2011年川大博士研究生入学考试 FjI1'Ah\
模考试题二 7*%}=.
考试注意事项 Q/J <$W*,
1. 本试题5大题,共10页,请考生注意检查,考试时间180分钟。 ;\f0II3
2. 1 – 70题答案请填在机读卡上相应处,否则不给分。 RH$l?j6
3. 翻译和作文写在答题纸上,写在试题上无效。中、英文翻译应做到字迹清晰、书写工整。 D(&Zq7]n
I. Reading Comprehension (30%; one mark each): rWqr-"0S.
Passage One ^jcVJpyT@R
The ancient ideal was characterized by balance, proportion, a sense of sane limits in human affairs----an ideal announced humbly enough by the Greek potter (molding his wares with careful symmetry and decorating them in a spare, linear fashion) but reverberating throughout society and literature. The two famous Greek proverbs “nothing in excess” and “know yourself” are both admonitions for the life of balance and limits. Aristotle made the first the keystone of his ethical system. The second, so closely associated with Socrates, was not a plea for psychoanalytic or Christian soul-searching: it meant instead that men must know their limits, particularly as mortals in relation to the divine, and be careful not to overstep them. What happened when men did overstep their limits was the favorite, indeed the definitive, subject of Greek tragedy. [g}0.J`_
With an appreciation of formal balance in art and life came the tendency to be superficial; and the Greeks would not have regarded this as a criticism. The idea of, in fact the obsession with, plumbing the depths of any experience belonged rather to Western European culture. The ancients appreciated the linear, the superficial, the immediate, and the tactile in mathematics, art, and ethics as well. Hence conscience played a relatively small role in ancient ethics: crimes against individuals or the state and impiety toward the gods were acts committed at a definite time and place; sins thought but not acted upon did not matter. Another aspect of the superficial was that the Greeks had comparatively little concern for history. The past did not weigh heavily upon them, as it did upon the men of Western Europe, for the ancient world itself had no ancient world against which to measure its achievements. Nor did the ancient man care to look far into the future, for there was nothing like the Christian concept of millennium or the secular notion of progress to direct his gaze. As Spengler put it, “The classical life exhausted itself in the completeness of the moment.” l)~$/#k
The limit of the ancient gaze was not only a temporal one. Most philosophers had no difficulty finding the physical limits of the universe: it was the sphere of the fixed stars, beyond which there was absolutely nothing. In social terms, a contentment with limited resources expressed itself in a steady-state economy and in a disinterest in technological innovation. The inventor at least had an honored, if not prominent, place in Greek mythology, but the explorer was a character type seldom found in ancient literature or ancient history. Odysseus was not really an explorer, but a wanderer, trying his best to get home, and Alexander the Great marched from Macedonia to India as a conqueror, not an explorer. The Greeks were gifted sailors and brazen enough to face the sea in small, wooden boats, yet they seldom ventured beyond the Pillars of Heracles. How complacent they seem when judged by the Western European standard.
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1. Why were explorers seldom found in ancient literature? *5 \'$;Rg
A.Because only inventors were held in people’s esteem in ancient time. =s*4y$%I
B.Because technological innovation was something impossible in ancient time. +VJyGbOcC
C.Because people’s perception of the universe was limited in ancient time. [jxh$}?P
D.Because wanderers were more welcome than explorers in ancient time. {lUaN0O:
2.Why did Spengler say “The classical life exhausted itself in the completeness of the moment”? hZ/p'
A.The classical life disappeared when the ancient world came to its end. jK%
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B.Past and future didn’t mean much to the ancients. pB]*cd B?
C.Society progressed slowly in ancient time. $Y\7E/T
D.The concept of millennium was strange to the ancients. 2
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3. That Greek tragedy always had as its theme the consequence of man’s overstepping their limits indicates _____. 0QW;=@)d
A.the ancients regarded overstepping their limits an unpardonable sin 6\v4#
B.the ancients believed in knowing their limits as mortals (/9 erfuJ
C.Socrates was greatly respected by the ancients I>6zX
D.the ancients were constantly examining their soul |Ho}
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4.What does the author imply in the last paragraph? *+00
A.Western Europeans are more adventurous than the ancient Greeks. +tG'
B.Ancient Greeks regarded the universe the sphere of the fixed stars. !/!Fc
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C.Inventors were honored in ancient Greece. L$"pk{'
D.There were few explorers in the real sense of the word in ancient Greece. ytV[x
5.What’s the main idea of the passage? ,w=u?
A.There are limitations to ancient Greek art and literature. lS!O(NzqE'
B.Greek standard and Western European standard are totally different. ^gY'^2bzxu
C.Aristotle and Socrates were the most influential figures in ancient Greece. 0,8RA_Ca}
D.The concepts of balance and limits dominated ancient Greek culture. *Uf>Xr&
Passage Two YM
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The Alaska pipeline starts at the frozen edge of the Arctic Ocean. It stretches southward across the largest and northern most state in the United States, ending at a remote ice-free seaport village nearly 800 miles from where it begins. It is massive in size and extremely operative. mgodvX
The steel pipe cresses windswept plains and endless miles of delicate tundra that tops the frozen ground. It weaves through crooked canyons, climbs sheer mountains, plunges over rocky crags, makes its way through thick forests, and passes over or under hundreds of rivers and streams. The pipe is 4 feet in diameter, and up to 2 million barrels of crude oil can be pumped through it daily. 6TXTJ]er
Resting on H-shaped steel racks called “bents”, long sections of the pipeline follow a zigzag course high above the frozen earth. Other long sections drop out of sight beneath spongy or rocky ground and return to the surface later on. The pattern of the pipeline’s up-and-down route is determined by the often harsh demands of the arctic and subarctic climate, the tortuous lay of the land, and the varied compositions of soil, rock, or permanently frozen ground. A little more than half of the pipeline is elevated above the ground. The remainder is buried anywhere from 3 to 12 feet, depending largely upon the type of terrain and the properties of the soil. Sw? EF8}[
One of the largest in the world, the pipeline cost approximately $ 8 billion and is by far the biggest and most expensive construction project ever undertaken by private industry. In fact, no single business could raise that much money, so 8 major oil companies formed a consortium in order to share the costs. Each company controlled oil rights to particular shares of land in the oil fields and paid into the pipeline-construction fund according to the size of its holdings. Today, despite enormous problems of climate, supply shortages, equipment breakdowns, labor disagreements, treacherous terrain, a certain amount of mismanagements and even theft the Alaska pipeline has been completed and is operating. 0bSnD|#I
6.The passage primarily discusses the pipeline’s _____. 6!;D],,"#.
A. operating costs B. employees ?N@[R];
C. consumers D. construction Ht]O:io`
7. The word “it” (Para. 1, sentence 3) refers to _____. _~}2@&*G"
A. pipeline B. ocean C. state D. village _NpxV'E
8. The author mentions all of the following as important in determining the pipeline’s route EXCEPT the ______. qG]0z_dPE~
A. climate B. lay of the land itself l|;]"&|_]c
C. local vegetation D. kind of soil and rock 7?);wh 7`
9. How many companies shared the costs of constructing the pipeline? !\^W *nQ>l
A. 3 B. 4 C.8 D. 12 O]j<