问题 材料分析题

2010年5月24日,国务院已同意选择山东半岛蓝色经济区作为全国海洋经济科学发展实现路径的试点区域。山东省将建设黄河三角洲高效生态经济区作为融入环渤海一体化发展的重要举措。中 * * 党山东省第九次代表大会的决议和山东省十届人大四次会议审议通过的省“十一五规划纲要”,均提出要加强经济区的规划建设,山东省人民政府组织相关学科领域的专家进行大量研究论证,并于2008年制定出台《黄河三角洲高效生态经济区发展规划》。

依据材料回答,该规划的确立过程体现了哪些政治生活道理?

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答案

①中 * * 党山东省第九次代表大会的决议,体现了党是中国特色社会主义事业的领导核心。②山东省十届人大四次会议审议通过“十一五”规划纲要,体现了人民代表大会制度是我国的根本政治制度,人大是我国的国家权力机关,具有并行使了决定权。③政府组织了相关科学领域的专家进行了研究论证,也体现了公民通过专家咨询制度参与民主决策,提高政府决策的科学性。④政府制定出台发展规划体现了政府履行组织社会主义经济建设的职能。⑥该规划确立了整个过程体现了民主集中制。

选择题
单项选择题

A study released a little over a week ago, which found that eldest children end up, on average, with slightly higher IQ’s than younger siblings, was a reminder that the fight for self- definition starts much earlier than freshman year. Families, whatever the relative intelligence of their members, often treat the firstborn as if he or she were the most academic, and the younger siblings fill in other niches: the wild one, the flirt.

These imposed caricatures, in combination with the other labels that accumulate from the sandbox through adolescence, can seem over time like a miserable entourage of identities that can be silenced only with hours of therapy. But there’s another way to see these alternate identities: as challenges that can sharpen psychological skills. In a country where reinvention is considered a birthright, many people seem to treat old identities the way Houdini treated padlocked boxes: something to wriggle free from, before being dragged down. And psychological research suggests that this ability can be a sign of mental resilience, of taking control of your own story rather than being trapped by it.

The late-night bull sessions in college or at backyard barbecues are at some level like out-of-body experiences, allowing a re-coloring of past experience to connect with new acquaintances. A more obvious outlet to expand identity--and one that’s available to those who have not or cannot escape the family and community where they’re known and labeled-- is the Internet. Admittedly, a lot of the role-playing on the Internet can have a deviant quality. But researchers have found that many people who play life-simulation games, for example, set up the kind of families they would like to have had, even script alternate versions of their own role in the family or in a peer group.

Decades ago the psychologist Erik Erickson conceived of middle age as a stage of life defined by a tension between stagnation and generativity-a healthy sense of guiding and nourishing the next generation, of helping the community. Ina series of studies, the Northwestern psychologist Dan P. McAdams has found that adults in their 40s and 50s whose lives show this generous quality - who often volunteer, who have a sense of accomplishment - tell very similar stories about how they came to be who they are. Whether they grew up in rural poverty or with views of Central Park, they told their life stories as series of redemptive lessons. When they failed a grade, they found a wonderful tutor, and later made the honor roll; when fired from a good job, they were forced to start their own business.

This similarity in narrative constructions most likely reflects some agency, a willful reshaping and re-imagining of the past that informs the present. These are people who, whether pegged as nerds or rebels or plodders, have taken control of the stories that form their identities.

In conversation, people are often willing to hand out thumbnail descriptions of themselves: "I’m kind of a hermit. " Or a talker, a practical joker, a striver, a snob, a morning person. But they are more likely to wince when someone else describes them so authoritatively.

Maybe that’s because they have come too far, shaken off enough old labels already. Like escape artists with a lifetime’s experience slipping through chains, they don’t want or need any additional work. Because while most people can leave their family niches, schoolyard nicknames and high school reputations behind, they don’t ever entirely forget them.

Psychologists seem to believe that if adults want to remake their identity, they need to()

A. tell their psychologists very similar stories about themselves

B. command the identity-forming factors themselves

C. quit their jobs and start their own business

D. hire a wonderful tutor to get themselves into the honor roll