中国科学院2009年秋季博士研究生入学考试部分试题及答案.doc
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1、如有侵权,请联系网站删除,仅供学习与交流中国科学院2009年秋季博士研究生入学考试部分试题及答案【精品文档】第 8 页中国科学院2009年秋季博士研究生入学考试部分试题及答案完型填空原文26. Attitudes of respect, modesty and fair play can grow only out of slowly acquired skills that parents teach their children over many years through shared experience and memory. If a child reaches adulthoo
2、d with recollections only of television, Little League and birthday parties, then that child has little to draw on when a true test of character comes upsay, in a prickly business situation. “Unless that child feels grounded in who he is and where he comes from, everything else is an act,” says etiq
3、uette expert Betty Jo Trakimas.27. The Dickmeyers of Carmel. Ind., reserve every Friday night as “family night” with their three children. Often the family plays board games or hide-and-seek. “My children love it,” says Theresa, their mother.28. Can playing hide-and-seek really teach a child about m
4、anners? Yes, say Trakimas and others, because it tells children that their parents care enough to spend time with him, he is loved and can learn to love others. “Manners arent about using the right fork, agrees etiquette instructor Patricia Gilbert-Hinz. “Manners are about being kindgiving complimen
5、ts, team-playing, making sacrifices. Children learn that through their parents.”29. While children dont automatically warm to the idea of learning to be polite, theres no reason for them to see manners as a bunch of stuffy restrictions either. Theyre the building blocks of a childs education. “Once
6、a rule becomes second nature, it frees us,” Mitchell says. “How well could Michael Jordan play basketball if he had to keep reminding himself of the rules?”30. Judith Martin concurs. “A polite child grows up to get the friends and the dates and the job interviews,” she says, “because people respond
7、to good manners. Its the language of all human behavior.”英语6选5第一篇原文natural architecture - an emerging art movement that is exploring mankinds.The natural environment still manages to fill us with a sense of awe and amazement. Despite the amount of scientific knowledge mankind has gathered, nature st
8、ill holds great mysteries that we may never be able to unravel. This complexity has continually daunted man. In frustration, we try to control nature by enforcing order. As a result, we have distanced ourselves from the earth, even though our survival is completely dependent on it. We are now trying
9、 to regain our close connection to nature.There is an emerging art movement that is exploring mankinds desire to reconnect to the earth, through the built environment. Referred to as natural architecture, it aims to create a new, more harmonious, relationship between man and nature by exploring what
10、 it means to design with nature in mind. The roots of this movement can be found in earlier artistic shifts like the land art movement of the late nineteen sixties. Although this movement was focused on protesting the austerity of the gallery and the commercialization of art, it managed to expand th
11、e formal link between art and nature. This has helped develop a new appreciation of nature in all forms of art and design. The natural architecture movement aims to expand on land art by acting as a form of activism rather than protest. This new form of art aims to capture the harmonious connection
12、we seek with nature by merging humanity and nature through architecture. The core concept of the movement is that mankind can live harmoniously with nature, using it for our needs while respecting its importance. The movement is characterized by the work of a number of artists, designers and archite
13、cts that express these principles in their work. the pieces are simple, humble and built using the most basic materials and skills. because of this, the results often resemble indigenous architecture, reflecting the desire to return to a less technological world. The forms are stripped down to their
14、 essence, expressing the natural beauty inherent in the materials and location. The movement has many forms of expression that range from location-based interventions to structures built from living materials. However all of the works in the movement share a central ethos that demonstrates a respect
15、 and appreciation for nature.These works are meant to comment on architecture and provide a new framework to approach buildings and structures. They aim to infuse new ideas into architecture by subverting the idea that architecture should shelter nature. Instead, the structures deliberately expose t
16、he natural materials used in the building process. We see the branches, the rocks and all the materials for what they are. We understand that these structures wont exist forever. The materials will evolve over time, slowly decomposing until no evidence remains. These features are intentional, provok
17、ing viewers to question the conventions of architecture. The designers arent suggesting that architecture must conform to their vision, they are just providing ideas that they hope will inspire us all to rethink the relationship between nature and the built environment.Hypocritical oaths of private
18、hospitals Jeffrey | Dec 5, 05 12:10pm Eighteen-year-old Khairul Anuar Salim, who was attacked by hoodlums, succumbed to his wounds because, according to his uncle, a private hospital in Cheras insisted on “Money first then treatment”. That is because the bottom line of private hospitals is profit. T
19、hey have no intention to treat those who cannot afford to pay. They feel that the government should bear the responsibility for health care of ordinary folks who cannot afford or are unwilling to pay.That is also why they do not release the deceaseds body until they secure payment from the next of k
20、in never mind that the latter are under stress and grieving. In this, they are acting like the banks except that instead of using properties or shares as collateral for payment, they use the dead persons body. Doctors have taken their Hippocratic oath to uphold the special value of human life above
21、personal profit, to use their medical knowledge to ameliorate suffering and pain and in emergencies, do the best for anyone in medical need regardless of their financial means. It is sad that more often than not the Hippocratic oath has become the hypocritical oath in the case of doctors in the priv
22、ate hospitals. Many join the private hospitals to make money. By itself, there is nothing wrong in making money except that it is difficult to balance the irreconcilable conflict, which must invariably exist, between the imperatives of profit and those of compassion and care of the Hippocratic Oath.
23、 Administrative staff merely carry out the private hospitals policies on charges and billings including “No money no treatment” or “No money no body” laid down from above by their directors who may not all be physicians and, if public-listed, have to further account to faceless shareholders to whom
24、profits and share prices should go up for every successive financial year. Hence patients may be required to pay RM10 for toilet rolls, not to mention thousands of ringgit for surgery or stay in a deluxe room for convalescence. Fast registration, four-star private rooms for recuperation, televisions
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