A. the feeling I got from the paper is very shallow and I don't know how to do it.
B. irrational sensibility is blind
C. we can't immediately understand what we feel, only what we understand can be felt more deeply.
D. the weather-beaten old man and the inexperienced teenager have different understandings of the same proverb.
The answer is AD.
Answer the advertisement
Exquisite explanation and refinement of P34 II (II) 2
A brief analysis of the topic "believing in books is better than having no books" is an adaptation of Mencius' dialect. Mencius' original words are "it is better to believe in books than to have no books", which means that it is not enough to have only book knowledge (indirect experience), but also to pay attention to direct experience and practice. Its connotation involves the relationship between theory and practice, indirect experience (learning book knowledge) and direct experience (personal experience), perceptual knowledge and rational knowledge.
Item A, "You will never know how to practice it", is two sentences in a poem written by Lu You, a poet in the Song Dynasty, encouraging his son, emphasizing "to practice", which is consistent with the connotation of the topic and is the correct option.
Item B is the second half of a famous saying by the German philosopher Kant. Kant's original words are "rationality without sensibility is empty, and sensibility without rationality is blind". The second half emphasizes the importance of rational understanding, which does not meet the requirements of the topic.
Item C, "We can't immediately understand what we feel, only what we understand can make us feel more deeply" (Mao Zedong's famous saying), emphasizes the qualitative difference between perceptual knowledge and rational knowledge in content and form, and emphasizes the importance of rational knowledge, which is inconsistent with the connotation of the introduction.
Item D, "Weathered old people and inexperienced teenagers have different understandings of the same maxim" (Hegel's famous saying), emphasizes that rational knowledge is not only based on perceptual knowledge, but also shows that people with rich perceptual knowledge have different understanding depths of things compared with those with poor experience, and rational knowledge depends on perceptual knowledge, which is epistemology materialism, an important manifestation of knowledge's dependence on practice, and also conforms to the meaning of the question.
The emphasis here is mainly on practice. AD all mentioned the importance of practice, while BC mainly emphasized rational understanding.