题干

樱桃在还没成熟时,它们味道很酸,成熟后樱桃的含糖量提高了,吃起来也就可口了。专门种植樱桃的农户到了收获时节才采摘樱桃,所以超市里的樱桃都是到了成熟期才上架的。然而,生长在公园里的樱桃,却总是在尚未成熟、味道太酸的时候就被人摘下来了。如果人们能等久点再采摘,樱桃的味道会更好。为什么有的人等得,有的人却等不得呢?从经济生活的角度,最合理的解释是

A:公园里的樱桃有更高的品质

B:不同的所有制影响着人们对财产的处置方式

C:不同的消费理念导致了不同的消费行为

D:早于时节上市的樱桃,由于供不应求会获得更多的经济利益

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B

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People on a college campus were more likely to give money to the March of Dimes if they were asked for a donation by a disabled woman in a wheelchair than if asked by a nondisabled woman. In another 1 , subway riders in New York saw a man carrying a stick stumble(绊脚) and fall to the floor. Sometimes the victim had a large red birthmark on his2; sometimes he did not. In this situation, the victim was more likely to 3 aid if his face was spotless than if he had an unattractive birthmark. In 4 these and other research findings, two themes are 5 : we are more willing to help people we like for some reason and people we think6assistance.

In some situations, those who are physically attractive are more likely to receive aid. 7 , in a field study researchers placed a completed application to graduate school in a telephone box at the airport. The application was ready to be 8 , but had apparently been "lost". The photo attached to the application was sometimes that of a very 9 person and sometimes that of a less attractive person. The measure of helping was whether the individual who found the envelope actually mailed it or not. Results showed that people were more likely to 10 the application if the person in the photo was physically attractive.

The degree of 11 between the potential helper and the person in need is also important. For example, people are more likely to help a stranger who is from the same country rather than a foreigner. In one study, shoppers on a busy street in Scotland were more likely to help a person wearing a(n) 12 T-shirt than a person wearing a T-shirt printed with offensive words.

Whether a person receives help depends in part on the "worth" of the case. For example, shoppers in a supermarket were more likely to give someone. 13 to buy milk rather than to buy cookies, probably because milk is thought more essential for 14 than cookies. Passengers on a New York subway were more likely to help a man who fell to the ground if he appeared to be 15 rather than drunk.