[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷185及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 185 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 AThe Davos crowd is stunned by this turn of events. The recent highprofile layoff announcements in the global car industry only added to the grim realiz
2、ation. Of course, the hollowing out of manufacturing in the industrial world has been underway for more than 30 years. But in a year when the World Economic Forum is celebrating the emergence of China and India, their impacts on the global labor market are hitting home as never before. After all, if
3、 India is to services as China is to manufacturing, what does the future hold for high-wage workers in the developed world?BThe toughest part of this story is that there may be no easy way out. Thats because the Internet has changed the rules of engagement for globalization. It has revolutionized th
4、e logistics of supply-chain management, accelerating the diffusion of global manufacturing and making possible offshore outsourcing in once nontradable industries. The globalization of information services is migrating quickly up the value chain, from its start in call centers and data processing fi
5、ve years ago to software programming, design, medicine, accounting and other professions.CThis is a big shift, but not surprising. One of the“wins“in the win-win of globalization has failed to materialize. Job creation and real wages in the mature, industrial nations have seriously lagged behind his
6、torical norms. It is now common for economic recoveries to be either jobless or wagelessor both. That this has occurred in the midst of accelerating globalization is all the more disconcerting.DThe speed of this transformation turns the win-win models of globalization inside out. For generations we
7、harbored the belief that while painful, it was also understandable for rich countries to lose market share in manufacturing activities. This was never viewed as a serious threat because the developed world was blessed with a growing profusion of highly educated knowledge workers employed in nontrada
8、ble service industries. Rich countries would be able to buy cheaper things from poor countries, thereby expanding the purchasing power of an increasingly knowledge-based work force. And as producers in the developing world turned into consumers, these new markets would provide nothing but opportunit
9、y for the industrial world.EIt was one thing for this to happen to the structurally impaired economies of Europe and Japan. But now it is occurring in the worlds most flexible economythe United States. Gains in U. S. worker compensationby far the biggest component of overall personal incomehave lagg
10、ed while productivity growth has soared. As several Davos panelists stressed, this defies a basic premise of economicsthat labor is always paid in accord with its productivity. Yet over the first 48 months of the current expansion, private-sector compensation in the United States has increased only
11、12 percent in inflation-adjusted terms. By contrast, over comparable periods of the past four business cycles, real gains in private compensation averaged 20%.FThose hopes have now been dashed. Yet I dont believe that global leaders would be so foolish as to repeat the all-out tariff battles that le
12、d to the Great Depression. The more likely danger is that a growing distrust of the Indias and Chinas will lead industrial nations to squander the greatest opportunities of globalization. For example, any U. S. move to discourage trade with China would amount to a cut in American consumer purchasing
13、 power, by redirecting trade to higher-cost trade partners, like Mexico.GThe world economic forum in Davos is the cradle of the modern globalization paradigm: the“win-win“proposition that the development of poor countries is a huge plus for rich countries. This consensus has often been challenged by
14、 street protests at Davos, and the summit has often worried itself over the impact of globalization on poor economies. But this time was different. Tough questions were raised about the assumed benefits of globalization for rich economies.Order:5 AHe also empathized with Mozarts ability to continue
15、to compose magnificent music even in very difficult and impoverished conditions. In 1905, the year he discovered relativity, Einstein was living in a cramped apartment and dealing with a difficult marriage and money troubles. That spring he wrote four papers that were destined to change the course o
16、f science and nations. His ideas on space and time grew in part from aesthetic discontent. It seemed to him that asymmetries in physics concealed essential beauties of nature; existing theories lacked the“architecture“and“inner unity“ he found in the music of Bach and Mozart.BFrom 1902 to 1909, Eins
17、tein was working six days a week at a Swiss patent office and doing physics research in his spare time. But he was also nourished by music, particularly Mozart. And just as Mozarts antics shocked his contemporaries, Einstein pursued a notably Bohemian life in his youth. His studied indifference to d
18、ress and mane of dark hair, along with his love of music and philosophy, made him seem more poet than scientist. He played the violin with passion and often performed at musical evenings.CAs a boy Einstein did poorly in school. Music was an outlet for his emotions. At 5, he began violin lessons but
19、soon found the drills so trying that he threw a chair at his teacher, who ran out of the house in tears. At 13, he discovered Mozarts sonatas. The result was an almost mystical connection, said Hans Byland, a friend of Einsteins from high school. “When his violin began to sing, “Mr. Byland told the
20、biographer Carl Seelig, “the walls of the room seemed to recedefor the first time, Mozart in all his purity appeared before me, bathed in Hellenic beauty with its pure lines, roguishly playful, mightily sublime. “DIn his struggles with extremely complicated mathematics that led to the general theory
21、 of relativity of 1915, Einstein often turned for inspiration to the simple beauty of Mozarts music. “Whenever he felt that he had come to the end of the road or into a difficult situation in his work, he would take refuge in music, “recalled his older son, Hans Albert. “That would usually resolve a
22、ll his difficulties. “In the end, Einstein felt that in his own field he had, like Mozart, succeeded in unraveling the complexity of the universe.EEinstein once said that while Beethoven created his music, Mozarts “was so pure that it seemed to have been ever-present in the universe, waiting to be d
23、iscovered by the master. “Einstein believed much the same of physics, that beyond observations and theory lay the music of the sphereswhich, he wrote, revealed a “ pre-established harmony“ exhibiting stunning symmetries. The laws of nature, such as those of relativity theory, were waiting to be pluc
24、ked out of the cosmos by someone with a sympathetic ear. Thus it was less laborious calculation, but “pure thought “to which Einstein attributed his theories. Einstein was fascinated by Mozart and sensed an affinity between their creative processes, as well as their histories.FLast year, the 100th a
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