2023年福建专升本考试考试真题卷(1).docx
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1、2023年福建专升本考试考试真题卷(1)本卷共分为2大题50小题,作答时间为180分钟,总分100分,60分及格。一、单项选择题(共25题,每题2分。每题的备选项中,只有一个最符合题意) 1.It is hard to predict how science is going to turn out, and if it is really good science it is impossible to predict. If the things to be found are actually new, they are by definition un known in advance
2、. You either have science or you don’t, and if you have it you are obliged to accept the surprising and disturbing pieces of information, along with the neat and promptly used bits.The only solid piece of scientific truth about which I feel totally confident is that we are profoundly ignorant
3、about nature, l regard this as the major discovery of the past hundred years of biology. It would have amazed the brightest minds of the 18th century Enlightenment(启运动) to be told by any of us how little we know and how bewildering the way ahead seems. It is this sudden confrontation with the depth
4、and scope of ignorance that represents the most significant contribution of the 20th century science to the human intellect. In earlier times, we either pretended to understand how things worked or ignored the problems, or simply made up stories to fill the gaps. Now that we have begun exploring in
5、earnest, we are getting glimpses of how huge the questions are, and how far from being answered. Because of this, we are de pressed. It is not so bad being ignorant if you are totally ignorant.But we are making a beginning, and there ought to be some satisfaction. There are probably no questions we
6、can think up that can’t be answered, sooner or later, including even the matter of consciousness. To be sure, there may well be questions we can’t think up, ever, and therefore limits to the reach of human intellect, but that is another matter. Within our limits, we should be able to wor
7、k our way through to all our answers, if we keep at it long enough, and pay attention.Which of the following is NOT mentioned about scientists in earlier times()AThey invented false theories to explain things they didn't understand.BThey falsely claimed to know all about nature.CThey did not bel
8、ieve in results from scientific observation.DThey paid little attention to the problems they didn't understan2.About six years ago I was eating lunch in a restaurant in New York City when a woman and a young boy sat down at the next table, I couldn’t help overhearing parts of their convers
9、ation. At one point the woman asked: So, how have you been And the boy-who could not have been more than seven or eight years old-replied. Frankly, I’ve been feeling a little de pressed lately.This incident stuck in my mind because it confirmed my growing belief that children are changing. As
10、far as I can remember, my friends and I didn’t find out we were depressed until we were in high school.The evidence of a change in children has increased steadily in recent years. Children don’t seem childlike anymore. Children speak more like adults, dress more like adults and behave mo
11、re like adults than they used to.Whether this is good or bad is difficult to say, but it certainly is different. Childhood as it once was no longer exists. WhyHuman development is based not only on innate (天生的) biological states, but also on patterns of access to social knowledge. Movement from one
12、social role to another usually involves learning the secrets of the new status. Children have always been taught adult secrets, but slowly and in stages: traditionally, we tell sixth graders things we keep hidden from fifth graders.In the last 30 years, however, a secret-revelation (揭示) machine has
13、been installed in 98 percent of American homes. It is called television. Television passes information, and indiscriminately(不加区分地), to all viewers alike, be they children or adults. Unable to resist the temptation, many children turn their attention from printed texts to the less challenging, more
14、vivid moving pictures.Communication through print, as a matter of fact, allows for a great deal of control over the social information to which children have access. Reading and writing involve a complex code of symbols that must be memorized and practiced. Children must read simple books before the
15、y can read complex materials.Why is the author in favor of communication through print for children()AIt enables children to gain more social information.BIt develops children's interest in reading and writing.CIt helps children to memorize and practice more.DIt can control what children are to
16、learn.3.About six years ago I was eating lunch in a restaurant in New York City when a woman and a young boy sat down at the next table, I couldn’t help overhearing parts of their conversation. At one point the woman asked: So, how have you been And the boy-who could not have been more than se
17、ven or eight years old-replied. Frankly, I’ve been feeling a little de pressed lately.This incident stuck in my mind because it confirmed my growing belief that children are changing. As far as I can remember, my friends and I didn’t find out we were depressed until we were in high schoo
18、l.The evidence of a change in children has increased steadily in recent years. Children don’t seem childlike anymore. Children speak more like adults, dress more like adults and behave more like adults than they used to.Whether this is good or bad is difficult to say, but it certainly is diffe
19、rent. Childhood as it once was no longer exists. WhyHuman development is based not only on innate (天生的) biological states, but also on patterns of access to social knowledge. Movement from one social role to another usually involves learning the secrets of the new status. Children have always been t
20、aught adult secrets, but slowly and in stages: traditionally, we tell sixth graders things we keep hidden from fifth graders.In the last 30 years, however, a secret-revelation (揭示) machine has been installed in 98 percent of American homes. It is called television. Television passes information, and
21、 indiscriminately(不加区分地), to all viewers alike, be they children or adults. Unable to resist the temptation, many children turn their attention from printed texts to the less challenging, more vivid moving pictures.Communication through print, as a matter of fact, allows for a great deal of control
22、over the social information to which children have access. Reading and writing involve a complex code of symbols that must be memorized and practiced. Children must read simple books before they can read complex materials.The phenomenon that todays children seem adult-like is attributed by the autho
23、r to ()Athe widespread influence of televisionBthe poor arrangement of teaching contentCthe fast pace of human intellectual developmentDthe constantly rising standard of living4.About six years ago I was eating lunch in a restaurant in New York City when a woman and a young boy sat down at the next
24、table, I couldn’t help overhearing parts of their conversation. At one point the woman asked: So, how have you been And the boy-who could not have been more than seven or eight years old-replied. Frankly, I’ve been feeling a little de pressed lately.This incident stuck in my mind because
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