問題詳情

III 文意選填 (10%)   It's already become a cliché to say that change is the only constant, but more than ever, we are living in an age of 41 , transformative change. The Arab Spring represents a cascade of events that is changing the Middle East. The earthquake and tsunami in Japan could change the history of Asia. Besides, such revolutionary change has been deepened, widened and 42 by the power of social media. It's never been easier to influence or to be influenced.   The 2011 TIME magazine’s list of 100 most influential people in the world reflects those stories of influence, 43 from the Middle East or Asia or the world of social media. Wael Ghonim's posts on Facebook helped spark the Egyptian revolution. Katsunobu Sakurai condemned the lack of action of Japanese authorities in helping earthquake victims. The artist Ai Weiwei became the 44 of China.   Influence is impossible to measure. It's like 45 social scientists call the butterfly effect: the idea that a tiny change in one part of a system can yield enormous changes later on. But often this is a romantic illusion—large-scale changes 46 only when great numbers of people become unwilling to be controlled over time, just 47 people in the Middle East have been moved to shake off decades of authoritarian rule.    What social media have done is to make us all more 48 of what's going on — and offer a new way to organize opposition. We like to think revolutions 49 from below, but through most of human history, it's the elites that have caused and led revolutions. Now, because of social media, anyone can communicate with everyone. We're seeing that in the Middle East, Africa and China. The democratization of information may actually 50 real democracy. 
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參考答案

答案:B
難度:適中0.5
統計:A(0),B(0),C(0),D(0),E(0)

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