| 模型 | 模型答案 | 正确答案 |
|---|---|---|
| 金声玉亮2.0 | C. | C |
| deepseekr1 | The question asks which option is **not** a rationale for developing CSR (Corporate Social Responsibility) initiatives. CSR emphasizes that corporations have obligations beyond profit-making, addressing broader societal and environmental impacts. - **A** and **B** reflect core CSR principles: corporations must consider responsibilities beyond profit (A) and stakeholders beyond shareholders (B). - **D** aligns with the idea that corporations should address human values beyond economics. - **C**, however, states that corporate impacts are limited to "simple marketplace transactions," which directly contradicts CSR's premise that corporate influence extends far beyond mere transactions. If impacts were truly limited, CSR would be unnecessary. **Answer:** C |
C |
| gpto1 | C | C |
| GPT-4o | C. The impacts of corporations limit to only simple marketplace transactions. | C |
| llama3.1-70B-Instruct | C |
C |
| llama3.1-405B-Instruct | C. The impacts of corporations limit to only simple marketplace transactions. |
C |
| DeepSeek-Coder-V2 | C | C |
| Qwen2-72B-Instruct | C. | C |
| baichuan4 | C | C |
| doubao | C CSR initiatives are developed to address various aspects beyond just simple marketplace transactions, such as social and environmental responsibilities, and to consider the interests of multiple stakeholders. Options A, B, and D all support the need for CSR, while option C is not a correct rationale. |
C |
| minimax | C. The impacts of corporations limit to only simple marketplace transactions. | C |
| kimi | C | C |
| wenxinyiyan | C Explanation: The rationale for developing Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiatives typically includes the recognition that corporations have responsibilities that extend beyond merely producing offerings for profit. It also acknowledges that corporations have a broader constituency of stakeholders to consider, not just shareholders, and that they serve a wider range of human values that are not captured solely by a focus on economic values. Option C, "The impacts of corporations limit to only simple marketplace transactions," does not align with the rationale for developing CSR initiatives. In fact, it contradicts the core principles of CSR, which emphasize that the impacts of corporations are far-reaching and include social, environmental, and ethical considerations that extend beyond simple marketplace transactions. |
C |
| zhipu | C. The impacts of corporations limit to only simple marketplace transactions. This option is not a rationale for developing CSR initiatives because CSR (Corporate Social Responsibility) recognizes that corporations have impacts that extend beyond simple marketplace transactions, affecting a wide range of stakeholders and societal issues. The other options (A, B, and D) correctly reflect the broader responsibilities and impacts that corporations have, which are central to the rationale for CSR initiatives. |
C |
| gpto1 | C | C |