quarta-feira, 19 de outubro de 2022

VOCABULÁRIO – DWINDLED – PUC-RIO-2019-VESTIBULAR-GRUPO 2) – LÍNGUA INGLESA – RESOLUÇÃO DA QUESTÃO Nº03.

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• TEXTO - PUC-RIO-2019-VESTIBULAR-GRUPO 2:

Our fiction addiction: Why humans need stories

By David Robson

Our fiction addiction: Why humans need stories By David Robson Although we have no firm evidence of storytelling before the advent of writing, we can assume that narratives have been central to human life for thousands of years. Cave paintings in France from 30,000 years ago appear to depict dramatic scenes that were probably accompanied by oral storytelling. Today, we may not gather around the camp fire, but the average adult is still thought to spend at least 6% of the waking day engrossed in fictional stories on our various screens.

From an evolutionary point of view, that would be an awful lot of time and energy to expend on pure escapism, but psychologists and literary theorists have now identified many potential benefits to this fiction addiction.

One common idea is that storytelling is a form of cognitive play that hones our minds, allowing us to simulate the world around us and imagine different strategies, particularly in social situations. “It teaches us about other people and it’s a practice in empathy and theory of mind,” says Joseph Carroll at the University of Missouri-St Louis.

Providing some evidence for this theory, brain scans have shown that reading or hearing stories activates various areas of the cortex that are known to be involved in social and emotional processing, and the more people read fiction, the easier they find it to empathise with other people.

Crucially, evolutionary psychologists believe that our prehistoric preoccupations still shape the form of the stories we enjoy. As humans evolved to live in bigger societies, for instance, we needed to learn how to cooperate, without being a ‘free rider’ who takes too much and gives nothing, or overbearing individuals abusing their dominance to the detriment of the group’s welfare. Our capacity for storytelling – and the tales we tell – may have therefore also evolved as a way of communicating the right social norms.

Along these lines, various studies have identified cooperation as a core theme in popular narratives across the world. The anthropologist Daniel Smith of University College London recently visited 18 groups of hunter-gatherers of the Philippines. He found nearly 80% of their tales concerned moral decision making and social dilemmas. Crucially, this then appeared to translate to their real-life behaviour; the groups that appeared to invest the most in storytelling also proved to be the most cooperative during various experimental tasks – exactly as the evolutionary theory would suggest.

You might assume that our interest in cooperation would have dwindled with the increasing individualism of the Industrial Revolution, but these themes were still prevalent in some of the most beloved British novels from the 19th and early 20th Centuries.

Asking a panel of readers to rate the principal characters in more than 200 novels, researchers found that the antagonists’ major flaw was most often a quest for social dominance at the expense of others or an abuse of their existing power, while the protagonists appeared to be less individualistic and ambitious.

Evolutionary theory can also shed light on the staples of romantic fiction, including the heroines’ preferences for stable ‘dad’ figures or flighty ‘cads’. The ‘dads’ might be the better choice for the long-term security and protection of your children, but according to an evolutionary theory known as the ‘sexy son hypothesis’, falling for an unfaithful cad can have his own advantages since they can pass on their good looks, cunning and charm to his own children, who may then also enjoy greater sexual success.

There are many more insights to be gained from these readings, including, for instance, a recent analysis of the truly evil figures in fantasy and horror stories. Common features include a grotesque appearance and appear to be designed to trigger our evolved fear of contagion and disease, and given our innate tribalism, villains often carry signs that they are a member of an “out-group” – hence the reason that so many Hollywood baddies have foreign accents. Once again, the idea is that a brush with these evil beings ultimately reinforces our own sense of altruism and loyalty to the group.

The novelist Ian McEwan is one of the most celebrated literary voices to have embraced these evolutionary readings of literature, and argues that many common elements of plot can even be found in the machinations of our primate cousins. “If one reads accounts of the systematic nonintrusive observations of troops of bonobo,” he wrote in a book of essays on the subject, The Literary Animal, “one sees rehearsed all the major themes of the English 19th-Century novel: alliances made and broken, individuals rising while others fall, plots hatched, revenge, gratitude, injured pride, successful and unsuccessful courtship, bereavement and mourning.”

McEwan argues we should celebrate these evolved tendencies as the very source of fiction’s power to cross the continents and the centuries. “It would not be possible to enjoy literature from a time remote from our own, or from a culture that was profoundly different from our own, unless we shared some common emotional ground, some deep reservoir of assumptions, with the writer,” he added.

Available at:
<http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/20180503-our-fiction--addiction-why-humans-need-stories>.
Retrieved on: 3 May 2018.
Adapted.

03  (PUC-RIO-2019-VESTIBULAR-GRUPO 2) 

Concerning the vocabulary used in the text,

one may affirm that

(A) “assume” (line 2) and confirm are synonyms.
(B) “depict” (line 5) and illustrate are antonyms.
(C) “overbearing” (line 34) cannot be substituted by arrogant.
(D) “dwindled” (line 52) and declined express similar ideas.
(E) “trigger” (line 77) and activate express opposite ideas

Resposta :  D

 - Questão sobre VOCABULÁRIO:

• TO DWINDLE ( = TO BECOME SMALLER, TO REDUCE OVER TIME, TO DECREASE, TO SHRINK) significa TORNAR-SE MENOR, IR DIMINUINDO, IR DECLINANDOpor exemplo, no texto:

• "You might assume that our interest in cooperation would have dwindled with the increasing individualism of the Industrial Revolution,..."   – Você pode supor que nosso interesse em cooperação teria diminuído com o crescente individualismo da Revolução Industrial,...

 RESOLUÇÃO RÁPIDA:

Concerning the vocabulary used in the text,

one may affirm that

(A) “assume” (line 2) and confirm are synonyms.
(B) “depict” (line 5) and illustrate are antonyms.
(C) “overbearing” (line 34) cannot be substituted by arrogant.
(D) “dwindled” (line 52) and declined express similar ideas.
(E) “trigger” (line 77) and activate express opposite ideas

➽ASSUME (supor/presumir) e CONFIRM (confirmar) não são sinônimos.

➽DEPICT (retratar/representar) e ILLUSTRATE (ilustrar) não expressam ideias opostas.

➽OVERBEARING (arrogante) e ARROGANT (arrogante) são sinônimos.

➽DWINDLED (diminuído/reduzido) pode ser substituído por DECLINED.

➽TRIGGER (desencadear/ativar) e ACTIVATE (ativar) são sinônimos.

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