刷题刷出新高度,偷偷领先!偷偷领先!偷偷领先! 关注我们,悄悄成为最优秀的自己!

单选题

        Back in 1964, in his book Games People Play, psychiatrist Eric Berne described a pattern of conversation he called “Why Don’t You—Yes But”, which remains one of the most irritating aspects of everyday social life. The person adopting the strategy is usually a chronic complainer. Something is terrible about their relationship, job, or other situation, and they moan about it ceaselessly, but find some excuse to dismiss any solution that’s proposed. The reason, of course, is that on some level they don’t want a solution; they want to be validated in their position that the world is out to get them. If they can “win” the game—dismissing every suggestion until their interlocutor (对话者) gives up in annoyance—they get to feel pleasurably righteous (正当的) in their resentments and excused from any obligation to change.

        Part of the trouble here is the so-called responsibility/fault fallacy (谬误). When you’re feeling hard done by—taken for granted by your partner, say, or obliged to work for a half-witted boss—it’s easy to become attached to the position that it’s not your job to address the matter, and that doing so would be an admission of fault. But there’s a confusion here. For example, if I were to discover a newborn at my front door, it wouldn’t be my fault, but it most certainly would be my responsibility. There would be choices to make, and no possibility of avoiding them, since trying to ignore the matter would be a choice. The point is that what goes for the baby on the doorstep is true in all cases: even if the other person is 100% in the wrong, there’s nothing to be gained, long-term, from using this as a justification to evade responsibility.

        Should you find yourself on the receiving end of this kind of complaining, there’s an ingenious way to shut it down—which is to agree with it, ardently. Psychotherapist Lori Gottlieb describes this as “over-validation”. For one thing, you’ll be spared further moaning, since the other person’s motivation was to confirm her beliefs, and now you’re confirming them. But for another, as Gottlieb notes, people confronted with over-validation often hear their complaints afresh and start arguing back. The notion that they’re utterly powerless suddenly seems unrealistic —not to mention rather annoying—so they’re prompted instead to generate ideas about how they might change things.

        “And then, sometimes, something magical might happen,” Gottlieb writes. The other person “might realise she’s not as trapped as you are saying she is, or as she feels.” Which illustrates the irony of the responsibility/fault fallacy: evading responsibility feels comfortable, but turns out to be a prison; whereas assuming responsibility fees unpleasant, but ends up being freeing.

53. What does the author advise people to do to chronic complainers?

A
Stop them from going further by agreeing with them.
B
Listen to their complaints ardently and sympathetically.
C
Ask them to validate their beliefs with further evidence.
D
Persuade them to clarify the confusion they have caused.
使用微信搜索喵呜刷题,轻松应对考试!

答案:

A

解析:

解析:A。根据题干中的advise和chronic complainers可定位至原文第三段。该段第一句提到,有一种巧妙的方法可以让自己不再遭受对方没完没了的抱怨,那就是热烈地认同对方。A项与此内容相符,其中Stop them from going further对应原文第三段第一句中的shut it down,by agreeing with them对应该句中的to agree with it,故正确答案为A。

错项排除:B项利用原文第三段第一句中的ardently设置干扰,但作者建议的方法是热烈地认同对方,没有提到倾听是否能阻止对方的抱怨,故排除B项。C、D项分别利用第一段中的validated和第二段中的confusion设置干扰,但其中的with further evidence和Persuade them在原文中均无依据,故排除。

创作类型:
原创

本文链接:53. What does the author advise people to do to ch

版权声明:本站点所有文章除特别声明外,均采用 CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 许可协议。转载请注明文章出处。

让学习像火箭一样快速,微信扫码,获取考试解析、体验刷题服务,开启你的学习加速器!

分享考题
share