专业八级分类模拟196及答案解析.doc
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1、专业八级分类模拟 196 及答案解析(总分:100.10,做题时间:90 分钟)一、READING COMPREHENSIO(总题数:1,分数:100.00)Section A Multiple-Choice Questions In this section there are several passages by fourteen multiple choice questions. For each multiple choice qutestion, there are four suggested answers marked A. B, C and D. Choose the o
2、ne that you think is the best answer and mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET TWO. PASSAGE ONE Every political period has its characteristic form of scandal. During the Reagan defense buildup of the mid-1980s, the scandal of the day was “waste, fraud and mismanagement“ at the Pentagon, symbolized by th
3、e infamous $640 toilet seat. Amid the general embarrassment and excuse-making, only one defense hawk was bold enough to declare that waste and fraud were actually good things. “We need more“ of them, wrote Edward Luttwak in Commentary. If you“re going to build a stronger defense and build it fast, a
4、 bit of corruption is a necessary by-product. Today“s characteristic form of scandal is financial abuse and excess. So where is the Luttwak of today who will cut through all the demagoguery and the whining, the outraged criticism and the mealymouthed apologies, and say, “Look, you want a vigorous en
5、trepreneurial economy?“ A bit of excess is a necessary by-product. “We need more“ financial abuseit is a sign that capitalism is working. Who has the courage to make this argument? I am not that man. But if 1 were that man, the case would run something like this: the magic of capitalism, as explaine
6、d by Adam Smith and his followers, is that it channels individual greed into activities that benefit all of us. “Greed is good,“ declared Michael Douglas, playing a corrupt financier in the movie Wall Street. More accurately, greed is inevitable. It is part of the human condition. And in moderation,
7、 economists argue and history demonstrates, greed is no bad thing. Free-market economies could not function if we were all Mother Teresa. But there is nothing inherent in the human condition that keeps greed in moderation. So there are laws, and there are appearances. Both these forces draw a rough
8、lineand attempt to place itbetween greed that helps other people and greed that hurts other people. Inevitably, though, some will take greed too far. And that“s a good thing (goes the argument I lack the courage to make). Why? Because you can“t regulate greed with precision. Keynes used the term “an
9、imal spirits“ to describe the motivation of business people. A successful economy needs a culture that encourages them, up to a point. It“s a Goldilocks-type situation. You don“t want too much greed, and you don“t want too littleyou want an amount that“s just right. But the dials are not all that se
10、nsitive. A culture that encourages enough greed in enough people will encourage too much in a few. If nobody is taking greed too far, you can be certain that too few people are taking it far enough. For some reason, none of the lawyers who are defending the big greedheads have chosen to make this ar
11、gument. Instead, they offer inconsistent theories to explain the obvious. Lawyers for the Rigas family, which performed the remarkable feat of bankrupting a cable company, say their clients can“t be guilty of a conspiracy to loot the company because they are too dimwitted: one is “not the savviest g
12、uy,“ another is “clueless.“ Martha Stewart“s defense, by contrast, was in part that she is too clever to have done anything as dumb as conspiring to break the securities laws. Lawyers for Dennis Kozlowski, former CEO of Tyco, take this line of reasoning further. The Wall Street Journal called theirs
13、 the “brazenness defense.“ Kozlowski made no secret of the fact that he used Tyco money for a yacht, kept his mistresses on the payroll and (possibly therefore) also let Tyco finance a $5 million diamond ring for his wife. How could he have criminal intent if it was all out in the open? By contrast,
14、 Scott Sullivan, former CFO of WorldCom, engaged in a more traditional form of gall in pleading guilty to $11 billion worth of accounting fraud. It was a “misguided effort to save the company,“ he said. Call this the Vietnam defense: it was necessary to destroy the company in order to save it. Will
15、no one step forward to say clearly that these seeming malefactors are actually heroes? That we need more of them, not fewer? True, Martha has been found guilty (though she is appealing), and others may lose in court as well. True, these people may have personally harmed the economy and ripped off ma
16、ny individual investors. Nevertheless, taken together, they are a sign of the economy“s robust health. Far better that a few greedheads get carried away than that we are worried that we are not getting the benefit of all the good, healthy, productive sort of greed that this county is capable of prod
17、ucing. In fact, think of these unpopular figures as the canaries of capitalism. They precede us into the coal mine of greed, going farther than the rest of us dare, showing us where far enough becomes too far and perishing in the effort. They are martyrs of capitalism, dying financially so that othe
18、rs may prosper. Does no one have the simple guts to tell this truth? Well, I certainly don“t. PASSAGE TWO At a chess tournament in Tunisia in 1967, Bobby Fischer, then 24, was pitted against another American grand master, Samuel Reshevsky. At game time, Fischer was nowhere to be found, so Reshevsky
19、sat down opposite Fischer“s empty chair, made his first move, punched the game clock and waited. And waited. With five minutes left, Fischer suddenly strode onstage and, with a series of blindingly quick moves, hammered Reshevsky into defeat. Two days later, Fischer quit the tournament and abandoned
20、 competitive chess for two years. Which raises the question, Why is the gift of genius so often given to people too stupid to know what to do with it? In “Bobby Fischer Goes to War“ (Ecco; 342 pages), David Edmonds and John Eidinow tell the story of Fischer“s most famous match, the 1972 world champi
21、onship in Reykjavik. Fischer faced Soviet grand master Boris Spassky in a chess game that was not only an epic staring match between two intellectual gladiators but also the focus of all kinds of weird, free-floating cold war cultural-political energy. It was the Rumble in the Jungle and the Cuban m
22、issile crisis all rolled into one. The drama was hopelessly miscast. Fischer, the champion of the American way, was an antisocial, anti-Semitic ego-maniac who complained about the lighting, the auditorium, the prize money, even the marble the chessboard was made of. Spassky, the cog in the Soviet ma
23、chine, was a genial, sensitive fellow who liked a drink once in a while. He was All to Fischer“s Foreman. Of course, Fischer ate him alive. “Bobby Fischer Goes to War“ tells the story in fine, brisk style, interpreting the red-hot chess-fu actionthe Ruy Lopez opening! The Nimzo-Indian defense!for us
24、 nongeniuses and conveying the richness of the world beyond the chessboard through details plucked from FBI and KGB records. We see, for example, Soviet experts whisking Spassky“s orange juice back to Moscow to test for suspicious capitalist contaminants. It seems to be in the nature of genius to ze
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- 专业 分类 模拟 196 答案 解析 DOC
