Would you be happier if you spent more time discussing the state of the world and the meaning of life—and less time talking abou

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问题     Would you be happier if you spent more time discussing the state of the world and the meaning of life—and less time talking about the weather?【C1】______
    "We found this so interesting, because it could have gone the other way—it could have been, ’Don’t worry, be happy’—as long as you surf on the shallow level of life you’re happy, and if you go into the existential depths you’ll be unhappy," Dr. Mehl said.【C2】______
    "By engaging in meaningful conversations, we manage to impose meaning on an otherwise pretty chaotic world," Dr. Mehl said. "And interpersonally, as you find this meaning, you bond with your interactive partner, and we know that interpersonal connection and integration is a core fundamental foundation of happiness."
    Dr. Mehl’s study was small and doesn’t prove a cause-and-effect relationship between the kind of conversations one has and one’s happiness.【C3】______
    The study, published in the journal Psychological Science, involved 79 college students—32 men and 47 women—who agreed to wear an electronically activated recorder with a microphone on their lapel that recorded 30-second snippets of conversation every 12.5 minutes for four days, creating what Dr. Mehl called "an audio diary of their day."
     【C4】______. A conversation about a TV show wasn’t always considered small talk; it could be categorized as substantive if the speakers analyzed the characters and their motivations, for example. Many conversations were more practical and did not fit in either category, including questions about homework or who was taking out the trash, for example, Dr. Mehl said. Over all, about a third of all conversation was ranked as substantive, and about a fifth consisted of small talk.
    But the happiest person in the study, based on self-reports about satisfaction with life and other happiness measures as well as reports from people who knew the subject, had twice as many substantive conversations, and only one-third of the amount of small talk as the unhappiest, Dr. Mehl said. Almost every other conversation the happiest person had—45.9 percent of the day’s conversations— were substantive, while only 21.8 percent of the unhappiest person’s conversations were substantive.【C5】______.
    Next, Dr. Mehl wants to see if people can actually make themselves happier by having more substantive conversations. "It’s not that easy, like taking a pill once a day," Dr. Mehl said. "But this has always intrigued me. Can we make people happier by asking them, for the next five days, to have one extra substantive conversation every day?"
A It may sound unreasonable, but people who spend more of their day having deep discussions and less time engaging in small talk seem to be happier, said Matthias Mehl, a psychologist at the University of Arizona.
B. Just try having a substantive conversation in a group of moms... absolutely impossible. No matter what topic you start off with, the subject of the discussion invariably moves back to their kids.
C. People who feel the most intensely will likely fall into the more extreme categories such as very happy or very sad, and the questionnaire likely attracted participants who were more in the "very happy" phase of their life because the very sad people are non-participants.
D. Researchers then went through the tapes and classified the conversations as either small talk about the weather or having watched a TV show, and more substantive talk about current affairs, philosophy, the difference between Baptists and Catholics or the role of education.
E. But, he proposed, substantive conversation seemed to hold the key to happiness for two main reasons: both because human beings are driven to find and create meaning in their lives, and because we are social animals who want and need to connect with other people.
F. But that’s the planned next step, when he will ask people to increase the number of substantive
conversations they have each day and cut back on small talk, and vice versa.
G. Small talk made up only 10 percent of the happiest person’s conversations, while it made up almost three times as much—or 28.3 percent—of the unhappiest person’s conversations.
【C2】

选项

答案E

解析 空白处上文是梅尔博士所说的话,他认为人们通常都会这么认为——谈论浅显的话题能带来快乐。但从第一段我们知道,文章主题并不是这么回事。梅尔博士的话显然没有说完,其后需要一个转折回到文章主题:深人交谈能让人更快乐。纵观选项,只有E提到了梅尔博士进一步对实质性谈话(即深入交流)令人快乐的解释,而且E项的第一个词But在前文内容上转折,正符合上文逻辑。
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