[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷420及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 420 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 The quest for wisdom is as old as Socrates, but its also an up-to-the-minute economic indicator. A contrarian one: when things are going well, you dont
2、have to go searching for wisdom. It streams nonstop over CNBC, its avatars sit atop, the Forbes list of billionaires and each day it proves again the eternal truths of the free market. Then in due course things go to hell; the elites humbly confess their ignorance to Congress or a grand jury, and th
3、e search for new patterns begins.Tellingly, scholars date the modem scientific study of wisdom to the work of the American psychologist Vivian Clayton in the malaise-ridden 1970s. Clayton devised the first empirical tests for wisdom, which she defined as the ability to acquire knowledge and analyze
4、it both logically and emotionally-picking up on the work begun by Socrates.So its no coincidence that several dozen researchers in fields ranging from neuroscience to art, music and law have just received wisdom-seeking grants under the auspices of the University of Chicago. The $2.7 million program
5、, funded by the Templeton Foundation, is called Defining Wisdom, a name that implies the researchers will know what they were looking for once they find it. Wisdom, according to Robert J. Sternberg of Tufts University, the author of several books on the topic, is still an obscure field with minimal
6、academic cachet.With so much at stake, the programs directors, psychologists John Cacioppo and Howard Nusbaum, dismissed the traditional approach to wisdom research; rather they cast their nets wide and deep into the pools of academy. The 38 proposals they approved include ones aimed at finding wisd
7、om in computer operations and in classical literature. Starting at the beginning, one scholar observes that “language is the medium by which wisdom-related knowledge is usually conveyed.“ That sounds self-evident, but another scientist proposes to “explore music as a form of wisdom.“ “We are trying
8、to think out of the box,“ says Nusbaum.Cacioppo and Nusbaum dismiss arguments about the inherent circularity of searching for wisdom at the same time as defining it. But they have some preconceptions about what they expect to find. They see “wisdom“ in part as a corrective to the “rational choice“ p
9、attern of decision making, the foundation of free-market economics. Rational choice holds that everyones happiness is best served when people maximize their short-term individual gains, even at the expense of the broad interests of society or the long-term future. That is precisely opposite the appr
10、oach of, for example, ants, which are entirely indifferent to their individual fates and dont, as a rule, over-expand out of reckless greed.1 #NAME?(A)The quest for wisdom is an old-fashioned economic indicator.(B) When things proceed smoothly, people dont need to go searching for wisdom.(C) Billion
11、aires listed on the Forbes are demonstrating the profits of free market.(D)In the long run, all the wealthiest individuals will confess their ignorance. 2 Which of the following is true of Vivian Clayton?(A)Scholars considered her work as the start of modern scientific study of wisdom.(B) She was on
12、e of the greatest American psychologists born in the 1970s.(C) She designed empirical tests for wisdom without defining its concept.(D)She achieved more in the work of questing for wisdom than Socrates. 3 Robert J. Sternberg of Tufts University suggests that(A)defining wisdom requires joint efforts
13、of different fields.(B) research on wisdom still lacks academic achievements.(C) wisdom can only be explained with interdisciplinary supports.(D)researchers have to rely on grants for scientific study.4 The sentence “We are trying to think out of the box“(lines 6-7, Paragraph 4)suggests that(A)they
14、will try to find wisdom out of the box.(B) they will probe deep into the pools of academy.(C) they will break away from the conventions.(D)they will pursue their traditional approach.5 According to the text, “rational choice“ holds that(A)decision making is not linked with wisdom in a sense.(B) happ
15、iness relies on short-term individual gains.(C) individual happiness harms the broad interests of society.(D)individual fates change with reckless greed.5 Apart from a new football stadium and some smart university buildings, most of Middlesbrough looks as though it came to a dead halt in the 1980s.
16、 It boomed on steel and chemicals after iron ore was discovered in 1850. Just over a century later, as Britains traditional industries failed, it seemed to have reached the end of the road. Now government leaders hope that splendor and glamour can revive it.The most startling sign of this improbable
17、 ambition is an expensive art gallery. The 19.2 million Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art(MIMA)houses the local councils collection of modern British paintings and ceramics. It opens on January 28th with works on loan for the occasion by artists rarely seen in the regionPicasso, Matisse, Jackson
18、 Pollockalongside pictures by contemporary names such as Chris Ofili and Damien Hirst.The glass-fronted modernist gallery, by Dutch architect Erick van Egeraat, sits on once-ruined land opposite the Victorian town hall and 1960s council buildings. The landscaped space in between has become a vast ne
19、w square. “Middlesbrough lost its heart years ago,“ says Ray Mallon, the towns frank elected mayor. “Now we have created a new heart.“Locals are dubious. It looks nice, but they cant see many people going to it; those who want culture go to Newcastle. Mr. Mallon is not worried by such comments. He s
20、ays MIMA will lure some of the 7 million people who live within an hour and a halfs drive from the town, and persuade them to spend money there. With 5% of the towns 137,600 residents claiming unemploymenttwice the national averageand business registrations at half the national rate, outside money i
21、s needed.Using art for regeneration is a well-tried process, especially in northern England. Liverpools Tate North gallery and Salfords Lowry Centre succeed because they are part of bigger attractions and in big cities. But Gatesheads Baltic Mills art gallery and Sunderlands National Glass Centre ha
22、ve struggled to draw visitors, and both have needed extra subsidies. Godfrey Worsdale, MIMAs director, reckons he will achieve his aim of 110,000 visitors a year. Galleries that run into trouble, he says, tend to have single themes with niche appeal Still, since 96% of MIMAs cost has come from publi
23、c funds and as two-thirds of the 1 million running cost will fall on local taxpayers, the council is taking a risk. “It is not going to be profitable,“ says Mr. Mallon bravely. “What it can do is make the town profitable.“6 According to the first two paragraphs, the “improbable ambition“(Line 1, Par
24、agraph 2)is(A)to make Middlesbrough boom on steel and chemicals again.(B) to revive the traditional industries in Middlesbrough.(C) to revive Middlesbrough with glitz and glamour.(D)to build an expensive gallery in Middlesbrough.7 By saying “Middlesbrough lost its heart years ago“(Line 3, Paragraph
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