更多"It is relatively easy to understand"的相关试题:
[简答题]It is easy to understand why an earthquake causes terror. Yet in old age there may be terror of a very private nature, a sense of disintegration sometimes seeming from inner conflicts, sometimes from a premonition of death or the fear of becoming dependent.
[简答题]Consequently, it is easy to understand why little girls often perform school tasks better than boys, especially if the task requires sitting still, obeying commands, and accepting the teacher's ideas. A girl may pass easily through the first few grades.
[单项选择]It is easy to see why forgiveness is typically regarded as a virtue. Forgiveness is not always a virtue, however. Indeed, if I am correct in linking resentment to self-respect, a too ready tendency to forgive may properly be regarded as a vice because it may be a sign that one lacks respect for oneself. Forgiveness may indeed restore relationships, but to seek restoration at all cost--even at the cost of one’s very human dignity--can hardly be a virtue. And, in intimate relationships, it can hardly be true love or friendship either the kind of love and friendship that Aristotle claimed is an essential art of the human life. If I count morality as much as anyone else (as surely I do), a failure to resent moral injuries done to me is a failure to care about the moral value in my own person (that I am, in Kantian language, an end in myself) and thus a failure to care about the very rules of morality. To put the point in yet another way: If it is proper to feel indignation when I see third
A. Too ready to forgive is no more a real virtue than an evil.
B. The consistency between self-respect and forgiveness is important.
C. Rules of morality may guide the correct use of forgiveness.
D. Caring about others and oneself demands generous forgiveness.
[单项选择]
How and why would strain and anxiety trigger some of us to pile on extra weight Stress activates the flight-or-fight response (应激反应), a physiological reaction designed to get your body moving quickly in a physical emergency. When your brain perceives a threat, it sounds the alarm to your adrenal glands (肾上腺) to pump out the stress hormone cortisol (皮质醇). The hormone then signals fat cells to quickly release energy, which your muscles can use for a surge of power to "flee" or "fight". When the danger passes, cortisol briefly stays elevated to encourage your body to replenish (补充) its fat stores, then returns to normal.
"The system works beautifully if you’re running for the last bus home after work. It gives you a burst of energy, which you recover from quickly once you take your seat," says Pamela Peeke, MD, clinical assistant professor of medicine and author of Body for Life for Women. But when you turn on the stress response for month
A. The flight-or-fight response makes our body move slowly when in a physical emergency.
B. When we feel a threat, our brain sends the alarm to our adrenal glands to pump out cortisol.
C. Our muscles can use the energy released slowly by the fat cells to flight or fight.
D. Cortisol stays elevated persistently to encourage our body to replenish its fat stores after the danger passes.