The table before which we sit may be,
as the scientist maintains, composed of dancing atoms, but it does not reveal
itself to us as anything of the kind, and it is not with dancing atoms but a
solid and motionless object that we live. So remote is this
"real" table—and most of the other "realities" with which science deals—that it
cannot be discussed in terms which have any human value, and though it may
receive out purely intellectual credence it cannot be woven into the pattern of
life as it is led, in contradistinction to life as we attempt to think about it.
Vibrations in the either are so totally unlike, let us say, the color purple
that the gulf between them cannot be bridged, and they are, to all intents and
purposes, not one but two separate things of which the second and less "real"
must be the most significant for A. a solid motionless object B. certain characteristic vibrations in "ether" C. a form fixed in space and time D. a mass of atoms on motion
更多"Passage One
The table bef"的相关试题:
[单项选择] Passage One
The table before which we sit may be,
as the scientist maintains, composed of dancing atoms, but it does not reveal
itself to us as anything of the kind, and it is not with dancing atoms but a
solid and motionless object that we live. So remote is this
"real" table—and most of the other "realities" with which science deals—that it
cannot be discussed in terms which have any human value, and though it may
receive out purely intellectual credence it cannot be woven into the pattern of
life as it is led, in contradistinction to life as we attempt to think about it.
Vibrations in the either are so totally unlike, let us say, the color purple
that the gulf between them cannot be bridged, and they are, to all intents and
purposes, not one but two separate things of which the second and less "real"
must be the most significant for A. scientific reality B. a phenomenon we can directly experience C. reality colored by emotion D. a symbolic existence
[单项选择] Passage 3
"Before, we were too black to be white.
Now. we’re too white to be black. " Hadija, one of South Africa’s 3. 5m Coloured
(mixed race) people, sells lace curtains at a street market in a bleak township
outside Cape Town. In 1966 she and her family were driven out of District Six,
in central Cape Town, by an apartheid government that wanted the area for
whites. Most of the old houses and shops were bulldozed but a Methodist church,
escaping demolition, has been turned into a little museum, with an old street
plan stretched across the floor. On it, families have identified their old
houses, writing names and memories in bright felt-tip pen. "We can forgive, but
not forget," says one. Up to a point. In the old days, trampled
on by whites, they were made to accept a second-class life of scant privileges
as a grim reward for being light A. made all the families leave District Six so that a new Methodist church would be built there B. drove out all the residents in District Six so that a museum would be built there C. forced all the families to leave District Six so that the buildings there would be largely pulled down D. requested that all the residents leave District Six so that a street plan could be put forward
[单项选择] Passage One
Before the mid-nineteenth century,
people in the United States ate most foods only in season. Drying, smoking, and
salting could preserve meat for a short time, but the availability of fresh
meat, like that of fresh milk, was very limited, there was no way to
prevent spoilage, But in 1810 a French inventor named Nicolas Appert
developed the cooking-and-sealing process of canning. And in the 1850’s an
American named Gail Borden developed a means of condensing and preserving
milk. Canned goods and condensed milk became more common during
the 1860’s, but supplies remained low because cans had to be made by hand.
By 1880, however, inventors had fashioned stamping and soldering machines
that mass-produced cans from tinplate. Suddenly all kinds of food could be
preserved and bought at all times of the year. Other trends A. Causes of food spoilage B. Commercial production of ice C. Inventions that led to changes in the American diet D. Population movement in the nineteenth century
[单项选择]The table before which we sit may be, as the scientist maintains, composed of dancing atoms, but it does not reveal itself to us as anything of the kind, and it is not with dancing atoms but a solid and motionless object that we live. So remote is this "real" table--and most of the other "realities" with which science deals--that it cannot be discussed in terms which have any human value, and though it may receive out purely intellectual credence it cannot be woven into the pattern of life as it is led, in contradistinction to life as we attempt to think about it. Vibrations in the either are so totally unlike, let us say, the color purple that the gulf between them cannot be bridged, and they are, to all intents and purposes, not one but two separate things of which the second and less "real" must be the most significant for us. And just as the sensation which has led us to attribute an objective reality to a nonexistent thing which we call "purple" is more important for human li A. a solid motionless object B. certain characteristic vibrations in "ether" C. a form fixed in space and time D. a mass of atoms on motion
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