[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷290及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 290 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 All men are created equal, or so reckoned Thomas Jefferson as he drafted Americas Declaration of Independence in 1776. Subsequent Americans have had rea
2、son to question the founding father. So too have people in the land from which the new nation gained its freedom. America and Britain are among the most unequal countries in the rich world and Britain, at any rate, is more unequal now than it was a generation ago. That is the conclusion of a study c
3、ommissioned by Harriet Harman, the equalities minister.Class and money have always strongly affected how people do in life in Britain, with well-heeled families breeding affluent children just as the offspring of the desperately poor tend to remain poor. All that was supposed to have ceased at the e
4、nd of the Second World War, with the birth of a welfare state designed to meet basic needs and promote social mobility. But despite devoting much thought and more money to improving the lot of the poor, governments have failed to boost those at the bottom of the pile as much as those at the top have
5、 boosted themselves.The new study, led by John Hills of the London School of Economics, found, for example, that the richest tenth of households received income more than four times that of the poorest tenth; just a generation ago, it was three times as much. Internationally, only six of the 30 memb
6、ers of the OECD, a club of mainly rich countries, show greater inequality. Wealth is distributed far more unequally than income, with the richest tenth in Britain holding assets worth almost 100 times those of the poorest.Although the study found that some of the widest gaps between social groups ha
7、ve diminished over time, deep-seated differences between haves and have-nots persist, ruining the life chances of the less fortunate. Politicians of all stripes talk up equality of opportunity, arguing that it makes for a fairer and more mobile society, and a more prosperous one. The goal of greater
8、 equality of outcomes also has its boosters. In “The Spirit Level“, epidemic disease experts Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkinson claim that more equal societies are healthier than unequal ones, as well as happier. Not all agree, but in a country where the National Health Service accounts for almost a
9、 fifth of public spending, it is worth considering.The difficulty arises in putting these notions into practice, through severe tax increases for the middleclass and wealthy, or expanding government intervention. These have not recently been vote-winning propositions, but the recession that Britain
10、is now limping away from may have changed things.1 According to Harriet Harman, in Britain,(A)inequality has disappeared.(B) the rich-poor gap has narrowed.(C) various social inequalities spring up.(D)the unequal situation has worsened.2 Which of the following is true according to Paragraph 2?(A)Cla
11、ss and money determine everything in Britain.(B) Gap between poor and rich remains after World War II.(C) Basic needs are met in Britain thanks to the welfare policy.(D)The British government makes few efforts to help the poor.3 John Hills study has found that(A)the richest receive income four times
12、 more than the poorest.(B) Britain is an OECD member with the highest rate of inequality.(C) wealth distribution is more unequal than income distribution.(D)most gaps between social groups have disappeared over time.4 It is indicated in Paragraph 4 that British politicians(A)only indulge in empty ta
13、lks.(B) advocate fairer opportunities.(C) boost the equality of outcomes.(D)ignore the real need of the poor.5 Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkinson hold that fairer countries(A)enjoy a higher level of well-being.(B) are often more mobile and prosperous.(C) feature stronger government intervention.(D)c
14、an be realized by severe tax increases.5 On 26 March, the Italian Senate approved a bill that would give physicians in the country the right to override the living wills of people who are in a persistent vegetative state, and to try to keep the patients alive through artificial nutrition. The measur
15、e has caused intense controversy. Many countries have laws, or established codes of medical practice, that protect the expressed wishes of an individual to decline treatment if they become severely incapacitated and incapable of communicating. In most US states, for example, a doctor must negotiate
16、with relatives via an ethics committee if he or she believes that a patient incapacitated in this way could benefit from additional treatment. The Italian bill, however, explicitly allows physicians to overrule such living wills. It also declares that artificial nutrition is not a clinical intervent
17、ion.Curiously, the proposed law applies only to patients in the type of prolonged, deep coma known as a persistent vegetative state, and not to those with other, similarly incapacitating illnesses. This is because the bill has been prompted by the recent and much-publicized death of Eluana Englaro,
18、who spent 17 years in a vegetative state after a car accident at the age of 21. Her father, arguing that his daughter had voiced a desire to be allowed to die if incapacitated, had pressed her reluctant doctors to cease artificial feeding. He eventually took legal action, winning in one court after
19、the next in fighting off all the doctors appeals. In February, he finally had her moved to a hospital that was prepared to remove the feeding tube. Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi issued an emergency decree to block the process, but the Italian president refused to sign it. The constitutional crisi
20、s was averted when Englaro died on 9 February.Surveys have indicated that a large majority of Italians do not support the idea that living wills could be ignored But most relevant scientific societies have been quiet The Federation of Italian Physicians published only a mild statement, after the Sen
21、ate vote, suggesting that it should have been consulted.As tragic as Englaros situation was, media-fuelled emotion is not a good basis for lawmaking. The Italian constitution says that no one can be forced to undergo medical treatment without his or her approval. The Italian parliament must now ensu
22、re that the bill is imbued with a suitable level of scientific and legal sophistication, and that it meets this constitutional provision. Discussion needs to embrace the requested wider consultation with the medical community and provisions should be made for care-givers conscientious objection. But
23、 a physician whose conscience precludes his or her personally removing a feeding tube should not have the last say in the life or death of a patient whose wishes are clearly stated.6 The word “override“(Line 2, Paragraph 1)most probably means(A)protect.(B) scorn.(C) ignore.(D)respect.7 In Paragraph
24、2, US states are cited as an example to show that(A)the expressed wishes of an individual are protected by laws or codes of medical practice.(B) a doctor must discuss with relatives of the patient when providing additional treatment.(C) a doctor has the right to let the patient who declines treatmen
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