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

    Danielle Steel, the 71-year-old romance novelist is notoriously productive, having published 179 books at a rate of up to seven a year. But a passing reference in a recent profile by Glamour magazine to her 20-hour workdays prompted an outpouring of admiration.

    Steel has given that 20-hour figure when describing her “exhausting” process in the past: “I start the book and don’t leave my desk until the first draft is finished.” She goes from bed, to desk, to bath, to bed, avoiding all contact aside from phone calls with her nine children. “I don’t comb my hair for weeks,” she says. Meals are brought to her desk, where she types until her fingers swell and her nails bleed.

    The business news website Quartz held Steel up as an inspiration, writing that if only we all followed her “actually extremely liberating” example of industrious sleeplessness, we would be quick to see results.

    Well, indeed. With research results showing the cumulative effects of sleep loss and its impact on productivity, doubt has been voiced about the accuracy of Steel’s self-assessment. Her output may be undeniable, but sceptics have suggested that she is guilty of erasing the role of ghostwriters (代笔人) at worst, gross exaggeration at best.

    Steel says working 20 hours a day is “pretty brutal physically”. But is it even possible? “No, ” says Maryanne Taylor of the Sleep Works. While you could work that long, the impact on productivity would make it hardly worthwhile. If Steel was routinely sleeping for four hours a night, she would be drastically underestimating the negative impact, says Alison Gardiner, founder of the sleep improvement programme Sleepstation. “It’s akin to being drunk.”

    It’s possible that Steel is exaggerating the demands of her schedule. Self-imposed sleeplessness has “become a bit of a status symbol”, says Taylor, a misguided measure to prove how powerful and productive you are. Margaret Thatcher was also said to get by on four hours a night, while the 130-hour work weeks endured by tech heads has been held up as key to their success.

    That is starting to change with increased awareness of the importance of sleep for mental health. “People are starting to realise that sleep should not be something that you fit in between everything else,” says Taylor.

    But it is possible—if statistically extremely unlikely—that Steel could be a “short sleeper” with an unusual body clock, says sleep expert Dr. Sophie Bostock. “It’s probably present in fewer than 1% of the population.”

    Even if Steel does happen to be among that tiny minority, says Bostock, it’s “pretty irresponsible” to suggest that 20-hour days are simply a question of discipline for the rest of us.

50. How does Dr. Sophie Bostock look at the 20-hour daily work schedule?

A
One should not adopt it without consulting a sleep expert.
B
The general public should not be encouraged to follow it.
C
One must be duly self-disciplined to adhere to it.
D
The majority must adjust their body clock for it.
使用微信搜索喵呜刷题,轻松应对考试!

答案:

B

解析:

解析:B。根据题干中的Dr. Sophie Bostock和the 20-hour daily work schedule可定位至最后一段。该段主要是说,即使斯蒂尔恰巧属于少数因生物钟不同寻常而不怎么需要睡眠的人,但如果说一天工作20个小时只是够不够自律的问题,那也是很不负责的。也就是作者认为,即便极少数人一天可以工作20个小时,但这也绝不是靠自律就可以实现的,即作者并不赞同公众去效仿这一做法,B项与符合Sophie Bostock的观点,因此选B。

 错项排除:A项虽然在一定程度上符合人们的常识判断,但并无原文依据,故排除。C项与原文内容相悖,故排除。D项利用文中出现的body clock进行干扰,但文中只是说斯蒂尔的生物钟可能异于常人,并没有说大众应该调整自己的生物钟,故D项排除。

创作类型:
原创

本文链接:50. How does Dr. Sophie Bostock look at the 20-hou

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