问题 问答题 案例分析题

阅读下列材料:

材料一人是存在的事物存在的尺度,也是不存在的事物不存在的尺度。

——普罗塔戈拉

材料二这种对赎罪券的谎谬宣传,使得那些有学问的人,对于保持大家对教皇的尊敬,也确实感到困难。对于俗人的怀疑和非难又是难以解答。

——周一良、吴于廑主编《世界通史资料选辑》

材料三社会秩序乃是为其他一切权利提供了基础的一项神圣权利。然而这项权利决不是出于自然,而是建立在约定之上的。……就是共同意志的体现,代表所有人的权利与自由。这是至高无上的……不可侵犯,不得转让,不受限制,不准分割。

——卢梭

假如上述材料作为研究性学习的素材,你认为该组材料最恰当的主题是什么?

答案

参考答案:

西方人文精神的起源和发展

解析:本题主要考查学生对教材内容的记忆和理解以及准确解读材料信息的能力。第四问根据所学不难作答,上述一组材料涉及到智者运动、宗教改革、启蒙运动等西方几次重要的思想解放运动,可知,整理出一条线索就是西方思想解放运动的过程以及人文精神的起源和发展。

选择题
填空题

[A] The take-up of EVs—which run entirely on electricity stored in rechargeable batteries—is seen as central to the plan to cut the transport sector’s carbon emissions, both here and across the European Union. It is predicted that we will be running a total of 800,000 EVs in Britain by 2020, and as a result the race to install a recharging infrastructure is well under way. Transport for London (TfL) recently announced it will have 1,300 EV charging points in London by 2013—more than the current number of petrol stations in the capital. The London mayor, Boris Johnson, is on the record as saying he wants to make the city the electric car capital of Europe.

[B] However, the power companies, sensing a good business opportunity, are now vying to sign up electric car-owning households with the offer of cheaper and faster off-peak home charging that will cut the time it takes to recharge the vehicle—freeing it to make more journeys, and making them more attractive to buyers. So far, EDF, British Gas, and most recently npower have said they will be targeting EV users with special home services as well as cheaper tariffs for recharging vehicles.

[C] What would make you consider buying an electric car They offer a green way to get around, with the chance to bypass petrol stations. And they are exempt from road tax and London’s congestion charge. Energy company npower (英国电力公司) this week revealed that 33% of UK drivers would think about buying an electric vehicle (EV) in the next five years, rising to 41% when the benefits were explained.

[D] But despite the introduction in January of a generous £ 5,000 government purchase grant to encourage more people to take the plunge, it’s fair to say that sales of electrically powered cars in the UK are yet to really take off. Just over 500 people took the government up on its offer in the first quarter of this year. Their high prices—typically about £ 25,000 after the grant—plus a lack of models by major carmakers and a shortage of charging points, have held back sales. However, the last two points are about to change.

[E] Speaking in Berlin last week, npower’s head of e-mobility, Phil Evans, told Guardian Money that the company sees EVs as a major opportunity, and as a result it is working on building an "upgradable" charging infrastructure that will develop as the cars’ power systems become more sophisticated.

[F] Potential buyers now have a choice of seven models in the UK, with 13 more on the way, while EDF Energy (英国电网), British Gas and npower have recently announced plans to start offering to install faster and cheaper charging points in customers’ homes, in a move they hope will help kick-start sales. The companies are banking on the fact that buyers of the latest, more consumer-friendly electric cars, such as the Nissan Leaf, are going to boost demand for electricity.

[G] Plans are also under way to increase the number of charging points at a variety of locations across the UK—and soon it will be possible for homeowners to upgrade their garages to allow faster, safer home charging. Until recently, most owners of plug-in-to-recharge electric cars have had to rely on the traditional three-point household plug, and wait about eight hours to fully recharge their vehicle at home.

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