To a philosopher, wisdom is not the same as knowledge. Facts may be known in enormous numbers without the knower of them loving

admin2011-05-26  66

问题     To a philosopher, wisdom is not the same as knowledge.  Facts may be known in enormous numbers without the knower of them loving wisdom. Indeed, the person who possesses encyclopedic (学识渊博的) information may actually have a genuine contempt (轻视) for those who love and seek wisdom. The philosopher is not content with a mere knowledge of facts. He desires to combine and evaluate facts, and to examine beneath the obvious to the deeper orderliness behind the immediately given facts. Insight into the hidden depths of reality, perspective (洞察) on human life and nature in their entirety, in the words of Plato, to be a spectator of time and existence--these are the philosopher’s objectives. Too great an interest in the small details of science, may, and often does, obscure these basic objectives.
    Philosophers assume that the love of wisdom is a natural gift of the human being. Potentially every man is a philosopher because in the depths of his being there is an intense longing to penetrate to the meaning of the mysteries of existence. The inner deep longing expresses itself in various ways prior to any actual study of philosophy as a technical branch of human culture. Consequently every human being in so far as he has ever been or is a lover of wisdom has, to that extent, a philosophy of life.  
According to the author, which statement concerning philosophers is most nearly accurate?

选项 A、They are impractical.
B、They are too radical.
C、They are a thoughtful group.
D、They have contempt for humanity.

答案C

解析 文中体现了作者的正面态度。impractical意为“不切实际的”,原文未提; radical意为“激进的”与原文相反;选项D与原文不符。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/bp4GFFFM
本试题收录于: 英语题库成考专升本分类
0

随机试题
最新回复(0)