美国法学院入学考试LSAT阅读真题3(含答案) .doc

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1、美国法学院入学考试LSAT阅读真题3(含答案)SECTION ITime 35 minutes 27 QuestionsDirections: Each passage in this section is followed by a group of questions to be answered on the basis of what is stated or implied in the passage. For some of the questions, more than one of the choices could conceivably answer the quest

2、ion. However, you are to choose the best answer, that is, the response that most accurately and completely answers the question, and blacken the corresponding space on your answer sheet.Many argue that recent developments in electronic technology such as computers and videotape have enabled artists

3、to vary their forms of expression. For example, video art can now achieve images whose effect is produced by “digitalization”: breaking up the picture using computerized information processing. Such new technologies create new ways of seeing and hearing by adding different dimensions to older forms,

4、 rather than replacing those forms. Consider Locale, a film about a modern dance company. The camera operator wore a SteadicamTM, an uncomplicated device that allows a camera to be mounted on a person so that the camera remains steady no matter how the operator moves. The SteadicamTM captures the da

5、nce in ways impossible with traditional mounts. Such new equipment also allows for the preservation of previously unrecordable aspects of performances, thus enriching archives.By Contrast, others claim that technology subverts the artistic enterprise: that artistic efforts achieved with machines pre

6、empt human creativity, rather than being inspired by it. The originality of musical performance, for example, might suffer, as musicians would be deprived of the opportunity to spontaneously change pieces of music before live audiences. Some even worry that technology will eliminate live performance

7、 altogether; performances will be recorded for home viewing, abolishing the relationship between performer and audience. But these negative views assume both that technology poses an unprecedented challenge to the arts and that we are not committed enough to the artistic enterprise to preserve the l

8、ive performance, assumptions that seem unnecessarily cynical. In fact, technology has traditionally assisted our capacity for creative expression and can refine our notions of any give art form.For example, the portable camera and the snapshot were developed at the same time as the rise of impressio

9、nist painting in the nineteenth century. These photographic technologies encouraged a new appreciation. In addition, impressionist artists like Degas studied the elements of light and movement captured by instantaneous photography and used their new understanding of the way our perceptions distort r

10、eality to try to more accurately capture realty in their work. Since photos can capture the “moments” of a movement, such as a hand partially raised in a gesture of greeting, Impressionist artists were inspired to paint such moments in order to more effectively convey the quality of spontaneous huma

11、n action. Photography freed artists from the preconception that a subject should be painted in a static, artificial entirety, and inspired them to capture the random and fragmentary qualities of our world. Finally, since photography preempted painting as the means of obtaining portraits, painters ha

12、d more freedom to vary their subject matter, thus giving rise to the abstract creations characteristic of modern art.1. Which one of the following statements best expresses the main idea of the passage?(A) The progress of art relies primarily on technology.(B) Technological innovation can be benefic

13、ial to art.(C) There are risks associated with using technology to create art.(D) Technology will transform the way the public responds to art.(E) The relationship between art and technology has a lengthy history.2. It can be inferred from the passage that the author shares which one of the followin

14、g opinions with the opponents of the use of new technology in art?(A) The live performance is an important aspect of the artistic enterprise.(B) The publics commitment to the artistic enterprise is questionable.(C) Recent technological innovations present an entirely new sort of challenge to art.(D)

15、 Technological innovations of the past have been very useful to artists.(E) The performing arts are especially vulnerable to technological innovation.3. Which one of the following, if true, would most undermine the position held by opponents of the use of new technology in art concerning the effect

16、of technology on live performance?(A) Surveys show that when recordings of performances are made available for home viewing, the public becomes far more knowledgeable about different performing artists.(B) Surveys show that some people feel comfortable responding spontaneously to artistic performanc

17、es when they are viewing recordings of those performances at home.(C) After a live performance, sales of recordings for home viewing of the particular performing artist generally increase.(D) The distribution of recordings of artists performances has begun to attract many new audience members to the

18、ir live performances.(E) Musicians are less apt to make creative changes in musical pieces during recorded performances than during live performances.4. The author uses the example of the SteadicamTM primarily in order to suggest that(A) the filming of performances should not be limited by inadequat

19、e equipment(B) new technologies do not need to be very complex in order to benefit art(C) the interaction of a traditional art form with a new technology will change attitudes toward technology in general(D) the replacement of a traditional technology with a new technology will transform definitions

20、 of a traditional art form(E) new technology does not so much preempt as enhance a traditional art form5. According to the passage, proponents of the use of new electronic technology in the arts claim that which one of the following is true?(A) Most people who reject the use of electronic technology

21、 in art forget that machines require a person to operate them.(B) Electronic technology allows for the expansion of archives because longer performances can be recorded.(C) Electronic technology assists artists in finding new ways to present their material.(D) Electronic technology makes the practic

22、e of any art form more efficient by speeding up the creative process.(E) Modern dance is the art form that will probably benefit most from the use of electronic technology.6. It can be inferred from the passage that the author would agree with which one of the following statements regarding changes

23、in painting since the nineteenth century?(A) The artistic experiments of the nineteenth century led painters to use a variety of methods in creating portraits, which they then applied to other subject matter.(B) The nineteenth-century knowledge of light and movement provided by photography inspired

24、the abstract works characteristic of modern art.(C) Once painters no longer felt that they had to paint conventional portraits, they turned exclusively to abstract portraiture.(D) Once painters were less limited to the impressionist style, they were able to experiment with a variety of styles of abs

25、tract art.(E) Once painters painted fewer conventional portraits, they had greater opportunity to move beyond the literal depiction of objects.参考答案:1-6 BADECEDuring the 1940s and 1950s the United States government developed a new policy toward Native Americans, often known as “readjustment.” Because

26、 the increased awareness of civil rights in these decades helped reinforce the belief that life on reservations prevented Native Americans from exercising the rights guaranteed to citizens under the United States Constitution, the readjustment movement advocated the end of the federal governments in

27、volvement in Native American affairs and encouraged the assimilation of Native Americans as individuals into mainstream society. However, the same years also saw the emergence of a Native American leadership and efforts to develop tribal instructions and reaffirm tribal identity. The clash of these

28、two trends may be traced in the attempts on the part of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) to convince the Oneida tribe of Wisconsin to accept readjustment.The culmination of BIA efforts to sway the Oneida occurred at a meeting that took place in the fall of 1956. The BIA suggested that it would be

29、to the Oneidas benefit to own their own property and, like other homeowners, pay real estate taxes on it. The BIA also emphasized that, after readjustment, the government would not attempt to restrict Native Americans ability to sell their individually owned lands. The Oneida were then offered a one

30、-time lump-sum payment of $60,000 in lieu of the $0.52 annuity guaranteed in perpetuity to each member of the tribe under the Canandaigua Treaty.The efforts of the BIA to “sell” readjustment to the tribe failed because the Oneida realized that they had heard similar offers before. The Oneida delegat

31、es reacted negatively to the BIAs first suggestion because taxation of Native American lands had been one past vehicle for dispossessing the Oneida: after the distribution of some tribal lands to individual Native Americans in the late nineteenth century, Native American lands became subject to taxa

32、tion, resulting in new and impossible financial burdens, foreclosures, and subsequent tax sales of property. The Oneida delegates were equally suspicious of the BIAs emphasis on the rights of individual landowners, since in the late nineteenth century many individual Native Americans had been convin

33、ced by unscrupulous speculators to sell their lands. Finally, the offer of a lump-sum payment was unanimously opposed by the Oneida delegates, who saw that changing the terms of a treaty might jeopardize the many pending land claims based upon the treaty.As a result of the 1956 meeting, the Oneida r

34、ejected readjustment. Instead, they determined to improve tribal life by lobbying for federal monies for postsecondary education, for the improvement of drainage on tribal lands, and for the building of a convalescent home for tribal members. Thus, by learning the lessons of history, the Oneida were

35、 able to survive as a tribe in their homeland.7. Which one of the following would be most consistent with the policy of readjustment described in the passage?(A) the establishment among Native Americans of a tribal system of a elected government(B) the creation of a national project to preserve Nati

36、ve American language and oral history(C) the establishment of programs to encourage Native Americans to move from reservations to urban areas(D) the development of a large-scale effort to restore Native American lands to their original tribes(E) the reaffirmation of federal treaty obligations to Nat

37、ive American tribes8. According to the passage, after the 1956 meeting the Oneida resolved to(A) obtain improved social services and living conditions for members of the tribe(B) pursue litigation designed to reclaim tribal lands(C) secure recognition of their unique status as a self-governing Nativ

38、e American nation within the United States(D) establish new kinds of tribal institutions(E) cultivate a life-style similar to that of other United States citizens9. Which one of the following best describes the function of the first paragraph in the context of the passage as a whole?(A) It summarize

39、s the basis of a conflict underlying negotiations described elsewhere in the passage.(B) It presents two positions, one of which is defended by evidence provided in succeeding paragraphs.(C) It compares competing interpretations of a historical conflict.(D) It analyzes the causes of a specific histo

40、rical event and predicts a future development.(E) It outlines the history of a government agency.10. The author refers to the increased awareness of civil rights during the 1940s and 1950s most probably in order to(A) contrast the readjustment movement with other social phenomena(B) account for the

41、stance of the Native American leadership(C) help explain the impetus for the readjustment movement(D) explain the motives of BIA bureaucrats(E) foster support for the policy of readjustment11. The passage suggests that advocates of readjustment would most likely agree with which one of the following

42、 statements regarding the relationship between the federal government and Native Americans?(A) The federal government should work with individual Native Americans to improve life on reservations.(B) The federal government should be no more involved in the affaires of Native Americans than in the aff

43、airs of other citizens.(C) The federal government should assume more responsibility for providing social services to Native Americans.(D) The federal government should share its responsibility for maintaining Native American territories with tribal leaders.(E) The federal government should observe a

44、ll provisions of treaties made in the past with Native Americans.12. The passage suggests that the Oneida delegates viewed the Canandaigua Treaty as(A) a valuable safeguard of certain Oneida rights and privileges(B) the source of many past problems for the Oneida tribe(C) a model for the type of agr

45、eement they hoped to reach with the federal government(D) an important step toward recognition of their status as an independent Native American nation(E) an obsolete agreement without relevance for their current condition13. Which one of the following situations most closely parallels that of the O

46、neida delegates in refusing to accept a lump-sum payment of $60,000?(A) A university offers s a student a four-year scholarship with the stipulation that the student not accept any outside employment; the student refuses the offer and attends a different school because the amount of the scholarship

47、would not have covered living expenses.(B) A company seeking to reduce its payroll obligations offers an employee a large bonus if he will accept early retirement; the employee refuses because he does not want to compromise an outstanding workers compensation suit.(C) Parents of a teenager offer to

48、pay her at the end of the month for performing weekly chores rather than paying her on a weekly basis; the teenager refuses because she has a number of financial obligations that she must meet early in the month.(D) A car dealer offers a customer a $500 cash payment for buying a new car; the customer refuses because she does not want to pay taxes on the amount, and requests instead that her monthly payments be reduced by a proportionate amount.(E) A landlord offers a tenant several months rent-free in exchange for the tenants ag

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