问题 单项选择题

哲学就是要触动每个人的精神内存,让人回到自己的精神家园并守护自己的精神家园。对此理解正确的是()

A.哲学产生于人类的实践活动

B.哲学是自发产生的世界观

C.哲学高于一切具体科学

D.哲学有助于形成正确的思想方法

答案

参考答案:D

解析:

题中材料“哲学就是要触动每个人的精神内存,让人回到自己的精神家园并守护自己的精神家园”,说明哲学是指导人们生活的更好的艺术,哲学有助于人们形成正确的思想方法,故D项符合题意,可以入选;本题材料并未涉及哲学产生方面的问题,故A项不符合题意,不能入选;哲学是哲学家依据一定的自然知识、社会知识和思维知识,把不自觉的、不系统的世界观加以系统化、理论化而形成的思想体系,哲学不是自发形成的,故B项表述错误,不能入选;C项中的表述不科学且不符合材料主旨,故不能入选。因此,答案是D项。

考点:本题考查生活处处有哲学的相关知识。

单项选择题

Life expectancy in the richest countries of the world now exceeds the poorest by more than 30 years, figures show. The gap is widening across the world, with Western countries and the growing economies of Latin America and the Far East advancing more rapidly than Africa and the countries of the former Soviet Union. Average life expectancy in Britain and similar countries of the OECD was 78.8 in 2000-2005, an increase of more than seven years since 1970-1975 and almost 30 years over the past century. In sub-Saharan Africa, life expectancy has increased by just four months since 1970, to 46.1 years. Narrowing this "health gap" will involve going beyond the immediate causes of disease-poverty, poor sanitation and infection—to tackle the "causes of the causes" —the social hierarchies in which people live, says the report published by the Global Commission on the Social Determinants of Health established by the WHO in 2005.
Professor Sir Michael Marmot, chairman of the commission, who first coined the term "status syndrome", said social status was the key to tackling health inequalities worldwide. In the 1980s, in a series of ground-breaking studies among Whitehall civil servants, Professor Marmot showed that the risk of death among those on the lower rungs of the career ladder was four times higher than those at the top, and that the difference was linked with the degree of control the individuals had over their lives.
He said yesterday that the same rule applied in poorer countries. If people increased their status and gained more control over their lives they improved their health because they were less vulnerable to the economic and environmental threats. "When people think about those in poor countries they tend to think about poverty, lack of housing, sanitation and exposure to infectious disease. But there is another issue, the social gradient in health which I called status syndrome. It is not just those at the bottom of the hierarchy who have worse health; it is all the way along the scale. Those second from the bottom have worse health than those above them but better health than those below."
The interim report of the commission, in the online edition of The Lancet, says the effects of status syndrome extend from the bottom to the top of the hierarchy, with Swedish adults holding a PhD having a lower death rate than those with a master’s degree. The study says.. "The gradient is a worldwide occurrence, seen in low-income, middle-income and high- income countries. It means we are all implicated. "
The result is that even within rich countries such as Britain there are striking inequalities in life expectancy. The poorest men in Glasgow have a life expectancy of 54, lower than the average in India. The answer, the report says, is empowerment, of individuals, communities and whole countries. "Technical and medical solutions such as medical care are without doubt necessary. But they are insufficient." Professor Marmot said: "We talk about three kinds of empowerment. If people don’t have the material necessities, they cannot be empowered. The second kind is psycho-social empowerment: more control over their lives. The third is political empowerment, having a voice."
The commission’s final report, to be published soon, will identify the ill effects of low status and make recommendations for how they can be tackled. In Britain a century ago, infant mortality among the rich was about 100 per 1,000 live births compared with 250 per 1, 000 among the poor. Infant mortality is still twice as high among the poor in Britain, but the rates have come down dramatically to 7 per 1,000 among the poor and 3.5 among the rich. Professor Marmot said: "We have made dramatic progress, but this is not about abolishing the rankings, but by identifying the ill effects of hierarchies we can make huge improvement.\

Professor Marmot proposed that "empowerment" should ______.

A.mainly include technical and medical advancement

B.be equal to access to material necessities

C.be material, psycho-social and political

D.be the final answer to the social problem of "health gap"

单项选择题 A型题