【考研类试卷】考研英语(二)分类真题17及答案解析.doc
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1、考研英语(二)分类真题 17 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:0,分数:0.00)二、Part A(总题数:0,分数:0.00)三、Text 1(总题数:1,分数:20.00)Killing oneself has been legal in Britain since 1961, but it is a serious crime to help someone else to die. Anyone who “aids, assists, counsels or procures“ a suicide out of
2、 compassion or something more sinisterrisks up to 14 years in prison. It is a risk that many are willing to take. About 120 Britons have committed suicide at Dignitas, a Zurich suicide clinic that takes advantage of liberal Swiss laws, and many have had relatives or friends with them for moral or pr
3、actical support. None of these companions has been charged with a crime. But such cases are not unknown. Since April 2005, 16 people have been prosecuted for assisting suicide in England and Wales, and some of them have gone on to be convicted. The uncertainty as to whether helpers will be prosecute
4、d heaps agony on those who already face the appalling decision whether to end their lives. Debbie Purdy, who has multiple sclerosis, asked prosecutors last year to clarify whether her husband would be charged if he went with her to Zurich. When they declined, she appealed to the House of Lords, whic
5、h ruled in her favour in July. On September 23rd the director of public prosecutions (DPP), Keir Starmer, duly published guidelines to enlighten her and the thousands like her. Mr Starmer listed 16 factors that would weigh in favour of prosecution and 13 against. Helpers are less likely to be prosec
6、uted if they were close friends or relatives; if the person who died was severely ill physically; if he had a “settled“ wish to die; and so on. Charges are more likely if the victim was under 18 or mentally ill, or if the suspect stood to gain from his death (though, campaigners note, this is often
7、the case because helpers tend to be spouses or offspring). A British version of Dignitas is ruled out. serial assisters can expect to be prosecuted, as can members of groups whose main purpose is facilitating suicide. One consequence of leaving the matter to lawyers, rather than getting a bill throu
8、gh Parliament, is that the guidelines are framed in broader terms than a new law would have been. Earlier this year Lord Falconer and others proposed an amendment to the Coroners and Justice Bill that would have legalised assisting suicide overseas in cases of terminal illness. It was voted down by
9、peers who considered it dangerously radical. The new guidelines, though they do not make assisting suicide legal, apply at home as well as abroad and cover suicide by the seriously as welt as the terminally ill. It remains to be seen whether the rules will satisfy the demand for reform or will trigg
10、er more change. It seems too important an issue for people not to have their say.(分数:20.00)(1).Helping someone to die is illegal, _(分数:4.00)A.and prohibitive laws have been made in BritainB.and most helpers have been convicted in BritainC.but Switzerland has legalised assisted suicideD.but most who
11、do will escape prosecution(2).Those who want to choose assisted suicide worry _(分数:4.00)A.they might be charged and convictedB.those who help them may face lawsuitsC.the new guidelines could not help them muchD.the new guidelines would put an end to suicide(3).According to the new guidelines, _(分数:4
12、.00)A.helping people to kill themselves is legal in some casesB.spouses who help family members die will be sparedC.no suicide assisting agencies should be set up in BritainD.mentally sick suicide helpers should not be prosecuted(4).The rules in the guidelines _(分数:4.00)A.are less specific than the
13、terms in a law would beB.will not be passed by the ParliamentC.will meet the demand of the terminally illD.will finally make suicide assisting acts legal(5).If Lord Falconer“s proposal had been accepted _(分数:4.00)A.accompanying a spouse to Dignitas for suicide would have been legalB.assisting suicid
14、e would have been made legal within BritainC.it would have aroused more change in law-making endeavorD.it would have filled up the gap left by the new guidelines四、Text 2(总题数:1,分数:20.00)There aren“t a whole lot of scientific disciplines that haven“t had something to say about climate change over the
15、yearsand with good reason. When a problem is global in scale there“s a universe of specialists and subspecialists who have to try hard to fix it. But one fieldpsychologyhas never had much skin in the game. It“s less important to consider how humans feel about the mess we“ve made of our planet, after
16、 all, than how we clean it up. That, at least, has always been the thinking. Increasingly, however, psychologists are making the case that the best way to resolve any crisis and prevent it from happening again is to understand the minds of the people who caused it. And that means all six billion of
17、US. The newest issue of the American Psychologist is devoted largely to making that case, with a series of articles by a team of psychologists from around the country exploring the thinking, feelings and other cognitive processes that have allowed us to be so neglectful of our worldand could be harn
18、essed to help us take better care of it. The papers are by and large illuminating, surprising and, well, occasionally absurdwhich is what often happens when scientists are feeling their way in a relatively new field and fall back on jargon and other linguistic terms to try to make it make sense. Sti
19、ll, with climate change only growing worse and the U.S. in particular seeming unable or unwilling to do much about it, new perspectives are always welcome and badly needed. One of the first things scientists do in trying to wrestle a big problem to the ground is simplify and clarify it, with a nice,
20、 clear equation if possibleand the climate psychologists are no exception. If you want to devise policies to make people more climate conscious, they argue, all you have to remember is I=tpn . More specifically put, that means the impact of any behavioral change will be equal its technical potential
21、 to fix the problem, times the behavioral plasticity required to comply with it, times the number of people who actually do comply. “Behavioral science understandably focuses on the p ,“ writes psychologist Paul Stern of the National Research Council, “though in setting policy priorities, t and n ar
22、e critical to take into account.“ Insulating your attic is technically simple and very effective, but it takes a lot of behavioral plasticity before anyone will actually get up and do it. Buying a hybrid car can do a lot of good toobut until the prices come way down and the selection goes way up not
23、 a lot of people are going to do it. There“s still time, of course, to reverseor at least slowour environmental decline. Psychologists may always play more of a supporting than leading role in making that happen, but it“s a critical role nonetheless.(分数:20.00)(1).From the first paragraph we learn th
24、at _(分数:4.00)A.every discipline has tried to avoid talking about climate changeB.psychology as a discipline hasn“t had much to say about climate changeC.experts in other disciplines than climatology know little about climate changeD.no discipline is concerned about how people actually feel about cli
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