题干

下列各项关于名著的表述,错误的一项是(    )

A:曹雪芹的祖父曹寅极受康熙的赏识,康熙六次南巡,曹寅就接驾了四次。《红楼梦》中提到江南的甄家“独他们接驾四次”,暗示的就是这一宠信。

B:《红楼梦》的环境描写可分为三个层面:神话层面、社会层面、大观园层面,其中大观园层面是“主体工程”,“围绕着不同人物,在政治与自然的不同气候里有着不同的景观”。

C:薛宝钗出身在一个豪富的皇商家庭,她与林黛玉一样都博览诗书,才思敏捷,与林黛玉一样一心追求美好丰富的精神生活,但是命运结局却迥然不同。

D:可怜的高老头快断气了,他还盼望着两个女儿能来见他一面。拉斯蒂涅差人去请他的两个女儿,两个女儿都推三阻四不来。老人每只眼中冒出一颗眼泪,滚在鲜红的眼皮边上,他长叹一声,说:“唉,爱了一辈子的女儿,到头来反给女儿遗弃!”

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C

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    Do you believe that things are connected for no scientific reason at all? For example, do you avoid saying the word “four” to avoid bad luck? If so, you have a superstition (迷信). And you're not alone — all kinds of people have them.

    For example, Portugal's soccer superstar Cristiano Ronaldo always steps onto the pitch (球场) with his right foot first, according to The Telegraph. And sports players are not alone in having superstitions. A visitor once asked the Nobel Prize winning scientist Niels Bohr whether he really believed that the horseshoe he'd hung at his country home was lucky. “Of course not,” the Danish physicist said. “But I understand it's lucky whether you believe in it or not.”

    One recent study found that even scientists at MIT and other top US schools tended to look for a meaning in natural events, similar to the connection between stepping on the pitch and playing soccer well, according to The Atlantic. When the researchers gave the scientists little time to answer questions, they were twice as likely to agree with statements such as “Trees produce oxygen so that animals can breathe” as they were when they had more time to think about their reply.

    It seems that fear can make people think differently in this way, too. In a British study, students imagined meeting a “witch” who said she would cast (施魔法) an evil spell(符咒) on them. About half said a scientist should not be worried about the spell. Yet each of them said that, personally, they wouldn't let the witch do it to them.

    So why are so many of us superstitious? Well, it seems to be our way of dealing with the unknown. “Many people quite simply just want to believe,” Brian Cronk, a professor of psychology at Missouri Western State University, said in a 2008 interview. “The human brain is always trying to work out why things happen, and when the reason is not clear, we tend to make up some pretty bizarre (古怪的) explanations.”

    And these explanations aren't completely unhelpful. In fact, superstitions can sometimes work and bring real luck, according to psychologists at the University of Cologne in Germany in the May 2010 issue of the journal Psychological Science. They found that believing in something can improve performance on a task like an exam.

    So, what about you? What superstitions do you follow to keep you safe and successful?