问题 单项选择题

股份有限公司创立大会对公司章程的决议,必须经( )通过。

A.出席大会的认股人所持表决权的1/2以上

B.出席大会的认股人所持表决权的2/3以上

C.出席大会的认股人所持表决权的3/4以上

D.全体发起人表决

答案

参考答案:A

解析: 我国《公司法》第九十一条规定,创立大会行使的职权有:①审议发起人关于公司筹办情况的报告;②通过公司章程;③选举董事会成员;④选举监事会成员;⑤对公司的设立费用进行审核;⑥对发起人用于抵作股款的财产的作价进行审核;⑦发生不可抗力或者经营条件发生重大变化直接影响公司设立的,可以作出不设立公司的决议。创立大会对上述第①项至第⑦项事项作出决议,必须经出席会议的认股人所持表决权过半数通过。

单项选择题

At the tail end of the 19th century, Friedrich Nietzsche suggested that natural history— which he saw as a war against fear and superstition-ought to be narrated "in such a way that everyone who hears it is irresistibly inspired to strive after spiritual and bodily health and vigour," and he grumbled that artists had yet to discover the right language to do this. "None the less," Nietzsche admitted, "the English have taken admirable steps in the direction of that ideal... the reason is that they [natural history books] are written by their most distinguished scholars—whole, complete and fulfilling natures. "
The English language tradition of nature writing and narrating natural history is gloriously rich, and although it may not make any bold claims to improving health and wellbeing, it does a good job—for readers and the subjects of the writing. Where the insights of field naturalists meet the legacy of poets such as Clare, Wordsworth, Hughes and Heaney, there emerges a language as vivid as any cultural achievement.
That this language is still alive and kicking and read every day in a newspaper is astounding. So to hold a century’s worth of country diaries is, for an interloper like me, both an inspiring and humbling experience. But is this the best way of representing nature, or is it a cultural default Will the next century of writers want to shake loose from this tradition What happens next
Over the years, nature writers and country diarists have developed an increasingly sophisticated ecological literacy of the world around them through the naming of things and an understanding of the relationships between them. They find ways of linking simple observations to bigger issues by remaining in the present, the particular. For writers of my generation, a nostalgia for lost wildlife and habitats and the business of bearing witness to a war of attrition in the countryside colours what we’re about. The anxieties of future generations may not be the same.
Articulating the "wild" as a qualitative character of nature and context for the more quantitative notion of biodiversity will, I believe, become a more dynamic cultural project. The re-wilding of lands and seas, coupled with a re-wilding of experience and language, offers fertile ground for writers. A response to the anxieties springing from climate change, and a general fear of nature answering our continued environmental injustices with violence, will need a reassessment of our feelings for the nature we like—cultural landscapes, continuity, native species-as well as the nature we don’t like—rising seas, droughts, "invasive" species.
Whether future writers take their sensibilities for a walk and, like a pack of wayward dogs unleashed, let them loose in hills and woods to sniff out some fugitive truth hiding in the undergrowth, or choose to honestly recount the this-is-where-I-am, this-is-what-I-see approach, they will be hitched to the values implicit in the language they use. They should challenge these. Perhaps they will see our natural history as a contributor to the commodification of nature and the obsessive managerialism of our times. Perhaps they will see our romanticism as a blanket thrown over the traumatised victim of the countryside. But maybe they will follow threads we found in the writings of others and find their own way to wonder.

Which of the following statements is NOT in agreement with the author’s view

A.The English tradition of nature writing should be reflected and reconsidered.

B.The values implicit in the language of natural history should be challenged.

C.The re-wilding of human experience and language will greatly benefit us.

D.The re-wilding of lands and seas will bring us more disasters.

材料分析题