问题 选择题

春秋战国时期,儒家学者认为“礼”是“国之干”,坚持以“礼”作为对历史人物的评判依据。这里的“礼”主要是指

A.风俗  

B.贡赋   

C.秩序

D.礼仪

答案

答案:C

题目分析:儒家认为确立礼是国家的躯干,认为杀害有礼者,就是在戕害国家躯体,制造祸端。那么对于一国而言,“礼”即是国家的统治秩序。礼在中国古代是社会的典章制度和道德规范。作为典章制度,它是社会政治制度的体现,是维护上层建筑以及与之相适应的人与人交往中的礼节仪式。在封建时代,礼维持社会、政治秩序,巩固等级制度,调整人与人之间的各种社会关系和权利义务的规范和准则。礼既是中国古代法律的渊源之一,也是古代法律的重要组成部分。

单项选择题
单项选择题

The most damning thing that can be said about the world’s best-endowed and richest country is that it is not only not the leader in health status, but that it is so low in the ranks of the nations. The United States ranks 18th among nations of the world in male life expectancy at birth, 9th in female life expectancy at birth, and 12th in infant mortality. More importantly, huge variations are evident in health status in the United States from one place to the next and from one group to the next.

The forces that affect health can be divided into four groupings that lend themselves to analysis of all health problems. Clearly the largest group of forces resides in the person’s environment. Behavior, in part derived from experiences with the environment, is the next greatest force affecting health. Medical care services, treated as separate from other environmental factors because of the special interest we have in them, make a modest contribution to health status. Finally, the contributions of heredity to health are difficult to judge.

No other country spends what we do per capita for medical care. The care available is among the best technically, even if used too freely and thus dangerously. Given the evidence that medical care is not that valuable and access to care not that bad, it seems most unlikely that our bad showing is caused by the significant proportion who are poorly served. Other hypotheses have greater explanatory power: excessive poverty, both actual and relative, and excessive wealth.

Excessive poverty is probably more prevalent in the U. S. than in any of the countries that have a better infant mortality rate and female life expectancy at birth. This is probably true also for all but four or five of the countries with a longer male life expectancy. In the notably poor countries that exceed us in male survival, difficult living conditions are a more accepted way of life and in several of them, a good basic diet, basic medical care and basic education, and lifelong employment opportunities are an everyday fact of life. In the U. S. a national unemployment level of 10 percent may be 40 percent in the ghetto while less than 4 percent elsewhere. The countries that have surpassed us in health do not have such severe problems. Nor are such a high proportion of their people involved in them.

Excessive wealth is not so obvious a cause of ill health, but, at least: until recently, few other nations could afford such unhealthful ways of living. Excessive intake of animal protein and fats, and use of tobacco and drugs, and dangerous recreational sports and driving habits are all possible only when one is wealthy. Our heritage, desires, and opportunities, combined with the relatively low cost of bad foods and speedy vehicles, make us particularly vulnerable. Our unacceptable health status, then, will not be improved appreciably by expanded medical resources nor by their redistribution so much as by a general attempt to improve the quality of life for all.

In discussing the forces that influence health, the author implies that medical care services are()

A. a special aspect of an individual’s environment

B. a function of an individual’s behavior pattern

C. becoming less important as technology improves

D. too expensive for most people