问题 单项选择题 A1型题

非法行医罪是依据哪部法律定罪()。

A.《中华人民共和国宪法》

B.《中华人民共和国刑法》

C.《中华人民共和国民法通则》

D.《中华人民共和国国境卫生检疫法》

E.《中华人民共和国传染病防治法》

答案

参考答案:B

解析:与犯罪行为相关的一定是刑事责任,一定与刑法相关。

单项选择题 案例分析题

一般资料:求助者,女性,31岁,已婚,大学文化程度,某公司部门经理。 案例介绍:求助者因工作关系结识了另一家公司的一位经理,对方虽然有家庭,但猛烈地追求她,多次发誓要离婚娶她。求助者不想介入婚外情,多次婉拒。但几年中对方痴心不改,也颇令求助者感动。去年发现自己的丈夫有婚外情,求助者主动提出离婚。离婚后求助者找到那个追求自己的人,想共同组建家庭,但他总是说妻子不同意离婚,一年多没有实质进展。为此两人产生矛盾。求助者非常生气,内心很痛苦,主动来进行心理咨询。 下面是心理咨询师与该求助者的一段咨询对话。 心理咨询师:你能详细地说说你生气的原因吗? 求助者:他以前总在追我,多次发誓要离婚娶我,说实在的,我确实有些感动,但我不想卷入婚外情,所以并没有什么实质上的事情发生。去年我丈夫先出轨了,我就离了婚。离婚后我想和他组建家庭,可他总拿妻子不同意离婚应付我,都一年多了,也没有个结果,他过去追我时说得多好听啊,现在他怎么能这样对我啊!我越想越生气,什么人啊!为这些事我们之间发生了矛盾,现在搞得关系很紧张。 心理咨询师:我听明白了,他过去多次发誓要娶你,可你真的离婚了,他却没能马上娶你,这让你非常生气,是这样吗? 求助者:是的。 心理咨询师:咱们前面商定的咨询目标是减轻你的情绪困扰,现在看看怎么减轻吧。 求助者:好吧。 心理咨询师:是他不娶你使你生气吗? 求助者:那当然是,如果他娶了我,我怎么会生气? 心理咨询师:我听明白了,按你所说,你要求别人娶你,别人就应该娶你。 求助者:是啊,娶我是他先提出来的,我没离婚前,他天天催我离婚,说离了婚他要娶我,可我现在离婚一年多了,他反而不娶了,他怎么这样做事啊! 心理咨询师:你信奉的是一个人对另一个人怎样,另一个人就必须对他怎样。 求助者:对啊,互相的吗。 心理咨询师:因此,别人对你怎样,你肯定对别人怎样。 求助者:对呀,……不对,(沉默)好像也不是,我丈夫出事后实际上也不想和我离婚,他发誓一定要对我好,希望重新来过,他那时对我挺好的,可我没有对他好,最终下决心和他离了婚。 心理咨询师:你刚讲过一个人对别人怎样,别人就必须对他怎样,而你又讲了你的丈夫后来对你很好,可你并没有对他好,这似乎有些矛盾,你能解释一下吗? 求助者:(沉默)……他那时已经有婚外情了,怎么能再对他好呢? 心理咨询师:你看,实际上别人对你怎样,你并没有对他怎样。 求助者:好像是的。心理咨询师:你认为你生气是由于那个人没有娶你,其实娶不娶你只是一个事件,你要求别人必须像你怎样对他来对待你一样这是你的信念,而你的信念是不合理的,不合理的信念会造成你的情绪困扰。如果你能认识到你现在的情绪是你的不合理信念造成的,通过改变它,你就能改变自己的情绪。 求助者:真的是这样么? 心理咨询师:有一个六面体,上面的数字分别为1,2,3,4,5,6,你把它扔出去,落回时朝上的数字是几? 求助者:不知道,哪个数字都可能朝上。 心理咨询师:当你提出要求时,是不是就像把六面体抛出一样? 求助者:(沉默)我好像有些明白了,本来有多种可能的事,我就只要求一种? 心理咨询师:你对别人提出要求,要求他必须听你的,这是一种绝对化的要求,一种不合理的信念。如果把对别人的"要求"变成"希望",当不希望的事发生时,最多是一种失望,不会过分的怨恨别人,自己也就不会生气了。 求助者:你讲得对,我要想不生气,就得接受他娶我,还应该接受他不娶我。

本案例中,求助者多次出现沉默,可能是()的原因。

A.困惑 

B.情绪 

C.阻抗 

D.思考

单项选择题

In 1993, I published a book, The Rage of a Privileged Class, whose central thesis was that even the most gifted African-Americans assumed that they would never crash through America’s glass ceiling—no matter how talented, well educated, or hardworking they were. Few people of any race would claim that true equality has arrived; but so much has changed since Rage came out. Color is becoming less and less a burden; race is less and less an immovable barrier.

My new research explores how that phenomenon is changing the way people of all races view the American landscape. I polled two groups of especially accomplished people of color. One is the African-American alumni of Harvard Business School. The other is the alumni of A Better Chance, a program, founded in 1963, that sends ambitious, talented youngsters to some of the nation’s best secondary schools.

Generations, I concluded from my study, mattered deeply—with their defining characteristics rooted in America’s evolving racial dynamics. Generation 1, in this categorization, is the civil-rights generation—those (born before 1945) who participated in, or simply bore witness to, the defining 20th-century battle for racial equality. It is the generation of whites who, in large measure, saw blacks as alien beings and the generation of blacks who, for the most part, saw whites as irremediably prejudiced. Gen 2s (born between 1945 and 1969) were much less racially constrained—though they remained, in large measure, stuck in a tangle of racial stereotypes. Gen 3s (born between 1970 and 1995) saw race as less of a big deal. And that ability to see a person beyond color has cleared the way for a generation of Believers—blacks who fully accept that America means what it says when it promises to give them a shot.

That new reality made itself clear when I compared black Gen 1 Harvard M. B. A. s with their Gen 3 counterparts. Seventy-five percent of Gen 1s said blacks faced "a lot" of discrimination, compared with 49 percent of Gen 3s. Twenty-five percent of Gen 1s thought their educational attainments put them "on an equal professional footing with white peers or competitors with comparable educational credentials," compared with 62 percent of Gen 3s. Ninety-three percent of Gen 1s saw a glass ceiling at their current workplaces, compared with 46 percent of Gen 3s.

I am not about to make a statistical argument based on these numbers, but the message nonetheless seems clear. In the time since the Gen 1s came on the scene, a revolution has occurred. Those uptight suburbanites who couldn’t imagine socializing with, working for, or marrying a "Negro," who thought blacks existed in an altogether different dimension, who could no more see dining with a black person than dining with a giraffe, have slowly given way to a new generation that embraces—at least consciously—the concept of equality. Americans have, in some substantial way, re-created each other—to an extent that our predecessors might find astounding.

The new research indicates()

A. some privileged programs help build students’ self-confidence

B. the more education one receives, the less prejudice one is subjected to

C. racial prejudice has become less of an obstacle to career development

D. older generations suffered less discrimination owing to the civil rights movement