首页
登录
职称英语
"The world isn’t flat," writes Edward Glaeser, "it’s paved." At any rate, mo
"The world isn’t flat," writes Edward Glaeser, "it’s paved." At any rate, mo
游客
2023-12-10
55
管理
问题
"The world isn’t flat," writes Edward Glaeser, "it’s paved." At any rate, most of the places where people prefer to dwell are paved. More than half of humanity now lives in cities, and every month 5 million people move from the countryside to a city somewhere in the developing world.
For Mr Glaeser, a Harvard economist who grew up in Manhattan, this is a happy prospect. He calls cities "our species’ greatest invention": proximity makes people more inventive, as bright minds feed off one another; more productive, as scale gives rise to finer degrees of specialisation; and kinder to the planet, as city-dwellers are more likely to go by foot, bus or train than the car-slaves of suburbia and the sticks. He builds a strong case, too, for town-dwelling, drawing on his own research as well as that of other observers of urban life. And although liberally sprinkled with statistics, Triumph of the City is no dry work. Mr Glaeser writes lucidly and spares his readers the equations of his trade.
What makes some cities succeed? Successful places have in common the ability to attract people and to enable them to collaborate. Yet Mr Glaeser also says they are not like Tolstoy’s happy families: those that thrive, thrive in their own ways. Thus Tokyo is a national seat of political and financial power. Singapore embodies a peculiar mix of the free market, state-led industrialisation and paternalism. The well-educated citizenries of Boston, Milan, Minneapolis and New York have found new sources of prosperity when old ones ran out.
Mr Glaeser is likely to raise hackles in three areas. The first is urban poverty in the developing world. He can see the misery of a slum in Kolkata, Lagos or Rio de Janeiro as easily as anyone else, but believes that "there’s a lot to like about urban poverty" because it beats the rural kind. Cities attract the poor with the promise of a better lot than the countryside offers. About three-quarters of Lagos’s people have access to safe drinking water; the Nigerian average is less than 30%. Rural West Bengal’s poverty rate is twice Kolkata’s.
The second is the height of buildings. Mr Glaeser likes them tall—and it’s not just the Manhattanite in him speaking. He likes low-rise neighbourhoods, too, but points out that restrictions on height are also restrictions on the supply of space, which push up the prices of housing and offices. That suits those who own property already, but hurts those who might otherwise move in, and hence perhaps the city as a whole.
So Mr Glaeser wonders whether central Paris might have benefited from a few skyscrapers. He certainly believes that his hometown should preserve fewer old buildings. And he thinks that cities in developing countries should build up rather than out. New downtown developments in Mumbai, he says, should rise to at least 40 storeys.
The third, related, area is sprawl, which is promoted, especially in America, by flawed policies nationally and locally. Living out of town may feel green, but it isn’t. Americans live too far apart, drive too much and walk too little. The tax-deductibility of mortgage interest encourages people to buy houses rather than rent flats, buy bigger properties rather than smaller ones and therefore to spread out. Minimum plot sizes keep folk out of, say, Marin County, California. He says that spreading Houston has "done a better job of providing affordable housing than all of the progressive reformers on America’s East and West coasts."
Cities need wise government above all else, and they get it too rarely. That is one reason why, from Paris in 1789 to Cairo in 2011, they are sources of political upheaval as well as economic advance. The reader may wonder if Mumbai really would be better off as a city of high-rise slums rather than low-rise ones. [br] Which of the following adjectives best describes the author’s treatment of Glaeser’s argumentation?
选项
A、Indifferent
B、Neutral
C、Affirmative
D、Critical
答案
C
解析
在介绍格莱泽的著作时候,作者用了一些褒义的说法,如第2段的builds a strong case,is no dry work,writes lucidly等等,都很好的说明了作者对该著作的态度是赞赏的,故C项正确。
转载请注明原文地址:http://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3261942.html
相关试题推荐
Ofthefollowingfourkings,______diedmosttragically.A、KingEdwardB、KingEgbe
Therealchangeof"theReformation"cameinthedayof______.A、EdwardVIB、Mary
"Someliteraryworksaremortal;JaneAusten’sareimmortal,"writesHarold
"Someliteraryworksaremortal;JaneAusten’sareimmortal,"writesHarold
"Someliteraryworksaremortal;JaneAusten’sareimmortal,"writesHarold
______isNOToneof"TheGraveyardPoets".A、EdwardYoungB、ThomasPercyC、Thomas
WhenEdward,theConfessordied,theWitanchose______asEnglishKing.A、DukeWil
ThefirstkingoftheTudorswas______.A、HenryVIIB、HenryIIIC、EdwardIVD、Edw
TheCatcherintheRyewaswrittenbyA、J.D.Salinger.B、EdwardAlbee.C、AllenG
EdwardR.MurrowhasevertalkedaboutTVinthisway,"Thisinstrumentcan
随机试题
Whatdidthewomanplayyesterdayafternoon?[br][originaltext]M:Kate,whatd
AirlineAlliancesCooperativecompetition.Competitivecoope
男婴6天,家中出生,母乳喂养,3天来皮肤黄染、拒奶、嗜睡,体温不升。查体:面色灰
下列各种药物属于上述哪一类: A.抗酸剂 B.多巴胺受体拮抗剂 C.H2受
下列关于黄芩中降血脂有效成分的叙述,错误的是A.汉黄芩素B.黄芩新素ⅡC.黄芩素
求贤若渴,首先就要有强烈的人才意识,时时事事处处想到人才。把人才真正当作第一资源
下列关于刑事拘留的表述,不正确的有:A.拘留只能由人民检察院批准或者人民法院决定
关于诈骗罪,下列哪些选项是正确的?A:收藏家甲受托为江某的藏品进行鉴定,甲明知该
遗传性牙本质发育不全症的特征是A:牙釉质发生结构变化,但牙本质结构基本正常 B
对新生儿窒息进行复苏,最先施行的根本措施是A.药物治疗 B.建立呼吸,增加通气
最新回复
(
0
)