首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
The Uses of Difficulty The brain likes a challenge and pulling a few obstacles in its way may well boost its creativity. A)J
The Uses of Difficulty The brain likes a challenge and pulling a few obstacles in its way may well boost its creativity. A)J
admin
2014-01-20
59
问题
The Uses of Difficulty
The brain likes a challenge and pulling a few obstacles in its way may well boost its creativity.
A)Jack White, the former frontman of the White Stripes and an influential figure among fellow musicians, likes to make things difficult for himself. He uses cheap guitars that won’t stay in shape or in tunc. When performing, he positions his instruments in a way that is deliberately inconvenient, so that switching from guitar to organ mid-song involves a mad dash across the stage. Why? Because he’s on the run from what he describes as a disease that preys on every artist: "ease of use". When making music gets too easy, says White, it becomes harder to make it sing.
B)It’s an odd thought. Why would anyone make their work more difficult than it already is? Yet we know that difficulty can pay unexpected dividends. In 1966, soon after the Beatles had finished work on "Rubber Soul". Paul McCartney looked into the possibility of going to America to record their next album. The equipment in American studios was more advanced than anything in Britain, which had led the Beatles’ great rivals, the Rolling Stones, to make their latest album. "Aftermath", in Los Angeles. McCartney found that EMI’s(百代唱片)contractual clauses made it prohibitively expensive to follow suit, and the Beatles had to make do with the primitive technology of Abbey Road.
C)Lucky for us. Over the next two years they made their most groundbreaking work, turning the recording studio into a magical instrument of its own. Precisely because they were working with old-fashioned machines, George Martin and his team of engineers were forced to apply every ounce of their creativity to solve the problems posed to them by Lennon and McCartney. Songs like "Tomorrow Never Knows", "Strawberry Fields Forever", and "A Day in the Life" featured revolutionary sound effects that dazzled and mystified Martin’s American counterparts.
D)Sometimes it’s only when a difficulty is removed that we realise what it was doing for us. For more than two decades, starting in the 1960s, the poet Ted Hughes sat on the judging panel of an annual poetry competition for British schoolchildren. During the 1980s he noticed an increasing number of long poems among the submissions, with some running to 70 or 80 pages. These poems were verbally inventive and fluent, but also "strangely boring". After making inquiries Hughes discovered that they were being composed on computers, then just finding their way into British homes.
E)You might have thought any tool which enables a writer to get words on to the page would be an advantage. But there may be a cost to such facility. In an interview with the Paris Review Hughes speculated that when a person puts pen to paper, "you meet the terrible resistance of what happened your first year at it, when you couldn’t write at all". As the brain attempts to force the unsteady hand to do its bidding, the tension between the two results in a more compressed, psychologically denser expression. Remove that resistance and you are more likely to produce a 70-page ramble(不着边际的长篇大论).
F)Our brains respond better to difficulty than we imagine. In schools, teachers and pupils alike often assume that if a concept has been easy to learn, then the lesson has been successful. But numerous studies have now found that when classroom material is made harder to absorb, pupils retain more of it over the long term, and understand it on a deeper level.
G)As a poet, Ted Hughes had an acute sensitivity to the way in which constraints on self-expression, like the disciplines of metre and rhyme(韵律), spur creative thought. What applies to poets and musicians also applies to our daily lives. We tend to equate(等同)happiness with freedom, but, as the psychotherapist and writer Adam Phillips has observed, without obstacles to our desires it’s harder to know what we want, or where we’re heading. He tells the story of a patient, a first-time mother who complained that her young son was always clinging to her, wrapping himself around her legs wherever she went. She never had a moment to herself, she said, because her son was "always in the way". When Phillips asked her where she would go if he wasn’t in the way. she replied cheerfully, "Oh, I wouldn’t know where I was!"
H)Take another common obstacle: lack of money. People often assume that more money will make them happier. But economists who study the relationship between money and happiness have consistently found that, above a certain income, the two do not reliably correlate. Despite the ease with which the rich can acquire almost anything they desire, they are just as likely to be unhappy as the middle classes. In this regard at least, F. Scott Fitzgerald was wrong.
I)Indeed, ease of acquisition is the problem. The novelist Edward St Aubyn has a narrator remark of the very rich that, "not having to consider affordability. their desires rambled on like unstoppable bores, relentless(持续不断的)and whimsical(反复无常的)at the same time. " When Boston College, a private research university, wanted a better feel for its potential donors, it asked the psychologist Robert Kenny to investigate the mindset of the super-rich. He surveyed 165 households, most of which had a net worth of $ 25m or more. He found that many of his subjects were confused by the infinite options their money presented them with. They found it hard to know what to want, creating a kind of existential bafflement. One of them put it like this: "You know. Bob, you can just buy so much stuff, and when you get to the point where you can just buy so much stuff, now what are you going to do?"
J)The internet makes information billionaires out of all of us, and the architects of our online experiences are catching on to the need to make things creatively difficult. Twitter’s huge success is rooted in the simple but profound insight that in a medium with infinite space for self-expression, the most interesting thing we can do is restrict ourselves to 140 characters. The music service This Is My Jam helps people navigate the tens of millions of tracks now available instantly via Spot if y and iTunes. Users pick their favourite song of the week to share with others. They only get to choose one. The service was only launched this year, but by the end of September 650 000 jams had been chosen. Its co-founder Matt Ogle explains its raison d’etre(存在的理由)like this: "In an age of endless choice, we were missing a way to say: ’This. This is the one you should listen to’. "
K)Today’s world offers more opportunity than ever to follow the advice of the Walker Brothers and make it easy on ourselves. Compared with a hundred years ago, our lives are less tightly bound by social norms and physical constraints. Technology has cut out much of life’s donkeywork, and we have more freedoms than ever: we can wear what we like and communicate with hundreds of friends at once at the click of a mouse. Obstacles are everywhere disappearing. Few of us wish to turn the clock back, but perhaps we need to remind ourselves how useful the right obstacles can be. Sometimes, the best route to fulfilment is the path of more resistance.
It is a false assumption that lessons should be made easier to learn.
选项
答案
F
解析
细节推断题。定位句提到,在学校,教师和学生都经常想当然地认为如果某个概念简单易学,那么这门课程就是成功的。但无数的研究发现。课堂材料设置得更难以理解消化时,学生会长期记住其大部分内容,并能够理解得更透彻。由此可知,课程设置得简单并不利于学生。题干是对定位句的概括,故答案为F)。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/wT17777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Twelveyearsago,asafirst-yearlanguage-artsteacheratamiddleschoolinHouston,Ihad50minutesadaywitheachofmycl
StatesExperimentWithOut-of-ClassroomLearningAttheendofthismonth,mostofOhio’steenagerswillshakeofftheirsum
StatesExperimentWithOut-of-ClassroomLearningAttheendofthismonth,mostofOhio’steenagerswillshakeofftheirsum
Oneofthemostimportantorganizationsdesignedtocombatfatalinfectiousdiseasesinpoorcountriesgoesbytheunwieldyname
Oneofthemostimportantorganizationsdesignedtocombatfatalinfectiousdiseasesinpoorcountriesgoesbytheunwieldyname
Ofalltheareasoflearningthemostimportantisthedevelopmentofattitudes.Emotionalreactionsaswellaslogicalthought
TheSupremeCourt’sdecisionsonphysician-assistedsuicidecarryimportantimplicationsforhowmedicineseekstorelievedying
TheSupremeCourt’sdecisionsonphysician-assistedsuicidecarryimportantimplicationsforhowmedicineseekstorelievedying
A、Hekeepsforgettingtheimportantthingshehastodo.B、HehasgreatdifficultyrememberingKoreanwords.C、Hecan’tfindthe
Jointhe"SleepChallenge"[A]Didyougetenoughsleeplastnight?Probablynot."Weareanationofsleep-deprivedwomen,"say
随机试题
邓小平在领导全党重新解放思想,认识什么是社会主义问题的过程中,理论上最大的贡献是()
A.止嗽散B.杏苏散C.桑杏汤D.麻杏石甘汤E.清金化痰汤风燥咳嗽宜选用
乳汁分泌主要依赖
会计职业道德规范中的“坚持准则”,不仅指会计准则,而且包括会计法律、法规、国家统一的会计制度以及与会计工作相关的法律制度。()
某评估机构对一拟快速变现的厂房进行评估,已知在评估时点与其完全相同的资产正常变现价为380万元,评估师经综合分析,认为快速变现的折扣率为50%,则该厂房的快速变现价值为()万元。
参与银行间债券交易的,还需向中央国债登记结算有限责任公司支付银行间账户服务费、交易手续费等服务费用。()
下列()属于商业银行固定资产贷前调查报告中结论性意见的内容。
墨守成规对于()相当于()对于谦虚
有一根长240米的绳子,从某一端开始每隔4米作一个记号,每隔6米也作一个记号,然后将标有记号的地方剪断,则绳子共剪成()段。
假定市场上有两种证券A和B,其预期收益率分别为8%和13%,标准差分别为12%和20%,A、B两种证券的相关系数为0.3,市场无风险收益率为5%。某投资者决定用这两种证券组成最优风险组合,则A、B的系数分别为多少?该最优风险组合的预期收益率和方差分别为多少
最新回复
(
0
)