题目内容

It can be inferred from the passage that the author would MOST likely agree with which of

A. Scientific skepticism requires that no experiment should be considered valid if it produces experimental errors.
B. Theories should not be revised in any significant way in the absence of strong experimental evidence of a phenomenon they fail to explain.
C. Misinterpretations of experimental data always ensue from the "optimization" of experimental apparatus.
D. Sound experiments tend to produce experimental errors that are distributed in one direction or the other of the measurement scale, but not both.
E. Large revisions in experimental physical theories should not occur simply in the face of "miracles".

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After the investigations and______that are both necessary and inevitable after a calamity

A. observation… convenient
B. analyses … fashionable
C. second-guessing … costly
D. footwork … organized
E. solutions … abstruse

Despite certain______habits of the North American screech owl, it performs the majority of

A. predatory… ecology
B. instinctual … behavior
C. exogamous… kinship
D. omnivorous … diet
E. diurnal… darkness

Anderson's new theory is controversial for asserting that Britain might
have retained its North American empire had George Ⅲ's ministers proceeded
less precipitously. But as Anderson himself concedes to previous historians like
Line Henvel and Rhimes, there was no indication whether the persistence of imperial
(5) authority would have made much difference for any of the parties involved. At
most, these efforts would have endowed the British government with a
"hollow" empire, wherein the exercise of effective authority would depend on
the consent of the colonists and their representatives. While the grip on their
colonies was questionable, the British had no option but to curtail their
(10) authority, and at no point was the decision to do so more than a temporary
expedient. Once the war in French Canada was resolved, England attempted to
terminate the costly practices of Indian gift giving and to levy new taxation.
Under such circumstances, moreover, Britain would have been able to offer
only limited protections to any of America's other inhabitants, especially the
(15) Indians whose lands in the Ohio Valley were already being encroached upon by a
steady influx of European settlers. In a sense, the Seven Years' War ended up
confirming the "American" character of Britain's North American empire, an
entity over which metropolitan authority had never been more than tenuous.
Anderson's hypothesis concerning French Canada is corroborated both by
(20) the events of the American Revolution, and, less successfully, the
contemporaneous case of India, where the British successfully implemented the
colonial strategy Anderson recommends. As witnessed in Iroquoia, the Mughal
Empire's progressive collapse during the later 1740s and 1750s drew the
British, who had been in India as traders since the early seventeenth century,
(25) ever more deeply into politics on the subcontinent, first as the auxiliaries of
local grandees and eventually as political actors in their own right. When the
East India Company governed in Bengal, it did so by virtue of cleverly acting as
the Mughal Emperor's diwani (a Muslim office roughly analogous to a European
tax farmer). Despite the temptation to act unilaterally, the company's officials
(30) were never ignorant of the fact that they owed their authority to the cooperation
of local elites, who in turn accepted British rule assuming they could employ it
to their own advantage.
Anderson notes that although there were undoubtedly the vast differences
between them, India's experience of British rule during the eighteenth century
(35) points to the same devolution of imperial agency as in America. It is a pattern
Jack P. Greene has identified as "negotiated authority", whereby the unlimited
powers claimed by officials at the empire's center were subject to constant
revision by indigenous brokers on the periphery. Despite the fact that the
Indian colonial possessions were more enduring as a result, Anderson
(40) nevertheless

A. survey of the inadequacies of a conventional viewpoint
B. reconciliation of opposing points of view
C. summary and evaluation of a recent study
D. defense of a new thesis from anticipated objections
E. review of the subtle distinctions between apparently similar views

SECTION 4
Directions: Each question below consists of a word printed in capital letters followed by five lettered words or phrases. Choose the lettered word or phrase that is most nearly opposite in meaning to the word in capital letters. Since some of the questions require you to distinguish fine shades of meaning, be sure to consider all the choices before deciding which one is best.
INCLEMENT:

A. stagnant
B. optimistic
C. hostile
D. mild
E. pastoral

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