Passage One Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage. Technology is never a neutral tool for achieving human ends. Technological innovations reshape people as they use these innovations to control their environment. Artificial intelligence, for example, is altering humanity. While the term AI conjures up anxieties about killer robots or catastrophic levels of unemployment, there are other, deeper implications. As AI increasingly shapes the human experience, how does this change what it means to be human? Central to the problem is a person's capacity to make choices, particularly judgments that have moral implications. Aristotle argued that the capacity for making practical judgments depends on regularly making them-on habit and practice. We see the emergence of machines as substitute judges in a variety of everyday contexts as a potential threat to people learning how to effectively exercise judgment themselves. In the workplace, managers routinely make decisions about who to hire or fire and which loan to approve, to name a few. These are areas where algorithmic(算法的) prescription is replacing human judgment, and so people who might have had the chance to develop practical judgment in these areas no longer will. Recommendation engines, which are increasingly prevalent intermediaries in people's consumption of culture, may serve to constrain choice and minimize luck. By presenting consumers with algorithmically selected choices of what to watch, read, stream and visit next, companies are replacing human taste with machine taste. In one sense, this is helpful. After all, machines can survey a wider range of choices than any individual is likely to have the time or energy to do on their own. At the same time, though, this selection is optimizing for what people are likely to prefer based on what they've preferred in the past. We think there is some risk that people's options will be constrained by their past in a new and unanticipated way. As machine learning algorithms improve and as they train on more extensive data sets, larger parts of everyday life are likely to become utterly predictable. The predictions are going to get better and better, and they will ultimately make common experiences more efficient and pleasant. Algorithms could soon—if they don't already—have a better idea about which show you'd like to watch next and which job candidate you should hire than you do. One day, humans may even find a way for machines to make these decisions without some of the biases that humans typically display. But to the extent that unpredictability is part of how people understand themselves and part of what people like about themselves, humanity is in the process of losing something significant. As they become more and more predictable, the creatures inhabiting the increasingly Al-mediated world will become less and less like us. 46. What do we learn about the deeper implications of AI?A) It is causing catastrophic levels of unemployment.B) It is doing physical harm to human operators.C) It is altering moral judgments.D) It is reshaping humanity. 47. What is the consequence of algorithmic prescription replacing human judgment?A) People lose the chance to cultivate the ability to make practical judgments.B) People are prevented from participating in making major decisions in the workplace.C) Managers no longer have the chance to decide which loan to approve.D) Managers do not need to take the trouble to determine who to hire or fire. 48. What may result from increasing application of recommendation of recommendation of culture?A) Consumers will have much limited choice.C) It will be easier to decide on what to enjoy.B) Consumers will actually enjoy better luck.D) Humans will develop tastes similar to machines'. 49. What is likely to happen to larger parts of our daily life as machine learning algorithms improve?A) They will turn out to be more pleasant.C) They can be completely anticipated.B) They will repeat our past experience.D) They may become better and better. 50. Why does the author say the creatures living in the more and more AI-mediated world will become increasingly unlike us?A) They will have lost the most significant human element of being intelligent.B) They will no longer possess the human characteristic of being unpredictable.C) They will not be able to understand themselves as we can do today.D) They will be deprived of what their predecessors were proud of about themselves.
Passage One
Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage.
Technology is never a neutral tool for achieving human ends. Technological innovations reshape people as they use these innovations to control their environment. Artificial intelligence, for example, is altering humanity.
While the term AI conjures up anxieties about killer robots or catastrophic levels of unemployment, there are other, deeper implications. As AI increasingly shapes the human experience, how does this change what it means to be human? Central to the problem is a person's capacity to make choices, particularly judgments that have moral implications.
Aristotle argued that the capacity for making practical judgments depends on regularly making them-on habit and practice. We see the emergence of machines as substitute judges in a variety of everyday contexts as a potential threat to people learning how to effectively exercise judgment themselves.
In the workplace, managers routinely make decisions about who to hire or fire and which loan to approve, to name a few. These are areas where algorithmic(算法的) prescription is replacing human judgment, and so people who might have had the chance to develop practical judgment in these areas no longer will.
Recommendation engines, which are increasingly prevalent intermediaries in people's consumption of culture, may serve to constrain choice and minimize luck. By presenting consumers with algorithmically selected choices of what to watch, read, stream and visit next, companies are replacing human taste with machine taste. In one sense, this is helpful. After all, machines can survey a wider range of choices than any individual is likely to have the time or energy to do on their own.
At the same time, though, this selection is optimizing for what people are likely to prefer based on what they've preferred in the past. We think there is some risk that people's options will be constrained by their past in a new and unanticipated way.
As machine learning algorithms improve and as they train on more extensive data sets, larger parts of everyday life are likely to become utterly predictable. The predictions are going to get better and better, and they will ultimately make common experiences more efficient and pleasant.
Algorithms could soon—if they don't already—have a better idea about which show you'd like to watch next and which job candidate you should hire than you do. One day, humans may even find a way for machines to make these decisions without some of the biases that humans typically display.
But to the extent that unpredictability is part of how people understand themselves and part of what people like about themselves, humanity is in the process of losing something significant. As they become more and more predictable, the creatures inhabiting the increasingly Al-mediated world will become less and less like us.
46. What do we learn about the deeper implications of AI?
A) It is causing catastrophic levels of unemployment.
B) It is doing physical harm to human operators.
C) It is altering moral judgments.
D) It is reshaping humanity.
47. What is the consequence of algorithmic prescription replacing human judgment?
A) People lose the chance to cultivate the ability to make practical judgments.
B) People are prevented from participating in making major decisions in the workplace.
C) Managers no longer have the chance to decide which loan to approve.
D) Managers do not need to take the trouble to determine who to hire or fire.
48. What may result from increasing application of recommendation of recommendation of culture?
A) Consumers will have much limited choice.
C) It will be easier to decide on what to enjoy.
B) Consumers will actually enjoy better luck.
D) Humans will develop tastes similar to machines'.
49. What is likely to happen to larger parts of our daily life as machine learning algorithms improve?
A) They will turn out to be more pleasant.
C) They can be completely anticipated.
B) They will repeat our past experience.
D) They may become better and better.
50. Why does the author say the creatures living in the more and more AI-mediated world will become increasingly unlike us?
A) They will have lost the most significant human element of being intelligent.
B) They will no longer possess the human characteristic of being unpredictable.
C) They will not be able to understand themselves as we can do today.
D) They will be deprived of what their predecessors were proud of about themselves.
题目解答
答案
46. D) 48. A) 47. A) 50. B) 49. C)
解析
考查要点:
本组题围绕人工智能(AI)对人类社会、行为及判断能力的影响展开,重点考查学生对文章主旨、细节及逻辑关系的理解能力。
解题核心:
- 定位关键句:每题需快速定位原文对应段落,抓住核心观点(如AI改变人性、算法取代判断等)。
- 辨析选项差异:注意选项中“绝对化表述”或“过度推断”,结合上下文排除干扰项。
- 逻辑推断:部分题目需结合作者隐含态度(如对AI可能负面影响的隐忧)进行推理。
第46题
关键句:首段末句“Artificial intelligence...altering humanity”点明AI对人性的重塑作用。
选项分析:
- D(reshaping humanity)直接对应原文,其他选项(如失业、物理伤害)属于表层影响,非“深层含义”。
第47题
关键句:第4段“algorithmic prescription is replacing human judgment, and so people...no longer will”说明算法取代判断导致能力退化。
选项分析:
- A(lose chance to cultivate judgment)准确概括原文逻辑,其他选项(如“无法参与决策”)扩大了范围。
第48题
关键句:第5段“Recommendation engines...may serve to constrain choice”指出推荐系统限制选择。
选项分析:
- A(much limited choice)与“constrain choice”一致,C(decide easily)与文意相反。
第49题
关键句:第7段“larger parts of everyday life are likely to become utterly predictable”强调可预测性。
选项分析:
- C(completely anticipated)对应“utterly predictable”,A/D(pleasant/efficient)为算法带来的好处,非题干重点。
第50题
关键句:末段“unpredictability is part of how people understand themselves”说明不可预测性是人性核心。
选项分析:
- B(lose unpredictability)直接对应原文,A/C/D均为过度推断。