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[原始] 8月27日巴黎二战740=。=复习2天半提高100分。。补新阅读j!!!终于想起来了

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11#
发表于 2012-8-29 19:50:04 | 只看该作者
In a new book about the antiparty feeling of the early political leaders of the United States, Ralph Ketcham argues that the first six Presidents differed decisively from later Presidents because the first six held values inherited from the classical humanist tradition of eighteenth-century England. In this view, government was designed not to satisfy the private desires of the people but to make them better citizens; this tradition stressed the disinterested devotion of political leaders to the public good.  Justice, wisdom, and courage were more important qualities in a leader than the ability to organize voters and win elections.  Indeed, leaders were supposed to be called to office rather than to run for office.  And if they took up the burdens of public office with a sense of duty, leaders also believed that such offices were naturally their due because of their social preeminence or their contributions to the country.  Given this classical conception of leadership, it is not surprising that the first six Presidents condemned political parties.  arties were partial by definition, self-interested, and therefore serving something other than the transcendent public good.
Even during the first presidency (Washington's), however, the classical conception of virtuous leadership was being undermined by commercial forces that had been gathering since at least the beginning of the eighteenth century.  Commerce--its profit-making, its self-interestedness, its individualism--became the enemy of these classical ideals.  Although Ketcham does not picture the struggle in quite this way, he does rightly see Jackson's tenure (the seventh presidency) as the culmination of the acceptance of party, commerce, and individualism.  For the Jacksonians, nonpartisanship lost its relevance, and under the direction of Van Buren, party gained a new legitimacy.  The classical ideals of the first six Presidents became identified with a privileged aristocracy, an aristocracy that had to be overcome in order to allow competition between opposing political interests.  Ketcham is so strongly committed to justifying the classical ideals, however, that he underestimates the advantages of their decline.  For example, the classical conception of leadership was incompatible with our modern notion of the freedoms of speech and press, freedoms intimately associated with the legitimacy of opposing political parties.

这个是prep的阅读
12#
发表于 2012-8-29 19:58:44 | 只看该作者
我勒个去最后一个新狗狗是原题啊原题啊原题啊!!九月4号在巴黎考表示千万不要换裤啊...保佑保佑...
13#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-8-29 20:16:32 | 只看该作者
请问破折号那个你选的什么呀?
-- by 会员 kinghorse111 (2012/8/29 19:44:46)

是指语法吧,我只碰到1,2道,都是当作逗号处理无视之了,题目本身应该不难否则我应该有记忆。。
14#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-8-29 20:17:57 | 只看该作者
In a new book about the antiparty feeling of the early political leaders of the United States, Ralph Ketcham argues that the first six Presidents differed decisively from later Presidents because the first six held values inherited from the classical humanist tradition of eighteenth-century England. In this view, government was designed not to satisfy the private desires of the people but to make them better citizens; this tradition stressed the disinterested devotion of political leaders to the public good.  Justice, wisdom, and courage were more important qualities in a leader than the ability to organize voters and win elections.  Indeed, leaders were supposed to be called to office rather than to run for office.  And if they took up the burdens of public office with a sense of duty, leaders also believed that such offices were naturally their due because of their social preeminence or their contributions to the country.  Given this classical conception of leadership, it is not surprising that the first six Presidents condemned political parties.  arties were partial by definition, self-interested, and therefore serving something other than the transcendent public good.
Even during the first presidency (Washington's), however, the classical conception of virtuous leadership was being undermined by commercial forces that had been gathering since at least the beginning of the eighteenth century.  Commerce--its profit-making, its self-interestedness, its individualism--became the enemy of these classical ideals.  Although Ketcham does not picture the struggle in quite this way, he does rightly see Jackson's tenure (the seventh presidency) as the culmination of the acceptance of party, commerce, and individualism.  For the Jacksonians, nonpartisanship lost its relevance, and under the direction of Van Buren, party gained a new legitimacy.  The classical ideals of the first six Presidents became identified with a privileged aristocracy, an aristocracy that had to be overcome in order to allow competition between opposing political interests.  Ketcham is so strongly committed to justifying the classical ideals, however, that he underestimates the advantages of their decline.  For example, the classical conception of leadership was incompatible with our modern notion of the freedoms of speech and press, freedoms intimately associated with the legitimacy of opposing political parties.

这个是prep的阅读
-- by 会员 Sonnenblume (2012/8/29 19:50:04)

没错没错!!!就是这个了!我证明考古成功WOW
15#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-8-29 20:19:13 | 只看该作者
我勒个去最后一个新狗狗是原题啊原题啊原题啊!!九月4号在巴黎考表示千万不要换裤啊...保佑保佑...
-- by 会员 mizuya (2012/8/29 19:58:44)

尽人事以安天命
16#
发表于 2012-8-29 20:20:27 | 只看该作者
楼主问下IR题后面的题相比前头的题难度怎样?IR和OG比难度怎样?多谢!
17#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-8-29 20:23:59 | 只看该作者
楼主问下IR题后面的题相比前头的题难度怎样?IR和OG比难度怎样?多谢!
-- by 会员 xuduoduo (2012/8/29 20:20:27)

IR难度没有递增的感觉,难点还是在multi-source和审题,og50题每个题型我只做了2道没有发言权,感觉看了jj注意理解题目就ok
18#
发表于 2012-8-29 20:28:09 | 只看该作者
IR 12题中有几题多元?
19#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-8-29 20:41:54 | 只看该作者
IR 12题中有几题多元?
-- by 会员 xuduoduo (2012/8/29 20:28:09)

我做下来有4/12,但其实都是一道多源里的题里的4道
20#
发表于 2012-8-30 05:04:49 | 只看该作者
看来在巴黎考试的不少。有没有必要大家聚一下一起协同申请啊?
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