题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
提问人:网友d*******1 发布时间:2022年5月2日 00:37
[单选题]

“义务感,责任感,善恶感等”属于下列哪种情感。 A 、道德感 B、美感 C、理智感 D、喜悦

A. A 、道德感 B. B 、美感 C. C 、理智感 D. D 、喜悦

参考答案
十点题库官方参考答案 (由十点题库聘请的专业题库老师提供的解答)
更多““义务感,责任感,善恶感等”属于下列哪种情感。 A 、道德感”相关的问题
男性,58岁。反复发生心动过速10年,曾诊断"预激综合征",未予特殊治疗,近来发作频繁伴气短,此次因再次发作而来诊,查体:BP80/60mmHg,P180次/分,心律不齐,心电图:宽QRS,心动过速,心律不规则,平均心室率180次/分,V导联P波消失。该患者诊断是()
A . A.室颤
B . 室性心动过速
C . 预激伴房颤
D . 预激伴室上速
E . 预激合并冠心病
点击查看答案
疫毒痢的病位主要在()
A.肺脾
B.脾胃
C.肺胃
D.心肺
E.肝脾
点击查看答案
冬季施工混凝土不宜采用哪种养护方法()。
A.蒸汽加热养护
B.暖棚法
C.常温覆盖并洒水
D.蓄热法
点击查看答案
求函数F(x)=t3e-t2dt的极值.
求函数F(x)=t3e-t2dt的极值.
点击查看答案
柴油机第一道活塞环在环槽中的运动有()。 Ⅰ.轴向运动 Ⅱ.轴向振动 Ⅲ.刮削运动 Ⅳ.回转运动 Ⅴ.扭曲振动 Ⅵ.径向振动
A . A.Ⅰ+Ⅲ+Ⅴ
B . B.Ⅱ+Ⅲ+Ⅴ+Ⅵ
C . C.Ⅰ+Ⅱ+Ⅳ+Ⅴ+Ⅵ
D . D.Ⅰ+Ⅱ+Ⅲ+Ⅳ+Ⅴ+Ⅵ
点击查看答案
对化学刺激或电刺激不敏感,故很少用于筛选试验镇咳药的动物是()。
A.小鼠
B.兔
C.豚鼠
D.犬
点击查看答案
在如图1-2所示的某IP网络连接拓扑结构图中,共有 (36) 。
点击查看答案
关于胎盘早剥的临床表现,正确的是()
A. 轻型胎盘早剥腹痛症状明显B. 妊娠晚期的无痛性阴道流血C. 重型胎盘早剥剥离面不超过胎盘的1/3D. 轻型胎盘早剥贫血程度与出血量不符E. 重型胎盘早剥子宫硬如板状
点击查看答案
新线下,“代收业务”扣收他行账户的处理是通过()系统完成。
A.CFIB系统、CSPA系统 B.CSPB系统、CFIB系统 C.CSPB系统、BANCS系统 D.CFIB系统、人行小额定期借记系统
点击查看答案
在矩形均布荷载作用下,利用角点下的附加应力系数可求得()
A 只能求矩形均布荷载角点下的附加应力
B 不能求矩形均布荷载范围外地基中的附加应力
C 只能求矩形均布荷载范围内的地基中的附加应力
D 地基中任意点的附加应力
点击查看答案
下列关于200L桶内盖选项中,不可以领用的情况是()
A . 内盖内外表面整洁
B . 内盖密封圈完好
C . 内盖出现锈蚀
D . 内盖无变形
点击查看答案
呼吸衰竭治疗的主要目的是
A.控制感染
B.纠正酸碱失衡
C.纠正缺氧和CO2潴留
D.纠正电解质紊乱
E.纠正心力衰竭
点击查看答案
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions , which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.The Deep Sea At a time when most think of outer space as the final frontier, we must remember that a great deal of unfinished business remains here on earth. Robots crawl on the surface of Mars, and spacecraft exit our solar system, but most of our own planet has still never been seen by human eyes. It seems ironic that we know more about impact craters on the far side of the moon than about the longest and largest mountain range on earth. It is amazing that human beings crossed a quarter of a million miles of space to visit our nearest celestial neighbor before penetrating just two miles deep into the earth’s own waters to explore the Midocean Ridge. And it would be hard to imagine a more significant part of our planet to investigate - a chain of volcanic mountains 42,000 miles long where most of the earth’s solid surface was born, and where vast volcanoes continue to create new submarine landscapes. The figure we so often see quoted - 71% of the earth’s surface - understates the oceans’ importance. If you consider instead three-dimensional volumes, the land-dwellers’ share of the planet shrinks even more toward insignificance: less than 1% of the total. Most of the oceans’ enormous volume, lies deep below the familiar surface. The upper sunlit layer, by one estimate, contains only 2 or 3% of the total space available to life. The other 97% of the earth’s biosphere lies deep beneath the water’s surface, where sunlight never penetrates. Until recently, it was impossible to study the deep ocean directly. By the sixteenth century, diving bells allowed people to stay underwater for a short time: they could swim to the bell to breathe air trapped underneath it rather than return all the way to the surface. Later, other devices, including pressurized or armored suits, heavy metal helmets, and compressed air supplied through hoses from the surface, allowed at least one diver to reach 500 feet or so. It was 1930 when a biologist named William Beebe and his engineering colleague Otis Barton sealed themselves into a new kind of diving craft, an invention that finally allowed humans to penetrate beyond the shallow sunlit layer of the sea and the history of deep-sea exploration began. Science then was largely incidental - something that happened along the way. In terms of technical ingenuity and human bravery, this part of the story is every bit as amazing as the history of early aviation. Yet many of these individuals, and the deep-diving vehicles that they built and tested, are not well known. It was not until the 1970s that deep-diving manned submersibles were able to reach the Midocean Ridge and begin making major contributions to a wide range of scientific questions. A burst of discoveries followed in short order. Several of these profoundly changed whole fields of science, and their implications are still not fully understood. For example, biologists may now be seeing - in the strange communities of microbes and animals that live around deep volcanic vents - clues to the origin of life on earth. No one even knew that these communities existed before explorers began diving to the bottom in submersibles. Entering the deep, black abyss presents unique challenges for which humans must carefully prepare if they wish to survive. It is an unforgiving environment, both harsh and strangely beautiful, that few who have not experienced it firsthand can fully appreciate. Even the most powerful searchlights penetrate only tens of feet. Suspended particles scatter the light and water itself is far less transparent than air; it absorbs and scatters light. The ocean also swallows other types of electromagnetic radiation, including radio signals. That is why many deep sea vehicles dangle from tethers. Inside those tethers, copper wires or fiber optic strands transmit signals that would dissipate and die if broadcast into open water. Another challenge is that the temperature near the bottom in very deep water typically hovers just four degrees above freezing, and submersibles rarely have much insulation. Since water absorbs heat more quickly than air, the cold down below seems to penetrate a diving capsule far more quickly than it would penetrate, say, a control van up above, on the deck of the mother ship. And finally, the abyss clamps down with crushing pressure on anything that enters it. This force is like air pressure on land, except that water is much heavier than air. At sea level on land, we don’t even notice 1 atmosphere of pressure, about 15 pounds per square inch, the weight of the earth’s blanket of air. In the deepest part of the ocean, nearly seven miles down, it’s about 1,200 atmospheres, 18,000 pounds per square inch. A square-inch column of lead would crush down on your body with equal force if it were 3,600 feet tall. Fish that live in the deep don’t feel the pressure, because they are filled with water from their own environment. It has already been compressed by abyssal pressure as much as water can be (which is not much). A diving craft, however, is a hollow chamber, rudely displacing the water around it. That chamber must withstand the full brunt of deep-sea pressure - thousands of pounds per square inch. If seawater with that much pressure behind it ever finds a way to break inside, it explodes through the hole with laserlike intensity. It was into such a terrifying environment that the first twentieth-century explorers ventured.Questionswrite the correct letter, A, B, C or D, in boxes on your answer sheet.
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions , which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.The Deep Sea
At a time when most think of outer space as the final frontier, we must remember that a great deal of unfinished business remains here on earth. Robots crawl on the surface of Mars, and spacecraft exit our solar system, but most of our own planet has still never been seen by human eyes. It seems ironic that we know more about impact craters on the far side of the moon than about the longest and largest mountain range on earth. It is amazing that human beings crossed a quarter of a million miles of space to visit our nearest celestial neighbor before penetrating just two miles deep into the earth’s own waters to explore the Midocean Ridge. And it would be hard to imagine a more significant part of our planet to investigate - a chain of volcanic mountains 42,000 miles long where most of the earth’s solid surface was born, and where vast volcanoes continue to create new submarine landscapes.
The figure we so often see quoted - 71% of the earth’s surface - understates the oceans’ importance. If you consider instead three-dimensional volumes, the land-dwellers’ share of the planet shrinks even more toward insignificance: less than 1% of the total. Most of the oceans’ enormous volume, lies deep below the familiar surface. The upper sunlit layer, by one estimate, contains only 2 or 3% of the total space available to life. The other 97% of the earth’s biosphere lies deep beneath the water’s surface, where sunlight never penetrates.
Until recently, it was impossible to study the deep ocean directly. By the sixteenth century, diving bells allowed people to stay underwater for a short time: they could swim to the bell to breathe air trapped underneath it rather than return all the way to the surface. Later, other devices, including pressurized or armored suits, heavy metal helmets, and compressed air supplied through hoses from the surface, allowed at least one diver to reach 500 feet or so.
It was 1930 when a biologist named William Beebe and his engineering colleague Otis Barton sealed themselves into a new kind of diving craft, an invention that finally allowed humans to penetrate beyond the shallow sunlit layer of the sea and the history of deep-sea exploration began. Science then was largely incidental - something that happened along the way. In terms of technical ingenuity and human bravery, this part of the story is every bit as amazing as the history of early aviation. Yet many of these individuals, and the deep-diving vehicles that they built and tested, are not well known.
It was not until the 1970s that deep-diving manned submersibles were able to reach the Midocean Ridge and begin making major contributions to a wide range of scientific questions. A burst of discoveries followed in short order. Several of these profoundly changed whole fields of science, and their implications are still not fully understood. For example, biologists may now be seeing - in the strange communities of microbes and animals that live around deep volcanic vents - clues to the origin of life on earth. No one even knew that these communities existed before explorers began diving to the bottom in submersibles.
Entering the deep, black abyss presents unique challenges for which humans must carefully prepare if they wish to survive. It is an unforgiving environment, both harsh and strangely beautiful, that few who have not experienced it firsthand can fully appreciate. Even the most powerful searchlights penetrate only tens of feet. Suspended particles scatter the light and water itself is far less transparent than air; it absorbs and scatters light. The ocean also swallows other types of electromagnetic radiation, including radio signals. That is why many deep sea vehicles dangle from tethers. Inside those tethers, copper wires or fiber optic strands transmit signals that would dissipate and die if broadcast into open water.
Another challenge is that the temperature near the bottom in very deep water typically hovers just four degrees above freezing, and submersibles rarely have much insulation. Since water absorbs heat more quickly than air, the cold down below seems to penetrate a diving capsule far more quickly than it would penetrate, say, a control van up above, on the deck of the mother ship.
And finally, the abyss clamps down with crushing pressure on anything that enters it. This force is like air pressure on land, except that water is much heavier than air. At sea level on land, we don’t even notice 1 atmosphere of pressure, about 15 pounds per square inch, the weight of the earth’s blanket of air. In the deepest part of the ocean, nearly seven miles down, it’s about 1,200 atmospheres, 18,000 pounds per square inch. A square-inch column of lead would crush down on your body with equal force if it were 3,600 feet tall.
Fish that live in the deep don’t feel the pressure, because they are filled with water from their own environment. It has already been compressed by abyssal pressure as much as water can be (which is not much). A diving craft, however, is a hollow chamber, rudely displacing the water around it. That chamber must withstand the full brunt of deep-sea pressure - thousands of pounds per square inch. If seawater with that much pressure behind it ever finds a way to break inside, it explodes through the hole with laserlike intensity.
It was into such a terrifying environment that the first twentieth-century explorers ventured.Questionswrite the correct letter, A, B, C or D, in boxes on your answer sheet.
点击查看答案
我国生产及使用的第二类精神药品不包括()。
A.苯巴比妥
B.司可巴比妥
C.地西泮
D.甲丙氨酯
E.麦角胺咖啡因
点击查看答案
简述风险投资的风险转移?
点击查看答案
客服
TOP