[考研类试卷]考研英语(一)模拟试卷40及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(一)模拟试卷 40 及答案与解析Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)1 Euthanasia is clearly a deliberate and intentional aspect of a killing. Taking a human life, even with subtle rites and consent of the party involved is b
2、arbaric. No one can justly kill another human being. Just as it is wrong for a serial killer to murder, it is wrong for a physician to do so as well, no matter what the motive for doing so may be.Many thinkers, including almost all orthodox Catholics, believe that euthanasia is immoral. They oppose
3、killing patients in any circumstances whatever. However, they think it is all right, in some special circumstances, to allow patients to die by withholding treatment. The American Medical Associations policy statement on mercy killing supports this traditional view. In my paper “Active and Passive E
4、uthanasia“ I argue, against the traditional view, that there is in fact no normal difference between killing and letting dieif one is permissible, then so is the other.Professor Sullivan does not dispute my argument; instead he dismisses it as irrelevant. The traditional doctrine, he says, does not
5、appeal to or depend on the distinction between killing and letting die. Therefore, arguments against that distinction “leave the traditional position untouched“.Is my argument really irrelevant? I dont see how it can be. As Sullivan himself points out, nearly everyone holds that it is sometimes mean
6、ingless to prolong the process of dying and that in those cases it is morally permissible to let a patient die even though a few more hours or days could be saved by procedures that would also increase the agonies of the dying. But if it is impossible to defend a general distinction between letting
7、people die and acting to terminate their lives directly, then it would seem that active euthanasia also may be morally permissible.But traditionalists like Professor Sullivan hold that active euthanasiathe direct killing of patientsis not morally permissible; so, if my argument is sound, their view
8、must be mistaken. I can not agree, then, that my argument “leave the traditional position untouched“.However, I shall not press this point. Instead I shall present some further arguments against the traditional position, concentrating on those elements of the position which professor Sullivan himsel
9、f thinks most important. According to him, what is important is, first, that we should never intentionally terminate the life of a patient, either by action or omission, and second, that we may cease or omit treatment of a patient, knowing that this will result in death, only if the means of treatme
10、nt involved are extraordinary.1 The authors purpose in writing this passage is _.(A)to air his opinions on Sullivans arguments.(B) to attack the traditional view on euthanasia.(C) to explain how his argument is much relevant.(D)to draw a line between killing and letting die.2 According to the author
11、, the views held by traditional orthodox Catholics on euthanasia is _.(A)rather confusing.(B) partially reasonable.(C) quite convincing.(D)totally groundless.3 Which of the following best defines the word “omission“ (Paragraph 6)?(A)Involvement.(B) Sympathy.(C) Suspension.(D)Dismissal.4 Which of the
12、 following is TRUE according to the passage?(A)Euthanasia is a term whose meanings are too subtle to be definite.(B) Sullivan contends that there is difference between killing and letting die.(C) Modern medicine has assisted terminally ill patients in painless recovery.(D)The author doesnt agree tha
13、t he left the traditional position untouched.5 It seems that the writer is most concerned about _.(A)the interpretations of euthanasia.(B) the sufferings of the dying.(C) the effects of medical treatments.(D)the traditional view on death.5 In almost all cases the soft parts of fossils are gone for e
14、ver but they were fitted around or within the hard parts. Many of them also were attached to the hard parts and usually such attachments are visible as depressed or elevated areas, ridges or grooves, smooth or rough patches on the hard parts. The muscles most important for the activities of the anim
15、al and most evident in the appearance of the living animal are those attached to the hard parts and possible to reconstruct from their attachments. Much can be learned about a vanished brain from the inside of the skull in which it was lodged.Restoration of the external appearance of an extinct anim
16、al has little or no scientific value. It does not even help in inferring what the activities of the living animal were, how fast it could run, what its food was, or such other conclusions as are important for the history of life. However, what most people want to know about extinct animals is what t
17、hey looked like when they were alive. Scientists also would like to know. Things like fossil shells present no great problem as a rule, because the hard parts are external when the animal is alive and the outer appearance is actually preserved in the fossils.Animals in which the skeleton is internal
18、 present great problems of restoration, and honest restorers admit that they often have to use considerable guessing. The general shape and contours of the body are fixed by the skeleton and by muscles attached to the skeleton, but surface features, which may give the animal its really characteristi
19、c look, are seldom restorable with any real probability of accuracy. The present often helps to interpret the past. An extinct animal presumably looked more or less like its living relatives, if it has any. This, however, may be quite equivocal. For example, extinct members of the horse family are u
20、sually restored to look somewhat like the most familiar living horses domestic horses and their closest wild relatives. It is, however, possible and even probable that many extinct horses were striped like zebras. If lions and tigers were extinct they would be restored to look exactly alike. No livi
21、ng elephants have much hair and mammoths, which are extinct elephants, would doubtless be restored as hairless if we did not happen to know that they had thick, woolly coats. We know this only because mammoths are so recently extinct that prehistoric men drew pictures of them and that the hide and h
22、air have actually been found in a few specimens. For older extinct animals we have no such clues.6 According to the passage, the soft part of fossilized animals(A)can always be accurately identified.(B) have usually left some traces.(C) can usually be reconstructed.(D)have always vanished without an
23、y trace. 7 The muscles of a fossilized animal can sometimes be reconstructed because(A)they were preserved with the present relatives of the animal.(B) they were lodged inside the animals skull.(C) they were hardened parts of the animals body.(D)they were attached to the animals skeleton. 8 A fossil
24、ized animals external appearance is still reconstructed to(A)satisfy popular curiosity.(B) answer scientific questions.(C) establish its activities.(D)determine its eating habits. 9 The word “equivocal” (Line 6, Para. 3) is closest in meaning to(A)equally important.(B) definable.(C) equally doubtful
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