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英語 高校生

教えてください🙇🏻‍♀️

[2] あるクラスでディベートが行われています。 (1)~(3)はディベートの前半戦, (4)(5)は後半戦における発言の (1) 一部です。 ディベートの流れを意識しながら, 進行役の先生のセリフ が流れよく成り立つよう、下線に当てはまるものを選択肢から選び, 記号で答えなさい。 [思・判・表] (2) (教科書 P.88~89, P.92~95 参照) (3) (1) Teacher Are you ready to start our class debate? (4) Our topic is here on the board: "Digital books are better than paper books." (5) Raise your hand if you have a reason to support for this statement. (2) Student A: With an eReader, we have access to all of the books that we own. We can read many on the train. We can't carry many books with us every day. Teacher: (3) Student B Paper books don't use electricity. It's important that we use as little electricity as possible to prevent global warming. Teacher: (5点x5) (4) Teacher: Next, we will refute the other side's opinions. Say which opinion you are refuting, give your refutation, then give an example. (5) Student C They said that digital books are convenient, but I don't think it's a big advantage. We don't always need all of our books with us. Just one book is enough. Teacher: [選択肢] J. Good idea. "Good for the environment." 5. Great. "Digital books are convenient." 1. Let's start with the affirmative side. I. Very good. "Not a significant advantage." *. Let's start with the negative side.

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英語 高校生

赤い下線のところがどういう構造になっているか分からないです、教えてくださいm(_ _)m

moving from " (1) 点) There are historians and others who would like to make a neat division between "historical facts" and "values." The trouble is that values even enter into deciding what count as facts-there is a big leap involved in 'raw data" to a judgement of fact. More important, one finds that the more complex and multi-levelled the history is, and the more important the issues it raises for today, the less it is possible to sustain a fact-value division. But this by no means implies that there has simply to be a conflict of prejudices and biases, as the data are manipulated to suit one worldview or another. What it does mean is that the self of the historian is an important factor. The historian is shaped by experiences, contexts, norms, values, and beliefs. When dealing with history, especially the sort of history that is of most significance in philosophy, that shaping is bound to be relevant. As far as possible it needs to be articulated and open to discussion. The best historians are well aware of this. They are alert to many dimensions of bias and to the endless (and therefore endlessly discussable) significance of their own horizons and presuppositions. A great deal can of course be learned from those who do not share our presuppositions. Our capacity to make wise, well-supported judgements in matters of historical fact and significance can only be formed over years of discussion with others, many of whom have very different horizons from our own. It is possible to I have a 12-year-old chess champion or mathematical or musical genius, but it is unimaginable that the world's greatest expert on Socrates could be that age. The difficulty is not just one of the time to assimilate information; it is (2)

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