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听力原文:W: I first read Ulysses when I was 16, but I didn't understand much of it.
M: No wonder. It's one of the most complex novels in the English language.
Q: Why isn't the man surprised at the woman's statement?
(18)

A. Because she is so young.
Because the man didn't understand it either.
C. Because she doesn't have a good knowledge of English.
D. Because the novel is too difficult to understand.

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For about three centuries we have been doing science, trying science out, using science for the construction of what we call modern civilization. Every dispensable item of contemporary technology, from canal locks to dial telephones to penicillin, was pieced together from the analysis of data provided by one or another series of scientific experiments. Three hundred years seems a long time for testing a new approach to human interaction, long enough to settle back for critical appraisal of the scientific method, maybe even long enough to vote on whether to go on with it or not. There is an argument.
Voices have been raised in protest since the beginning, rising in pitch and violence in the nineteenth century during the early stages of the industrial revolution, summoning urgent crowds into the streets any day on the issue of nuclear energy. The principal discoveries in this century, all in all, are the glimpses of the depth of our ignorance about nature. Things that used to seem clear and rational, matters of absolute certainty—Newtonian mechanics, for example—have slipped through our fingers, and we are left with a new set of gigantic puzzles, cosmic uncertainties, ambiguities; some of the laws of physics are amended every few years, some are canceled outright, some undergo revised versions of legislative intent as if they were acts of Congress.
Just thirty years ago we call it a biological revolution when the fantastic geometry of the DNA molecule was exposed to public view and the linear language of genetics was decoded. For a while, things seemed simple and clear, the cell was a neat little machine, a mechanical device ready for taking to pieces and reassembling, like a tiny watch. But just in the last few years it has become almost unbelievably complex, filled with strange parts whose functions are beyond today's imagining.
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What CAN'T be inferred from the 1st paragraph?

A. Scientific experiments in the past three hundred years have produced many valuable items.
B. For three hundred years there have been people holding hostile attitude toward science.
C. For centuries scientific discoveries have been hailed by the human world unanimously.
D. Three hundred years is not long enough to settle back for critical appraisal of the scientific method.

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