问题 阅读理解与欣赏

阅读《论语》中的一段文字,完成小题。(5分)

季氏富于周公,而求也为之聚敛而附益之。子曰:“非吾徒也。小子鸣鼓而攻之可也!”

季康子问政于孔子曰:“如杀无道,以就有道,何如?”孔子对曰:“子为政,焉用杀?子欲善而民善矣。君子之德风;小人之德草。草上之风,必偃。”

小题1:在第二段文字中,孔子借用“风”与“草”的比喻,说明了什么道理?(请用文中的原句回答)(1分)

小题2:孔子一方面强调“君子之德风;小人之德草”的熏陶作用,另一方面又号召自己的学生对求“鸣鼓而攻之”,这样做是否自相矛盾?请对此谈谈你的看法。(4分)

答案

小题1:子欲善而民善矣

小题1:不矛盾,孔子主张为政以德,认为当权者应当用自己的道德来教育熏陶百姓,这样百姓自然有礼有德;但道德也不是无原则的,不加区分的运用,冉有为季氏“聚敛而附益之”的做法违背了德政,道德教育熏陶对他已经不起作用了。孔子让弟子去声讨他的做法,正是对德政的一种维护。

小题1:略

小题1:本题考查“对作品进行个性化阅读和有创意的解读”考点,能力层次为F,侧重“探究”能力的考查。这是一道探究题。答题之前,先对作品有充分的了解和准确的把握。面对一篇陌生的文学作品,要善于抓住关键语句,理清全文脉络,明白作品所表达的主题,对全文有一个整体认识和把握。具体答题时,还要切忌脱离文本,想当然地去套用鉴赏术语,避免空洞抽象的泛泛而谈或不着边际的任意罗列,更不能根据个人的主观喜好冠作隧意的褒贬。本题可以从客观与主观两方面去思考。

开放性试题
单项选择题

No blueprint exists for transforming an economy from one with a great deal of government control to one based almost solely on free market principles. Yet the experience of the United Kingdom since 1979 clearly shows one approach that works: privatization, in which under-performing state-owned are sold to private companies.

By 1979, the total amount of debt, liabilities, and losses for state-controlled enterprises in the UK topped 3 billion annually. By selling off many of these companies, particularly those in the depressed industrial sector, the government decreased its debt burden and ceased pumping public funds into money losing enterprises. According to government spokesperson Alistair McBride, "Far from past practice of throwing good money after bad, the Queen’s government this year expects to take in 34 billion from the proceeds of the sale." That, say some analysts, may only be the beginning. Privatization has not only been credited with rescuing whole industries but the nation’s economy to boot.

Due to increased tax revenues from the newly privatized companies along with a rebound in the overall economy, economic forecasters predict that Britain will be able to repay nearly 12.5% of the net national debt within two years. That is good news indeed for the economy as a whole at a time when many sectors are desperate for any ray of sunshine. British Airways this week announced a 20% jump in overall ticket sales and profits over this quarter a year ago. British Gas announced its first profitable quarter in nine years. At Associated British Ports, a new labor contract was finalized, the first union contract signed at the port without a work stoppage in twelve years. Closer to home for most Britons, the nation’s phone service, British Telecom, no longer puts new subscribers on a waiting list. Prior to privatization, new customers would sometimes have to wait months before phone service could be installed in their home. Now, according to a company press release, British Telecom is promising 24-hour turnaround for all new customers.

Part of this improved productivity has to do with new efforts to allow employees to hold a stake in the company’s future. Companies now give their employees stock options that allow employees to share in the company’s success (and profits). The response has been enthusiastic to say the least. At British Aerospace; 89% of those eligible to buy company shares did so. At British Telecom nearly 92% of eligible employees took part. Finally, at Associated British Ports, long synonymous with union disagreements, walkouts, and labor strife, almost 90% of employees now can call themselves owners of the company.

"When people have a personal stake in something," said Henry Dundee of Associated British Ports, "they think about it, they care about, they work to make it prosper." At the National Freight Consortium, itself no stranger to labor problems, the new employee-owners actually voted down an employee pay-increase and, pressured union representatives to relax demands for increased wages and expanded benefits. "Privatization was only the start," says one market analyst, "what we may have here is a new industrial revolution.\

By selling off state-owned enterprises the government will be able to do the following EXCEPT()

A. repay some of its huge national debts and liabilities

B.stop investing public funds into enterprises

C.harvest a big amount of tax revenue

D. help some depressed industrial sectors to recover