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( )it is generally agreed that sex-role stereotyping contributes to narrowly defined expectations about human potential, limited career options for males and females, and mixed messages about the world which contradict daily life experience, the social costs of such stereotyping have not been fully explored in the educational arena.



A.As B.If C.While D.Unless

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[A] Since the nineteenth century became the twentieth, Black bands [B] were being heard more and more on the streets of New Orleans. [C] Included in the crowd of listeners who followed them [D] were black youngsters such as Louis Armstrong. Soon there were white bands trying to copy this Black style of playing.



A.Since B.were being heard C.Included in the crowd D.were

It is developing a service that will let you create all online identity that can ( )various claims that it will back up.



A.plunge B.assert C.exert D.insert

Although it rules that these is no constitutional right to physician-assisted suicide, the Court in effect supported the medical principle of “double effect’’, a ( ) moral principle holding that an action having two effects—a good one that is intended and a harmful one that is foreseen—is permissible if the actor intends only the good effect.



A.century’s old B.century old C.centuries’s old D.centuries-old

The English speaker has [A]at his disposal a vocabulary and a set of grammatical rule which [B]enable him to communicate his thoughts and feelings, in a variety of styles, to [C]the other English speakers. His vocabulary, in particular, [D]both that which he uses actively and that which he recognizes, increases in size as he grows old, as a result of education and experience.



A.at his disposal B.enable C.the other D.both that which

The decades after 1830 were a period of disintegration and uncertainty in German philosophy. For almost half a century idealist philosophies, culminating in Hegel’s grandiose system,had dominated the philosophical scene, revolving around such spiritual notions as transcendental ego,consciousness,presentation (Vorstellung ) , idea, mind, and spirit (Geist). The rapid collapse of German Idealism—that “gigantic mountain range” of creative thought, as Husserl called it in 1917,was due to a combination of causes.There was in the first place, accelerated progress in the natural sciences, ranging from physiology (Johannes Muller, Ernst Weber) to physics (Robert Mayer, Hermann Helmholtz) and chemistry (Justus von Liebig, Friedrich Wohler). The success of the experimental approach visibly demonstrated the futility of all idealistic speculation about nature. Secondly, there was the rapid growth of technology (especially the construction of railways and the invention of the telegraph), combined with the process of industrialization (resulting in tensions between capital and labour which led to radical changes in the economic system). Moreover, new political ideas concerning popular participation in government led first of all to the abortive revolution of 1848 and resulted finally in the unification of Germany after the war of 1866.Next to philosophical idealism, the other great loser in this course of events was Christianity, especially protestant Christianity, a long-standing ally of idealism. The vacuum thus produced was often filled by vulgar materialist ideas along the line of Ludwig Buchner’s Kraft und Stoff (1855). The more educated classes,however, had needs of a more refined nature, and they turned instead to Schopenhauerianism. Schopenhauer stood firmly in the great European tradition of idealism extending from Plato and Kant, but he nevertheless resolutely rejected post-Kantian, and more specifically Hegelian idealism. Schopenhauer combined the scientist’s conviction of a blind causality reigning in the world of nature with a view according to which this world is none the less rooted in a subjective bestowal of sense. He combined the democratic feeling of compassion for all mankind with an elitist view on art, and a belief in the ultimate meaninglessness of history with an ontology in which the will is fundamental. But above all his philosophy, while rating Christianity rather low, made room for religion on better soil: the religion of India.The view of Indian thought current among educated circles in the second half of the nineteenth century in Germany was strongly influenced by Schopenhauer. Not only did he give popular currency to expressions such as “nirvana” and “the veil of maya”,but also he may also be held responsible for the current amalgamation of all ideas which blew into Europe from the East. Neither Hinduism and Buddhism nor Brahmanism and Vedanta philosophy were clearly distinguished by Schopenhauer. On one point, however, he was particularly firm:Buddhism is the highest religion in the world,because it is an “atheistic religion” . Thus it not only surpasses Christian theism,but also comes close to Schopenhauer’s own conception of the absolute. Schopenhauer’s followers in Germany were therefore able to look down on the parochial Christian rituals practised in their country, while upholding the claim that they,too,were directed toward some higher entity however, vaguely conceived. Moreover, they could feel themselves close to the Vedas and Up anisads,considered to be the oldest and most venerable documents of human thought, while at the same time feeling superior to these Indian “myths” as a result of their own rootedness in the purely philosophical ideas of the Schopenhauerian system.To illustrate all this, I want to quote from a document which not only exemplifies this widespread attitude, but also deviates from it in a significant way. It will moreover display the typical framework of Husserl’s own understanding of Indian thought. The document in question is a letter written by Thomas Masaryk (1850—193

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