[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷172及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 172 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)0 Beyond the basic animal instincts to seek food and avoid pain, Freud identified two sources of psychic energy, which he called “drives“: aggression and
2、libido. The key to his theory is that these were unconscious drives, shaping our behavior without the mediation of our waking minds; they surface, heavily disguised, only in our dreams. The work of the past half-century in psychology and neuroscience has been to downplay the role of unconscious univ
3、ersal drives, focusing instead on rational processes in conscious life. But researchers have found evidence that Freuds drives really do exist, and they have their roots in the limbic system, a primitive part of the brain that operates mostly below the horizon of consciousness. Now more commonly ref
4、erred to as emotions, the modern suite of drives comprises five: rage, panic, separation distress, lust and a variation on libido sometimes called seeking.The seeking drive is proving a particularly fruitful subject for researchers. Although like the others it originates in the limbic system, it als
5、o involves parts of the forebrain, the seat of higher mental functions. In the 1980s, Jaak Panksepp, a neurobiologist at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, became interested in a place near the cortex known as the ventral tegmental area, which in humans lies just above the hairline. When Pankse
6、pp stimulated the corresponding region in a mouse, the animal would sniff the air and walk around, as though it were looking for something. Was it hungry? No. The mouse would walk right by a plate of food, or for that matter any other object Panksepp could think of. This brain tissue seemed to cause
7、 a general desire for something new. “What I was seeing,“ he says, “was the urge to do stuff. “ Panksepp called this seeking.To neuropsychologist Mark Solms of University College in London, that sounds very much like libido. “Freud needed some sort of general, appetitive desire to seek pleasure in t
8、he world of objects,“ says Solms. “Panksepp discovered as a neuroscientist what Freud discovered psychologically. “ Solms studied the same region of the brain for his work on dreams. Since the 1970s, neurologists have known that dreaming takes place during a particular form of sleep known as REMrapi
9、d eye movementwhich is associated with a primitive part of the brain known as the pons. Accordingly, they regarded dreaming as a low-level phenomenon of no great psychological interest. When Solms looked into it, though, it turned out that the key structure involved in dreaming was actually the vent
10、ral tegmental, the same structure that Panksepp had identified as the seat of the “seeking“ emotion. Dreams, it seemed, originate with the libidowhich is just what Freud had believed.Freuds psychological map may have been flawed in many ways, but it also happens to be the most coherent and, from the
11、 standpoint of individual experience, meaningful theory of the mind. “Freud should be placed in the same category as Darwin, who lived before the discovery of genes,“ says Panksepp. “Freud gave us a vision of a mental apparatus. We need to talk about it, develop it, test it. “ Perhaps its not a matt
12、er of proving Freud wrong or right, but of finishing the job.1 Freud believed that aggression and libido(A)were the only two sources of psychic energy.(B) could sometimes surface in our conscious life.(C) affected our behaviour unconsciously.(D)could appear clearly in our dreams.2 Which of the follo
13、wing terms is equivalent to what Freud called libido?(A)Emotion.(B) Lust.(C) Seeking.(D)Urge.3 Jaak Panksepps study on a mouse proves that the seeking drive(A)originates in the limbic system.(B) involves parts of the forebrain.(C) controls how we respond to stimulus.(D)exists in many other animals.4
14、 According to Mark Solms, dreaming(A)takes place during the whole sleeping period.(B) involves a primitive part of the brain known as the pons.(C) is closely related to the “seeking“ emotion.(D)starts at the same time as libido appears.5 It can be inferred that Freud and Darwin are similar in that t
15、heir theories(A)have long been discredited.(B) provide good guide for further research.(C) are placed in the same category.(D)are concerned about human being.5 Mention the word “multinational“, and most people think of borderless mobilityof companies at home everywhere and nowhere, moving huge quant
16、ities of men, money and materials around the globe in the restless pursuit of profit. Aurelio Peccei, a director of Fiat, once claimed that the multinational corporation was “the most powerful agent for the internationalization of society“. Carl Gerstacker, sometime chairman of Dow Chemicals, confes
17、sed that he had “long dreamed of buying an island owned by no nation and of establishing the world headquarters of the Dow company on the truly neutral ground of such an island, beholden to no nation or society“.Mention of the word “multinational“ also makes people think of global productsof consume
18、rs in Greenwich Village and some village in Bengal drinking identical soft drinks. Theodore Levitt, a marketing guru at Harvard Business School, once argued that companies no longer need to be so “respectful“ of local quirks and peculiarities, and that global companies can sell the same thing in the
19、 same way anywhere.Multinationals should beware of following Mr. Levitt down this path. After a brief flirtation with globalization, companies such as Nestle and Unilever now realize that their local managers represent an invaluable resource. General Electric has broken with its strict practice of d
20、ividing its operations into global product lines by setting up a regional headquarters in Asia. Even the most powerful global brand has had to bow before local differences. People in the south of Japan like their Coca-cola slightly sweeter than people in Tokyo, and the company obliges. PepsiCo was p
21、uzzled why one of its best-selling products, “7-Up“ remained on the shelves in Shanghai until it discovered that, in the local dialect, the phrase means “death through drinking“. Even those pillars of American Puritanism, IBM and Disney, have dropped their strict no-alcohol policy in France. Philips
22、 Morris has had to make local adjustments to its familiar advertising symbol, Marlboro man: In Hong Kong the advertisement focuses on the horse, because the man reminds locals of coolie, and in Argentina the man was dropped entirely for a while, because cowboys were regarded as low-class wasters. Co
23、mpanies are also learning to their cost that the apparent convergence between different cultures has not gone as far as they thought. EuroDisney failed to take off, among other things, because the company assumed that Micky Mouse and other cartoon characters would be familiar in Europe as they are i
24、n the U. S. , and did not invest nearly enough in promoting their product.6 By citing the example of Aurelio Peccei, the author intends to(A)prove “multinational“ means borderless mobility.(B) explain the role of multinational corporation in internationalization of society.(C) describe some peoples
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- 考研 试卷 英语 阅读 模拟 172 答案 解析 DOC
