Directions:
Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
There are certain people who behave in a quite peculiar fashion during the work of analysis. When one speaks hopefully to them or expresses satisfaction with the progress of the treatment, they show signs of discontent and their condition invariably becomes worse. One begins by regarding this as defiance and as an attempt to prove their superiority to the physician, but later one comes to take a deeper and juster view. One becomes convinced, not only that such people cannot endure any praise or appreciation, but that they react inversely to the progress of the treatment. Every partial solution that ought to result, and in other people does result, in an improvement or a temporary suspension of symptoms produces in them for the time being an intensification of their illness; they get worse during the treatment instead of getting better. They exhibit what is known as a negative therapeutic reaction .
There is no doubt that there is something in these people that sets itself against their recovery, and its approach is dreaded as though it were a danger. We are accustomed to say that the need for illness has got the upper hand in them over the desire for recovery. If we analyse this resistance in the usual way then, even after fixation to the various forms of gain from illness, the greater part of it is still left over; and this reveals itself as the most powerful of all obstacles to recovery, more powerful than the familiar ones of narcissistic inaccessibility, a negative attitude towards the physician and clinging to the gain from illness.
In the end we come to see that we are dealing with what may be called a moral factor, a sense of guilt, which is finding satisfaction in the illness and refuses to give up the punishment of suffering. We shall be right in regarding this disencouraging explanation as final. But as far as the patient is concerned this sense of guilt is dumb; it does not tell him he is guilty, he feels ill. This sense of guilt expresses itself only as a resistance to recovery which it is extremely difficult to overcome. It is also particularly difficult to convince the patient that this motive lies behind his continuing to be ill; he holds fast to the more obvious explanation that treatment by analysis is not the right remedy for his case.
6. According to the author, some unusual patients would
[A] openly resist the treatment of the physician.
[B] intentionally hold the physician in contempt.
[C] respond against the physician s expectation.
[D] disregard the appreciation by the physician.
7. For the patients the author describes,
[A] a hopeful treatment often leads to a reverse result.
[B] a local treatment improves temporarily their symptoms.
[C] a partial solution betters rather than worsens their illness.
[D] a right solution cures them partially of their illness.
8. The author s study of this syndrome leads him to think that
[A] patients must be convinced of the treatment by analysis.
[B] patients ? sense of guilt may hinder them from getting well.
[C] patients need to know the final explanations of their illness.
[D] patients should give up the punishment of suffering from their illness.
9. It can be inferred from the text that
[A] certain people behave in a particularly fashionable way.
[B] the need for illness has overcome the desire for recovery.
[C] the patients who are content with their illness are guilty.
[D] the syndrome of inverse reaction to therapy is curious.
10. The root cause of the resistance to recovery lies in the fact that the patients
[A] are apt to refuse the recognization of the physician s authority.
[B] can hardly put up with being praised or appreciated by their doctors.
[C] cling to the unconscious belief in their deserved penalty by sickness.
[D] suffer from a chronic mental disease that offers them a feeling of guilt.
参考答案
Text 2: 6. C 7. A 8. B 9. D 10. C
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