专业英语八级(作文)-试卷74及答案解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级(作文)-试卷74及答案解析 (总分:10.00,做题时间:90分钟)一、WRITING(总题数:5,分数:10.00)1.PART V WRITING(分数:2.00)_2.Euthanasia is the deliberate advancement of a persons death for the benefit of that person. In most cases euthanasia is carried out because the person who is usually terminally ill asks to die. It can be ca
2、rried out either by doing something, such as administering a lethal injection, or by not doing something necessary to keep the person alive. The following are opinions on the necessity of legalizing euthanasia. Write an article of NO LESS THAN 300 words, in which you should: 1. summarize the argumen
3、ts, and then 2. express your opinion towards euthanasia, especially whether it should be legalized.Bonnie Malkin, Professor of Ave Maria School of Law Our legal system accepts that people have a legal right to choose when to die, as demonstrated by the fact that suicide is legal. This right is denie
4、d to those who are incapable of taking their own lives unaided. Legalising euthanasia would redress this balance. Our legal system also recognises that assisting a suicide attempt is a crime. Human beings are independent biological entities, and as an adult, have the right to take and carry out deci
5、sions about themselves. A human being decides who they spend their life with, their career path, where they live, whether to bear children. So what is the harm in allowing a terminally ill patient to decide for themselves whether they die in a hospital or in their own home? Surely a terminally ill s
6、ufferer is better qualified to decide for themselves whether they are better off dead or alive? Their disease makes them so crippled they cannot commit suicide alone. A quote from The Independent in this March stated that So long as the patient is lucid, and his or her intent is clear beyond doubt,
7、there need be no further questions. Human beings should be as free as possible and unnecessary restraints on human rights are strongly discouraged.Luke Gormally, first Research Officer of The Linacre Centre The prestigious position of doctors could quite easily be abused if euthanasia were to become
8、 legalised. A prime example of this would be the late Dr Harold Shipman, who killed between 215 and 260 elderly women. Vulnerable, ill people trust their doctor and if he confidently suggested a course of action, it could be hard to resist. A patient and his family would generally decide in favour o
9、f euthanasia according to the details fed to them by their doctor. These details may not even be well founded: diagnoses can be mistaken and new treatment developed which the doctor does not know about. Surely it is wrong to give one or two individuals the right to decide whether a patient should li
10、ve or die. On the contrary, the majority of doctors would make well-informed, responsible and correct decisions, but for those few like Harold Shipman, they can get away with murder, undetected, for 23 years.Gina Barton, American journalist If a terminal patient faces a long, slow, painful death, su
11、rely it is much kinder to spare them this kind of suffering and allow them to end their life comfortably. Pain medications used to alleviate symptoms often have unpleasant side effects or may leave the patient in a state of sedation. It is not as if they are really living during this time; they are
12、merely waiting to die. They should have the right to avoid this kind of torturous existence and be allowed to die in a humane way.(分数:2.00)_3.A surrogate mother is a woman who carries a child, usually for an infertile couple. There are two types of surrogacy, traditional and gestational. The traditi
13、onal type of surrogacy involves the surrogate mother being inseminated with the sperm of the intended father. In gestational surrogacy, eggs and sperm are extracted from the donors and implanted into the surrogate. Despite of its benefits, surrogacy is only legalized in few states, like the US and I
14、ndia. The following article illustrates the reason of banning surrogacy in France. Write an article of NO LESS THAN 800 words, in which you should: 1. summarize the article briefly, and then 2. express your opinion towards surrogacy, especially whether it should be legalized. Why Has France Banned S
15、urrogate Motherhood? Shortly after it emerged in the 1980s, surrogate motherhood was dealt a severe blow in France by a decision of its highest civil court. In 1991, it ruled that an agreement entered into by a woman to conceive, bear a child, and relinquish it at birth, albeit for benign reasons, w
16、as contrary to the public policy principle of unavailability of both the human body and civil status. This prohibition was confirmed in the Bioethics Act of 1994. In the last few years the issue of legalizing gestational surrogacy has resurfaced for many reasons. First of all, there is growing deman
17、d for autonomy, particularly with regards to individual life choices. There is also a persistent specific demand from women whose infertility is related to congenital malformation, cancer surgery, postpartum hemorrhage, or exposure to Distilbene. Last but not least, people can turn to international
18、surrogacy in the United States or in countries such as Ukraine and India where specialized clinics operate for foreigners. Today, however, the prohibition of surrogate motherhood is still supported by a majority of French citizens. It is justified by ethical concerns regarding the child, the surroga
19、te mother, and society as a whole. Firstly, children may be psychologically at risk in such transactions. Ignoring or denying the effects of pregnancy and the mother-child relationship on the childs future could well be damaging for him or her as well as for the intended parents; and children could
20、become commodities traded as merchandise between surrogate mothers and infertile couples. Secondly, even aside from the physical risks of pregnancy, the gestational mother is exposed to two dangers: becoming attached to the child and suffering from the separation after birth, since she knows that, f
21、or her, childbirth will mean an end rather than a beginning. France is also concerned about the fact that there is an inherent social division in this practice: surrogate mothers are usually from lower economic backgrounds and can be economically exploited in this transaction. Thirdly, surrogacy cou
22、ld threaten the symbolic image of women and the principle of human dignity that enjoys constitutional recognition. In France, dignity is often regarded as an obligation that individuals owe themselves to remain worthy of their human condition. Individuals are free to decide what constitutes their ow
23、n dignity provided the dignity of others is not harmed. While it is highly plausible that some surrogates are acting entirely of their own free will, it is still wrong for society to accept a form of alienation, however voluntary.(分数:2.00)_4.Death penalty or not? That is a question facing judges who
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