These and similar accounts have led some people to infer that creatures other than human can actually count. They also point to dogs that have been taught to respond to numerical questions with the correct number of barks, or to horses that seem to solve arithmetic problem by stomping their hooves number of times.
Animals respond to quantities only when they are connected to survive as a species-as in the case of the eggs-or survive as individuals -as in the case of food. There is on transfer to other situations or from concrete reality to the abstract notion of numbers. Animals can “count” only when the objects are present and only when the numbers involved are small-no more than seven or eight. In lab experiments, animals trained to count one kind of object were unable to count any other type. The objects, not the numbers, are what interest them. Animal’s admittedly remarkable achievements simply do not amount to evidence of counting, nor do they reveal more than innate instinct, refined by the genes of successive generations, or the results of clever, careful conditioning by trainers.
1.What is the main idea of the passage?
A. Careful training is required to teach animals to perform tricks involving numbers
B. Animas cannot count more than one kind of object
C. of all animals, dogs and horses can count best
D. Although some animals may be aware of quantities, they cannot actually count
2.The author refers to Gilbert’s book in paragraph 1 in order to___.
A. show how attitudes have changed since 1786
B. Contradict the idea that animals can count.
C. provide evidence that some birds are aware of quantities.
D. Indicate that more research is needed in this field.
3.The word “surreptitiously” in line 4 is closest in meaning to ___.
A. quickly
B. secretly
C. occasionally
D. stubbornly
4.The author mentions that all of the following are aware of quantities in some way EXCEpT___.
A. plovers
B. mice
C. caterpillars
D. wasps
5.According to the information in the passage, which of the following is LEAST likely to occur as a result of animal’s intuitive awareness of quantities?
A. A pigeon is more attracted by a box containing two pieces of food than by a box containing one piece.
B. When asked by its trainer how old it is, a monkey holds up five fingers.
C. When one of its four kittens crawls away, a mother cat misses it and searches for the missing kitten.
D. A lion follows one antelope instead of a herd of antelopes because it is easier to hunt a single prey.
公共英語(yǔ)三級(jí)閱讀答案及解析
1.D
文章中介紹了某些動(dòng)物很驚人的數(shù)字能力。但是無(wú)論怎樣,他們對(duì)數(shù)字的感覺(jué)也只是一種本能。
2.C
作者舉這個(gè)例子是為了證明他所提出的某些動(dòng)物能夠認(rèn)知某些東西的數(shù)量。
3.B
根據(jù)上下文以及我們的常識(shí),觀(guān)察動(dòng)物的習(xí)性是需要很長(zhǎng)時(shí)間,而且應(yīng)該是隱蔽的。
4.C
It has also been noted by naturalist that a certain type of wasp always provides five-never four, never six-caterpillars for each of their eggs。
5.B
When asked by its trainer how old it is, a monkey holds up five fingers.無(wú)論猴子的反應(yīng)是什么樣子,都只是一種反復(fù)訓(xùn)練之后的一種本能的反映。而不是真正的說(shuō)出他的年齡。
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