[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷72及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 72 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 A recent Woody Allen movie Midnight in Paris delivers a slightly changed version of a famous William Faulkner quotation. Faulkner himself would likely ha
2、ve been pleased. But his estate sued, arguing, absurdly, that using the quote was a copyright violation. Also last week, the Supreme Court heard a copyright case that could make it illegal to resell books, even household objects without the permission of the manufacturer.Copyright has been getting o
3、ut of control for some time, but the Faulkner lawsuit and the Supreme Court case show just how bad things are getting. If the Courts and Congress do not put a halt to this expansion, copyright owners will be able to lock up more and more intellectual property.The nations founders put protection of c
4、opyright in the Constitution because they rightly saw it as a way to encourage artists and scientists to create. Samuel Johnson may have been overstating things when he said “No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money. “ But ensuring that authors are decently paid for their work certainly en
5、courages them to create.The trouble is, copyright owners have gotten far too assertive about promoting their rights. The Faulkner estates suit is an example of copyright holders increasing willingness to sue over even minor uses of their work. Copyright law allows for “fair use“ it allows people to
6、use parts of copyrighted books under certain circumstances, including when the amount of the work used is not excessive and it is being put to a creative or scholarly use. The Woody Allen quote should clearly be protected as fair use. If it is not, artists will have to be much more careful when they
7、 make even glancing references to the work of other artists. That would be troubling because much art builds on what came before it. Faulkner did this as much as anyone.The case the Supreme Court heard last week poses a challenge to the “first sale“ doctrine, which lets people who buy copyrighted it
8、ems to resell them as they wish. The publisher John Wiley explanations for beliefs follow. 1 call this process, wherein our perceptions about reality are dependent on the beliefs that we hold about it, belief-dependent realism. Reality exists independent of human minds, but our understanding of it d
9、epends on the beliefs we hold at any given time.I patterned belief-dependent realism after model-dependent realism, presented by physicists Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow in their book The Grand Design. There they argue that because no one model is adequate to explain reality, “one cannot be s
10、aid to be more real than the other. “ When these models are coupled to theories, they form entire worldviews.Once we form beliefs and make commitments to them, we maintain and reinforce them through a number of powerful cognitive biases that distort our percepts to fit belief concepts. On the top of
11、 all these biases, there is the in-group bias, in which we place more value on the beliefs of those whom we perceive to be fellow members of our group and less on the beliefs of those from different groups. This is a result of our evolved tribal brains leading us not only to place such value judgmen
12、t on beliefs but also to dismiss them as nonsense or evil, or both.Belief-dependent realism is driven even deeper by a meta-bias called the bias blind spot, or the tendency to recognize the power of cognitive biases in other people but to be blind to their influence on our own beliefs. Even scientis
13、ts are not immune, subject to experimenter-expectation bias, or the tendency for observers to select and publish data that agree with their expectations for the outcome of an experiment and to disbelieve data that do not.This dependency on belief and its host of psychological biases is why, in scien
14、ce, we have built-in self-correcting machinery. Strict double-blind controls are required, in which neither the subjects nor the experimenters know the conditions during data collection. Collaboration with colleagues is vital. Results are vetted at conferences and in peer-reviewed journals. Research
15、 is replicated in other laboratories. Dis-confirming evidence and contradictory interpretations of data are included in the analysis. If you dont seek data and arguments against your theory, someone else will, usually with great glee and in a public forum. This is why skepticism is a sine qua non of
16、 science, the only escape we have from the belief-dependent realism trap created by our believing brains.6 The author uses his own practices to show that our beliefs are often_.(A)prejudiced(B) false(C) irrational(D)changeable7 In the authors view, reality is the combination of_.(A)culturally-depend
17、ent beliefs(B) objective facts(C) explainable beliefs(D)convincing intellectual arguments8 We tend to accept beliefs that_.(A)are consistent with our cultural values(B) strike us as foreign and novel(C) come from our own work groups(D)are powerful but biased9 The bias blind spot can prompt a scienti
18、st to_.(A)overemphasize the value of experiments(B) refuse to accept the failure of his experiments(C) discard some valuable data(D)disbelieve data collected by others10 II can be inferred from the last paragraph that the self-correcting process in science requires_.(A)strict controls(B) individual
19、wisdom(C) persistent innovation(D)shared efforts10 How has the internet changed the role of record companies? To many, it seemed the digital world would render record labels obsolete. However, a new report suggests that far from marginalizing labels, the internet has actually made them more importan
20、t. The core business of record companies is investing in artists in order to break them to large audiences. The report shows that, although the nature of the investment is fast-evolving, the backing of record companies is as vital to the careers of artists as it ever was.How have labels stayed not j
21、ust relevant but essential in the DIY age? First, they have refused to compromise on their core missiondeveloping new acts. Investment in artists and repertoire has defied a declining world market. Second, the role filled by record companies is skilled, costly and one which no other sector is prepar
22、ed to play.Another reason is that artists may have the tools to record, publish and distribute their own work, but they still want record labels as partners to support their professional careers.()f course the exact shape of the “deal“ is evolving. Larger advances to new signings are harder to find,
23、 but at the same time labels have adapted their services to new areas such as brand partnerships where they share revenues with artists.One of the most significant trends highlighted in the report is the shift from mass media advertising to consumer-focused, digital-led marketing. Gone are the days
24、when marketing campaigns were only a-bout TV and print advertising. Labels today give artists the tools and support they need to develop deeper and more engaging relationships with their fans.Finally, record companies have also reinvented their relationship with their consumers. Having long fought w
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