首页
登录
职称英语
The process of transforming all direct experience into imaginary or into tha
The process of transforming all direct experience into imaginary or into tha
游客
2023-12-03
28
管理
问题
The process of transforming all direct experience into imaginary or into that supreme mode of symbolic expression, language, has so completely taken possession of the human mind that it is not only a special talent but a dominant, organic need. All our sense impressions leave their traces in our memory not only as signs disposing our practical reaction in the future but also as symbols, images representing our idea of things: and the tendency to manipulate ideas, to combine and abstract, mix and extend them by playing with symbols, is man’s outstanding characteristic. It seems to be what his brain most naturally and spontaneously does. Therefore his primitive mental function is not judging reality, but dreaming his desires.
Dreaming is apparently a basic function of human brains, for it is free and unexhausting like our metabolism, heartbeat, and breath. It is easier to dream than not to dream, as it is easier to breathe than to refrain from breathing. The symbolic character of dreams is fairly well established. Symbol mongering, on this ineffectual, uncritical level, seems to be instinctive, the fulfillment of an elementary need rather than the purposeful exercise of a high and difficult talent.
The special power of man’s mind rests on the evolution of this special activity, not on any transcendently high development of animal intelligence. We are not immeasurably higher than other animals: we are different. We have a biological need and with it a biological gift that they do not share.
Because man has not only the ability but the constant need of conceiving what has happened to him, what surrounds him, what is demanded of him—in short, of symbolizing nature, himself, and his hopes and fears—he has a constant and crying need of expression. What he cannot express, he cannot conceive: what he cannot conceive is chaos, and fills him with terror.
If we bear in mind this all-important craving for expression we get a new picture of man’s behavior: for from this trait spring his powers and his weaknesses. The process of symbolic transformation that all our experiences undergo is nothing more or less than the process of conception, underlying the human faculties of abstraction and imagination.
When we are faced with a strange or difficult situation, we cannot react directly, as other creatures do, with flight, aggression, or any such simple instinctive pattern. Our whole reaction depends on how we manage to conceive the situation—whether we cast it in a definite dramatic form, whether we see it as a disaster, a fulfillment of doom, or a fiat of the Devine Will. In words or dreamlike images, in artistic or religious or even in cynical form, we must construe the events of life. There is great virtue in the figure of speech, "I can make nothing of it," to express a failure to understand something. Thought and memory are processes of making the thought content and memory image: the pattern of our ideas is given by the symbols through which we express them. And in the course of manipulating those symbols we inevitably distort the original experience, as we abstract certain features of it, embroider and reinforce those features with other ideas, until the conception we project on the screen of memory is quite different from anything in with our real history.
Conception is a necessary and elementary process: what we do with our conceptions is another story. That is the entire history of human culture—of intelligence and morality, folly and superstition, ritual, language, and the arts—all the phenomena that set man apart from, and above, the rest of animal kingdom. As the religious mind has to make all human history a drama of sins and salvation in order to define its own moral attitudes, so a scientist wrestles with the mere presentation of "the facts" before he can reason about them. The process of envisaging facts, values, hopes, and fears underlies our whole behavior pattern: and this process is reflected in the evolution of an extraordinary phenomenon found always, and only, in human societies—the phenomenon of language. [br] Which can serve as the title of this passage?
选项
A、Images and Human Brain.
B、Language and Human Brain.
C、Dreams and Human Brain.
D、Conceptions and Human Brain.
答案
B
解析
主旨大意题。分析全文可知,文章通过对大脑的主要功能以及对人类表达需求的阐述,揭示了大脑和语言的关系,故选[B]。虽然文章也提到了images,dreams和conceptions等概念,但都是为说明语言与大脑的关系所服务的,并非主旨,故排除[A]、[C]和[D]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3241910.html
相关试题推荐
Thefunctionofthesentence"Iapologize"isA、interrogative.B、directive.C、inf
Thestudyofthementalprocessesoflanguagecomprehensionandproductionis___
Psycholinguisticsisthestudyofthepsychologicalprocessesinvolvedinl
Psycholinguisticsisthestudyofthepsychologicalprocessesinvolvedinl
Psycholinguisticsisthestudyofthepsychologicalprocessesinvolvedinl
Psycholinguisticsisthestudyofthepsychologicalprocessesinvolvedinl
Psycholinguisticsisthestudyofthepsychologicalprocessesinvolvedinl
Psycholinguisticsisthestudyofthepsychologicalprocessesinvolvedinl
"Handsup!"isa______.A、directiveB、commissiveC、expressiveD、declarationA此题考察
"Theearthgoesaroundthesun."isa______.A、directiveB、commissiveC、expressi
随机试题
Thesuccessofthespaceprogramcameasapleasantsurprisetoanationthatha
[originaltext]M:WelcometoBritain.MayIseeyourpassportandpapers,please
WheneveraFrenchnovelistranslatedintoEnglish,theeditionsoldinBritain
Thereareagreatmanyreasonsforstudyingwhatphilosophershavesaidinthep
以下哪项不属病态呼吸的临床表现A.上气 B.哮喘 C.少气 D.打鼾 E
患者因节律性上腹痛、恶心、呕吐、返酸,拟诊断为消化性溃疡,为明确诊断,最有价值的
A.保留时间B.峰面积C.电泳淌度D.电渗E.理论塔板数在流动相流速发生改变时,
在某大型医院的建设过程中,施工单位调配了吊机、挖掘机和推土机共120台工程设备进
适合设计单端固定桥的是A.某一侧基牙倾斜度大,难以取得共同就位道 B.后牙游离
制定吊装技术方案时应考虑起重机的基本参数有()。2012A.额定起重量 B.最
最新回复
(
0
)