This passage is based on material from an opinion piece published in 2007.
Cultures are not objects that can be adequately understood from the outside, but neither can cultures speak for themselves. Yet this is precisely the goal celebrants of cultural identity often embrace. The National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C.; is a good example. In designing exhibits, the curators abandoned traditional museum classifications (such as geographical distribution or era). Being extraneous to the cultures presented, such categories, the curators think, distort interpretation of those cultures.
Since some ordering of objects is unavoidable, the museum's magnificent collections are presented under themes like cosmology or landscape. It is not evident, however, that these categories derive from the mental universe of the cultures presented. An interpretation, that avoids all borrowed concepts, following the museum's stated philosophy, would require that all things Huron, for example, be presented in the Huron language—not very useful if the purpose is to present a culture to those outside of it.
The museum's displays gather objects found anyplace between Newfoundland and Argentina, and made anytime between today and thousands of years ago/ under headings such as animals, or containers. All things are treated as if they are of equal, indeterminate value. Such critical abstinence is often accompanied in museums by the desire to entertain. However, populism and a misplaced business mentality risk transforming the institutional custodians of cultural heritage into theme parks.
The passage mentions “all things Huron" (see highlighted text) primarily to
provide an example of how museums have traditionally displayed cultural objects
demonstrate why the notion of cultural identity is difficult to define
show how the museum's business mentality has distorted its goal
illustrate that the museum's intentions are fundamentally good
imply that the museum's stated philosophy leads to an unintended, undesirable conclusion
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正确答案是 E。文章提到, 博物馆声称的哲学将导致一个不希望看到的结论, 表明直接使用某个文化中的语言来表达一种文化是不可能的(not very useful)。因此, 选项 E 正确地暗示了博物馆所声明的哲学会导致意外的不良结果。