如何解決種族歧視英文?
種族歧視用英語怎麼說?
racial tensions
消除種族歧視用英語怎麼說
To eliminate racial discrimination
反種族歧視 英文怎麼寫
Anti racial discrimination 反種族歧視
antiracism 反種族主義
種族歧視英文
一個瀕臨死亡的人描述:我感覺自己的身體分為兩個,一個躺在床上,那只是空殼;另一個飄在空中,那是自己的身形。 死亡臨近的時候是什麼感覺?每個人死亡的時候感覺是一樣嗎?科學家們已經對此作了細緻的研究,為人們提供了在生與死交界處的微妙感受信息。這就是--瀕死體驗。 1892年,瑞士地址科學家Heim根據爬山跌落者的報道,首先對瀕死體驗進行了現象學的描述。隨後,許多學者對此進行了調查和研究。我國對瀕死體驗的研究也已起步。據率先將國外這項研究介紹到國內的天津市安定醫院院長馮志穎介紹,瀕死體驗是指由某些遭受嚴重創傷或疾病但意外地獲得恢復的人,和處於潛在毀滅性境遇中預感即將死亡而又僥倖脫險的人所敘述的他們的死亡威脅時刻的主觀體驗。它和人們臨終過程心理一樣,是人類走向死亡時的精神活動。然而臨終過程是面臨死亡過程中的心理變化,時間較長,瀕死體驗卻發生在死亡突降的緊急關頭,持續短暫。目前國內外報道的瀕死體驗現象約有40種。 “我感到自己飛在天花板上,飄飄蕩蕩,有一個軀體(我的)躺在病床上。我清楚地感受到了它的脈搏和呼吸。”這是一位精神病學專家對他的同行講述的一次親歷離體體驗。“我對此確實感到特別吃驚。” “我感到思維特別清晰,過去的某些生活場景鏡頭畫面似地一一從頭腦中迅速閃過。有小時侯受獎的鏡頭,也有結婚時興奮的鏡頭,就象生活的‘全景回憶’。”“那時我不害怕,也不痛苦,也不思念親人,就象情感喪失了一般。”這是馮院長對唐山大地震倖存者中81例瀕死體驗的研究中,41例講述有類似的短暫經歷。 國內外研究表明,儘管不同個人描述的瀕死體驗內容有差異,但它具有明顯的一致性和普遍性,而且具有廣泛的超常內容。馮志穎及同事對1976年唐山大地震倖存者瀕死體驗調查中,雖只獲得81例有效的調查數據,確是目前世界瀕死體驗研究史上採集樣本最多的一次。據統計分析,這些倖存者中,半數以上的人瀕死時在對生活歷程進行回顧,近半數的人產生意識從自身分離出去的感受,覺得自身形象脫離了自己的軀體,遊離到空中。自己的身體分為兩個,一個躺在床上,那只是空殼,而另一個是自己的身形,它比空氣還輕,晃晃悠悠飄在空中,感到無比舒適;約三分之一的人有自身正在通過坑道或隧道樣空間的奇特感受,有時還伴有一些奇怪的嘈雜聲和被牽拉或被擠壓的感覺;還有約四分之一的人體驗到他們”遇見“非真實存在的人或靈魂現象,這種非真實存在的人多為過世的親人,或者是在世的熟人等,貌似同他們團聚。 社會心理、文化程度、職業、婚姻、性格、傾向等也對瀕死體驗的內容有不同程度的影響。馮志穎等的研究表明,男性較女性思維過程加快的感受多;未婚者比已婚者具有超感官知覺和世界毀滅感的體驗多;文化程度越高,思維特別清晰的感受越多,文化程度越底,離體體驗、生存於非塵世領域的體驗、軀體陌生感和世間非真實感較多;農民和無工作者時間緩慢或停止感和身體感覺異常的體驗多,幹部和工人有突然醒悟感的多;相信鬼神和命運者多有扮演著另一個人的感受。 “一朝被蛇咬,十年怕井繩。”蛇咬尚且如此,接受過死亡而又回到人世間的人其心理又該有多麼微妙的變化!馮志穎和他的合作者的研究報告指出,81例受研究者中,有47例在瀕死體驗前後性格有改變。瀕死體驗具有思維特別清晰感的人,性格多變得溫順;而“遇見”非塵世的人或靈魂、思維或行為不受意識控制而被審判感等體驗的人,性格多變得盲目樂觀或急噪。在“死而復生”之後,絕大多數人對當時得瀕死體驗記憶猶新,時隔一二十年仍刻骨銘心。 一位唐山大地震時只有23歲的劉姓姑娘,被倒塌的房屋砸......
“黑種人”用英文怎麼說,不要用black people,那好像有種族歧視之意
黑人:African American,Africans, blacks (沒有種族歧視之意)
黃種人: Asians, Middle-Easte常ners (中東人)
白種人:Caucasians (正式), Euroepeans, Americans
英語作文,要求::從中國人的角度來寫關於種族歧視,用英文,300~400字 100分
In some countries where racial prejudice is acute, violence has so come to be taken for granted as a means of solving differences,that it is not even questioned. There are countries where the white man imposes his rule by brute force; there are countries wherethe black man protests by setting fire to cities and by looting and pillaging. Important people on both sides, who would in other respects appear to be reasonable men, get up and calmly argue in favor of violence – as if it were a legitimate solution, like any other. What is really frightening, what really fills you with despair, is the realization that when it comes to the crunch, we have made no actual progress at all. We may wear collars and ties instead of war-paint, but our instincts remain basically unchanged. The whole of the recorded history of the human race, that tedious documentation of violence, has taught us absolutely nothing. We have still not learnt that violence never solves a problem but makes it more acute. The sheer horror, the bloodshed, the suffering mean nothing. No solution ever comes to light the morning after when we dismally contemplate the smoking ruins and wonder whathit us.
Before we can even begin to contemplate peaceful co-existence between the races, we must appreciate each other's problems. And to do this, we must learn about them: it is a simple exercise in communication, in exchanging information. “Talk, talk, talk,” the advocates of violence say, “all you ever do is talk, and we a......
如何說服別人,你不是一個有種族歧視的人的英語作文
I am happy to join with you today in what will go down in history as the greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation.
Five score years ago, a great American, in whose symbolic shadow we stand today, signed the Emancipation Proclamation. This momentous decree came as a great beacon light of hope to millions of Negro slaves who had been seared in the flames of withering injustice. It came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of bad captivity.
But one hundred years later, the Negro still is not free. One hundred years later, the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination. One hundred years later, the Negro lives on a lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material prosperity. One hundred years later, the Negro is still languished in the corners of American society and finds himself an exile in his own land. So we’ve come here today to dramatize a shameful condition.