a convenient alternative to driving to the
store. A research estimated that in 1998 US consumers would
purchase $ 7.3 billion of goods over the Internet, double the 1997 total.
Finding a bargain was getting easier, owing to the rise of online auctions and
Web sites that did comparison shopping on the Internet for the best
deal. For all the consumer interest, retailing in cyberspace was
still a largely unprofitable business, however. Internet pioneer Amazon. com,
which began selling books in 1995 and later branched into recorded music and
videos, posted revenue of $153.7 million in the third quarter, up from $37.9
minion in the same period of 1997. Overall, however, the company's loss widened
to $45.2 million from $9.6 million, and analysts did not expect the company to
turn a profit until 2001. Despite the great loss, Amazon. com had a stock market
value of many billions, reflecting investors' optimism about the future of the
industry. Internet retailing appealed to investors because it
provided an efficient means for reaching millions of consumers without having
the cost of operating conventional stores with their armies of salespeople.
Selling online carried its own risks, however. With so many companies competing
for consumers' attention, price competition was intense and profit margins thin
or nonexistent. One video retailer sold the hit movie Titanic for $9.99,
undercutting the $19.99 suggested retail price and losing about $6 on each copy
sold. With Internet retailing still in its initial stage; companies seemed
willing to absorb such losses in an attempt to establish a dominant market
position.
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单选题Researchers built the calculating difference engine according to Babbage's design in order to show that______.
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单选题People may find in McDonald's that
单选题Keasey's findings support the conclusion about six-year-old children that
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单选题One great benefit of the Web is that it allows us to move information online that now resides in paper form. Several states in America are using the Web in a profound way. You can apply for various permits or submit applications for business licences. Some states are putting up listings of jobs—not just state government jobs, but all the jobs available in the state. I believe, over time, that all the information that governments print, and all those paper forms they now have, will be moved on to the Internet. Electronic commerce notches up month-by-month too. It is difficult to measure, because a lot of electronic commerce involves existing buyers and sellers who are simply moving paperbased transactions to the Web. That is not new business. Microsoft, for example, purchases millions of dollars of PCs online instead of by paper. However, that is not a fundamental change; it has just improved the efficiency of an existing process. The biggest impact has occurred where electronic commerce matches buyers and sellers who would not previously have found each other. When you go to a book site and find an obscure book that you never would have found in a physical bookstore, that is a new type of commerce. Today, about half of all PCs are still not connected to the Web. Getting communications costs down and making all the software simpler will bring in those people. And that, in turn, will move us closer to the critical mass that will make the Web lifestyle everyone's lifestyle. One clement that people underestimate is the degree to which the hardware and software will improve. Just take one aspect: screen technology. I do my e-mail on a 20-inch liquid crystal display (LCD) monitor. It is not available at a reasonable price yet, but in two years it will be. In ten years, a 40-inch LCD with much higher resolution will be commonplace. The boundary between a television set and a PC will be blurred because even the set-top box that you connect up to your cable or satellite will have a processor more powerful than what we have today in the most expensive PC. This will, in effect, make your television a computer. Interaction with the Web also will improve, making it much easier for people to be involved. Today the keywords we use to search the Web often return to too many articles to sort through, many of them out of context. If you want to learn about the fastest computer chip available, you might end up getting responses instead about potato chips being delivered in fast trucks. In the future, we shall be either speaking or typing sentences into the computer. If you ask about the speed of chips, the result will be about computers, not potatoes. Speech recognition also means that you will be able to call in on a phone and ask if you have any new messages, or check on a flight, or check on the weather. To predict that it will take over ten years for these changes to happen is probably pessimistic. We usually overestimate what we can do in two years and underestimate what we can do in ten. The Web will be as much a way of life as the car by 2008. Probably before.
单选题Work looks a better cure for poverty than welfare Especially as fewer and fewer countries will be able to afford to pay potential workers to stay at home a Victorian idea is back in favour: many poor people are better off when they are pulled back into the labour market. The idea revived first in the United States. There, in its harshest form, the unemployed work in exchange for welfare. But countries with governments to the left of America's, including Labour Australia and Socialist France, are now also exploring ways to link income support and employment policy. Coming from different directions, the right and the left are gradually finding new common ground. For the right, it seems deplorable to encourage the poor to rely on the state for cash, because they get hooked on government help and accustomed to being poor. For the left, it seems deplorable to allow workers to drop out of the job market for long periods, because it makes it harder for them to find new jobs. For both, the answer is to get the poor to work. Most industrial countries have a two-tier system of social protection: a social-security scheme, where workers and their bosses make regular contributions in exchange for payments to workers when they are unemployed, sick or retired; and a safety-net, to give some income to those poor people who have exhausted their social insurance or who have none The former is usually not means-tested but, for the unemployed, is of limited duration; the latter is almost always tied to income The public tends to approve of contributory benefits, which is what designers of such schemes intended. Safety-net benefits carry no such sense of entitlement, and are less popular. Yet they have grown more rapidly in large part because the 1980-82 recession increased the number of people of working age who had exhausted their right to contributory benefits. And an increasing proportion of the poor are people for whom the contributory systems were never designed: the young and lone mothers. In consequence, payments which carry a clear entitlement have become less significant, compared with those which appear to depend purely on state charity. The rise in the bill for the unpopular kind of social protection comes at a time when governments want to curb state spending. It comes, too, at a time when many countries have done almost everything they can think of to protect the poor. A decade ago many on the left argued that poverty was usually caused by circumstances outside the control of the poor—a lack of jobs, disability, old age, racial discrimination, broken marriages. One way or another, governments have tried to tackle most of these problems. Still the poor remain.
单选题{{B}}Text 4{{/B}}
Despite Denmark's manifest virtues,
Danes never talk about how proud they are to be Danes. This would sound weird in
Danish. When Danes talk to foreigners about Denmark, They always begin by
commenting on its tininess, its unimportance, the difficulty of its language,
the general small-mindedness and self-indulgence of their countrymen and the
high taxes. No Dane would look you in tire eye and say, "Denmark is a great
country." You're supposed to figure this out for yourself. It is
the land of the silk safety net, where almost half the national budget goes
toward smoothing out life's inequalities, and there is plenty of money for
schools, day care, retraining programs, job seminars. Danes love seminars: Three
days at a study center hearing about waste management is almost as good as a ski
trip. It is a culture bombarded by English, in advertising, pop music, the
Internet, and despite all the English that Danish absorbs--there is no Danish
Academy to defend against it--old dialects persist in Jutland that can barely be
understood by Copenhageners. It is the land where, as the saying goes, "Few have
too much and fewer have too little," and a foreigner is struck by the sweet
egalitarianism that prevails, where the lowliest clerk gives you a level gaze,
where Sir and Madame have disappeared from common usage, even Mr. and Mrs. It's
a nation of recyclers--about 55% of Danish garbage gets made into something
new--and no nuclear power plants. It's a nation of tireless planners. Trains run
on time. Things operate well in general. Such a nation of
overachievers--a brochure from the Ministry of Business and Industry says,
"Denmark is one of the world's cleanest and most organized countries, with
virtually no pollution, crime, or poverty. Denmark is the most
corruption-free society in the Northern hemisphere." So, of course, one's heart
lifts at any sighting of Danish sleaze: skinhead graffiti on buildings
("Foreigners out of Denmark!"), broken beer bottles in the gutters, drunken
teenagers slumped in the park. Nonetheless, it is an orderly
land. You drive through a Danish town, it comes to an end at a stone wall, and
on the other side is a field of barley, a nice clean line: town here, country
there. It is not a nation of jaywalkers. People stand on the curb and wait for
the red light to change, even if it's 2 a.m. and there's not a car in sight.
However, Danes don’t think of themselves as a waiting-at-2-a,
m.-for-the-green-light people--that's how they see Swedes and Germans. Danes see
themselves as jazzy people, improvisers, more free spirited than Swedes, but the
truth is (though one should not say it) that Danes are very much like Germans
and Swedes. Orderliness is a main selling point. Denmark has few natural
resources, limited manufacturing capability; its future in Europe will be as a
broker, banker, and distributor of goods. You send your goods by container
ship to Copenhagen, and these bright, young, English-speaking, utterly honest,
highly disciplined people will get your goods around to Scandinavia, the Baltic
States, and Russia. Airports, seaports, highways, and rail lines are ultramodern
and well-maintained. The orderliness of the society doesn't mean
that Danish lives are less messy or lonely than yours or mine, and no Dane would
tell you so. You can hear plenty about bitter family feuds and the sorrows
of alcoholism and about perfectly sensible people who went off one day and
killed themselves. An orderly society cannot exempt its members from the hazards
of life. But there is a sense of entitlement and security that
Danes grow up with. Certain things are yours by virtue of citizenship, and you
shouldn't feel bad for taking what you're entitled to, you're as good as anyone
else. The rules of the welfare system are clear to everyone, the benefits you
get if you lose your job, the steps you take to get a new one; and the
orderliness of the system makes it possible for the country to weather high
unemployment and social unrest without a sense of
crisis.
单选题{{B}}Text 3{{/B}}
Culture is the sum total of all the
traditions, customs, belief and ways of life of a given group of human beings.
In this sense, every group has a culture, however savage, undeveloped, or
uncivilized it may seem to us. To the professional
anthropologist, there is no intrinsic superiority of one culture over another,
just as to the professional linguist there is no intrinsic hierarchy among
languages. People once thought of the languages of backward
groups as savage, undeveloped form of speech, consisting largely of grunts and
groans. While it is possible that language in general began as a series of
grunts and groans, it is a fact established by the study of "backward" languages
that no spoken tongue answers that description today. Most languages of
uncivilized groups are, by our most severe standards, extremely complex,
delicate, and ingenious pieces of machinery for the transfer of ideas. They fall
behind the western languages not in their sound patterns or grammatical
structures, which usually are fully adequate for all language needs, but only in
their vocabularies, which reflect the objects and activities known to their
speakers. Even in this department, however, two things are to he noted: 1. All
languages seem to possess the machinery for vocabulary expansion; either by
putting together words already in existence or by borrowing them from other
languages and adapting them to their own system. 2. The objects and activities
requiring names and distinctions in "backward" languages, while different from
ours; are often surprisingly numerous and complicated. A western language
distinguishes merely between two degrees of remoteness ("this" and "that"); some
languages of the American Indians distinguish between what is close to the
speaker, or the person addressed, or remote from both, or out of sight, or in
the past, or in the future. This study of language, in turn,
casts a new light upon the claim of the anthropologists that all cultures are to
viewed independently, and without ideas of rank or
hierarchy.
单选题{{B}}Text 2{{/B}}
Time spent in a bookshop can be most
enjoyable, whether you are a book-lover or merely there to buy a book as a
present. You may even have entered the shop just to find shelter from a sudden
shower. But the desire to pick up a book with an attractive dust-jacket is
irresistible. You soon become absorbed in some book or other, and usually it is
only much later that you realize that you have spent far too much time
there. This opportunity to escape the realities of everyday life
is, I think, the main attraction of a bookshop. There are not many places where
it is possible to do this. A music shop is very much like a bookshop. You can
wander round such places to your heart's content. If it is a good shop, no
assistant will approach you with the inevitable greeting: "Can I help you, sir?"
You needn't buy anything you don't want. In a bookshop an assistant should
remain in the background until you have finished browsing. Then, and only then,
are his services necessary. You have to be careful not to be
attracted by the variety of books in a bookshop. It is very easy to enter the
shop looking for a book on, say, ancient coins and to come out carrying a copy
of the latest best-selling novel and perhaps a book about brass-rubbing-
something which had only vaguely interested you up till then. This volume on the
subject, however, happened to be so well illustrated and the part of the text
you read proved so interesting that you just had to buy it. This sort of thing
can be very dangerous. Booksellers must be both long suffering and
indulgent. There is a story which well illustrates this. A
medical student had to read a textbook which was far too expensive for him to
buy. He couldn't obtain it from the library and the only copy he could find was
in his bookshop. Every afternoon, therefore, he would go along to the shop and
read a little of the book at a time. One day, however, he was dismayed to find
the book missing from its usual place and about to leave when he noticed the
owner of the shop beckoning to him. Expecting to be reproached, he went
toward him. To his surprise, the owner pointed to the book, which was
tucked away in a corner. "I put it there in case anyone was tempted to buy it,"
he said, and left the delighted student to continue his
reading.{{B}}Notes:{{/B}} to one's heart's content尽情地。 beckon v.
打招呼。
单选题Some experts, like Chris Voss, think that
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The Lakers' forward Kobe Bryant has
scored 50 or more points in four straight games, second in the NBA only to Wilt
Chamberlain's seven. He also now is tied with Michael Jordan for second with
four behind Chamberlain's 32 in most 60-point games. "He's doing
something I've never seen," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said in an e-mail
Saturday. "This has been historic." He should know because he coached Jordan and
played against Chamberlain. Bryant is not going to win the MVP award, which
likely will go to Dirk Nowitzki or Steve Nash. But his scoring brilliance again
seems to answer the question of who's the best player in the league and it also
provides more evidence in the similarity of Bryant and Jordan in their talent
and approach to the game. In any ease, Bryant is the player now
firmly holding that mythical torch of greatness, sporting celebrity and
creativity that Jordan once took from Julius "Dr. J" Erring. "Kobe has the
verdant green light to hoist it up until he cools down," Jackson said. "Wonders
never cease in this game." Certainly, Bryant has been wonderful in the four
games, averaging 56.3 points with two games of at least 60. Moreover, he hardly
has been selfish or working outside the offense because most of his field goals
have come on long jumpers, including 17 of 33 on three-pointers. Bryant is
shooting 54 percent. "It's phenomenal. It's incredible," Jackson
told Los Angeles reporters. "He's shooting [outside] more than Michael was.
Michael was probably doing more post-up, more penetration, more at-the-basket
kind of stuff. But Kobe's doing a whole range of things. I think his shooting
has just been remarkable, the way he is raising up over people and knocking the
ball down." It's still a long way off, but because he started in
the NBA when he was 18, Bryant, 28, can pass Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as the league's
all-time scorer if he can stay healthy and average 25 points until he is 38.
"The best part of it all is that we're winning," Bryant said. "The second is
that this generation of players who might not have ever heard of the Elgin
[Baylors] or Wilts [and their] greatness will now take notice so the legacy of
their brilliance will live on. "As far as myself, I can't
explain it. All is in slow motion all the time. I don't know why or how, but
it's trippy." That's probably what Chamberlain said during his record
run.
单选题A small group of Internet security specialists gathered in Singapore to start up a global system to make e-mail and e-commerce more secure, end the rapid growth of passwords and raise the bar significantly for Internet fraud, spies and troublemakers. The Singapore event included an elaborate technical ceremony to create and then securely store numerical keys that will be kept in three hardened data centers there, in Zurich and in San Jose, Calif. The keys and data centers are working parts of a technology known as Secure DNS, or DNSSEC. DNS refers to the Domain Name System, which is a directory that connects names to numerical Internet addresses. Preliminary work on the security system had been going on for more than a year, but this was the first time the system went into operation, even though it is not quite complete. The three centers are fortresses made up of five layers of physical, electronic and cryptographic security, making it virtually impossible to damage the system. Four layers are active now. The fifth, a physical barrier, is being built inside the data center. The technology is viewed by many computer security specialists as a ray of hope amid the recent cascade of data thefts, attacks, disruptions and scandals, including break-ins at Citibank, Sony, Lockheed Martin, RSA Security and elsewhere. It allows users to communicate via the Internet with high confidence that the identity of the person or organization they are communicating with is not being tricked or forged. Internet engineers like Dan Kaminsky, an independent network security researcher who is one of the engineers involved in the project, want to counteract three major deficiencies in today's Internet. There is no mechanism for ensuring trust, the quality of software is uneven, and it is difficult to track down bad actors. One reason for these flaws is that from the 1960s through the 1980s the engineers who designed the network's underlying technology were concerned about reliable, rather than secure, communications. That is starting to change with the introduction of Secure DNS by governments and other organizations. The event in Singapore capped a process that began more than a year ago and is expected to be complete after 300 so-called top-level domains have been digitally signed. Before the Singapore event, 70 countries had adopted the technology, and 14 more were added as part of the event. While large countries are generally doing the technical work to include their own domains in the system, the association of Internet security specialists is helping smaller countries and organizations with the process.
