LPREP IBT 3 E AS
FINAL 11/22/14
11/22/14
144
SPEAKING
Page 476
[ mp3 226-227]
Question 2
. Now listen to the passage.
(Professor)
So I just wanted to make a quick point about the introduction in the
textbook chapter on dreams…uh, the one about Freud’s
theories, which
have not really stood up to the test of time. Now, to be fair to Freud, he
had
no knowledge of REM, um, Rapid Eye Movement or Dreaming
Sleep, when we dream. But now that we can tell when people, and
animals,
are dreaming, there is real evidence that Freud’s theories on the
origin of dreams can’t be true.
The first and strongest evidence is the fact that mammals seem to
dream, and babies have longer periods of dreaming sleep than adults.
Neither babies nor animals would be likely to have as many repressed
desires as an adult human.
Another incompatibility between the theory that
repressed urges provoke
dreams is the regularity of dreaming sleep. The sleep cycle is pretty
repetitive, and it seems unlikely that animal emotions would be held in
check all day long and come up in sleep in such a regular pattern.
Now answer the following question. You have 30 seconds to prepare an answer and 60
seconds to give your spoken response.
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