[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷73及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 73 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 Everyone will be familiar with the frustration of losing a favourite book. But losing an entire library is another thing altogether. Martin Bekkelund, a
2、Norwegian technology writer, recently blogged about a woman whose e-reader had been wiped by Amazon because it claimed her account was linked to a previously blocked account. Her books were unreadable and no refund was offered. Though it now appears that the womans e-books have since been restored,
3、this incident is hardly a first. In 2009, a copyright problem led to Amazon remotely deleting copies of Animal Farm and 1984, two books by George Orwell, from thousands of Kindles.It may come as a surprise that this sort of thing is even possible. After all, a high-street bookseller would not sponta
4、neously remove paperbacks from a customers home, whatever infractions they may have committed. But, unlike with paper books, customers do not actually “own“ the e-books they buy. Instead, they are licensed to the purchaser. Customers cannot resell them and there are restrictions on lending them. The
5、 transaction is more like renting access to a book than owning one altogether. Plus, e-book sellers have the capability to take them back without warning.The furious backlash against Amazons Orwell deletions in 2009 suggests that many customers do not realise this distinction. Yet this lack of aware
6、ness of the legal terms-of-use is largely the fault of the e-book sellers. Their websites talk of “buying“ books as if the digital transaction is exactly the same as one in a bookshop. And the explanation that customers are, in effect, merely “renting“ their e-books is buried in long, jargon-filled
7、license agreements that almost nobody reads.Why are e-book buyers faced with this encumbrance? A likely reason is that publishing digital editions opens up a new form of vulnerability to the business. At the moment, people typically share or resell their books in moderation. And they keep them shelv
8、ed neatly in a sitting room, in order to have information at their fingertips and to serve as a discreet testimony to ones characteror perhaps a form of self-congratulation to ones vanity. All of this is lost with e-books: they dont suffer from wear and tear, can be transferred at the speed of light
9、 and a digital copy may seem less valuable than a tangible one. Booksellers and publishers might reasonably fear that the sale of a single e-book could result in it being shared or resold many times over, denying the author and publisher income from their product. The threat of illegal copying must
10、be taken into account too.In this view, publishers and booksellers have an interest in licensing e-books and retaining control o-ver their distribution and secondary uses. After all, e-books are a new format and a different product. If the business model needs to change, why shouldnt the terms-of-us
11、e and legal rights associated with the product change as well? But, if this is the case, there should be transparency for the customer too.1 We may learn from Paragraph 1 that in the digital era_.(A)losing a whole library of books is less likely to happen(B) conflicts between booksellers and buyers
12、become common(C) booksellers may randomly take away books from users(D)readers could regain the books they lost easily2 According to the author, the incidents of e-book removal are rooted in_.(A)sellers lack of professional ethics(B) buyers abandonment of user right(C) buyers conduction of improper
13、practices(D)sellers retaining of books ownership3 Paragraph 3 mainly shows that the terms-of-use of e-book sellers are_.(A)anger-provoking(B) legally invalid(C) technically erroneous(D)overworded4 The comparison between printed books and e-books in Paragraph 4 is used to show that_.(A)printed books
14、have advantage in cultivating character(B) e-books can be transferred among readers easily(C) printed books are more convenient to use(D)e-books are of better durability5 The authors attitude towards e-book sellers can be described as_.(A)fundamentally critical(B) unreservedly supportive(C) chiefly
15、understanding(D)profoundly worried5 From The Tipping Point to Nudge, the rise of pop-social science has been a noticeable feature of the past decade in publishing. Not everyone is impressed. A professor of education who is an expert in policy evaluation lamented the fact that politicians tend to get
16、 their facts from popular social science books containing inaccuracies.I think the professor was right to worry about ministerial exposure to authors such as Malcolm Glad-well and Dan Ariely and even Tim Harford but not for quite the right reasons. The problem is not that such authors are inaccurate
17、. Gladwell has plenty of critics, but I find him a careful reporter. And I am told Tim Harford is all but infallible.Yet infallibility is not enough. Its perfectly possible for an author to do nothing but weave together credible, peer-reviewed research and yet produce a highly partial view of realit
18、y. Different pieces of research invariably point in different directions. Dan Arielys Predictably Irrational is full of examples of irrational behaviour. My own Logic of Life is full of examples of rational behaviour.If Ariely describes a rainy day and I describe a sunny one, we are not really contr
19、adicting each other. We each offer our spin, but its really about whether most people expect sunshine or rain: Dan says that its rainier than we tend to think, while I say the sun shines more often than anyone would credit. A serious review of this metaphorical evidence would count up the rainy days
20、 and the sunny ones.For real policy questions, such reviews exist. They are called systemic reviews. They should be the first port of call for anyone wanting to understand what works. But they are not exactly bestsellers in airport bookshops.Quite apart from the fact that nobody wants to read all th
21、e evidence, there is a deep problem with the way evidence is selected throughout academia. Even a studiously impartial literature review will be biased towards published results. Many findings are never published because they just arent very intriguing. Alas, boring or disappointing evidence is stil
22、l evidence. It is dangerous to discard it.The systemic review tries to track down unpublished research as well as what makes it into the journals. A less careful review will often be biased towards results that are interesting. A peer-reviewed article presents a single result, while a popular social
23、-science book will highlight a series of results that tell a tale. The final selection mechanism is the reader, who will half remember some findings and forget the rest.Those of us who tell ourselves we are curious about the world are actually swimming in “evidence“ that has been filtered again and
24、again in favour of interestingness. Its a heady and perhaps toxic drink, but we shouldnt blame popularisers alone for our choice to dive in.6 The author might agree to the statement that_.(A)publishers should produce less social science books(B) social science writers should enhance their accuracy(C
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