501 Critical Reading Questions
Critical Reading Questions
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501 critical reading questions
Critical Reading Questions
(1) (5) (10) (15) (20) www.IELTS4U.blogfa.com 1 2 7 whole picture—as nearly as I can. I don’t want to put on the blinders of ‘good’ and ‘bad,’ and limit my vision. If I used the term ‘good’ on a thing I’d lose my license to inspect it, because there might be bad in it. Don’t you see? I want to be able to look at the whole thing.” Mac broke in heatedly, “How about social injustice? The profit sys- tem? You have to say they’re bad.” Dr. Burton threw back his head and looked at the sky. “Mac,” he said. “Look at the physiological injustice, the injustice of tetanus [ . . . ], the gangster methods of amoebic dysentery—that’s my field.” “Revolution and communism will cure social injustice.” “Yes, and disinfection and prophylaxis will prevent others.” “It’s different, though; men are doing one, and germs are doing the other.” “I can’t see much difference, Mac.” [ . . . ] “Why do you hang around with us if you aren’t for us?” “I want to see,” Burton said. “When you cut your finger, and strepto- cocci get in the wound, there’s a swelling and a soreness. That swelling is the fight your body puts up, the pain is the battle. You can’t tell which one is going to win, but the wound is the first battleground. If the cells lose the first fight the streptococci invade, and the fight goes on up the arm. Mac, these little strikes are like the infection. Something has got into the men; a little fever has started and the lymphatic glands are shoot- ing in the reinforcements. I want to see, so I go to the seat of the wound.” “You figure the strike is a wound?” “Yes. Group-men are always getting some kind of infection. This seems to be a bad one. I want to see, Mac. I want to watch these group-men, for they seem to me to be a new individual, not at all like single men. A man in a group isn’t himself at all, he’s a cell in an organism that isn’t like him any more than the cells in your body are like you. I want to watch the group, and see what it’s like. Peo- ple have said, ‘mobs are crazy, you can’t tell what they’ll do.’ Why don’t people look at mobs not as men, but as mobs? A mob nearly always seems to act reasonably, for a mob.” “Well, what’s this got to do with the cause?” “It might be like this, Mac: When group-man wants to move, he makes a standard. ‘God wills that we recapture the Holy Land’; or he says, ‘We fight to make the world safe for democracy’; or he says, ‘We will wipe out social injustice with communism.’ But the group doesn’t care about the Holy Land, or Democracy, or Communism. Maybe the group simply wants to move, to fight, and uses these words simply to reassure the brains of individual men. I say it might be like that, Mac.” “Not with the cause, it isn’t,” Mac cried. 501 Download 1.11 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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