题干

阅读下面名著选段,回答问题。

       ⑴我们谁都知道自己难免一死。但是这一天的到来,似乎遥遥无期。当然,人们要是健康无恙,谁又会想到它,谁又会整日惦记着它。于是便饱食终日,无所事事。

       ⑵有时我想,要是人们把活着的每一天都看作生命的最后一天该有多好啊!就能更显出生命的价值。如果以为生命还比较漫长,我们的每一天就不会过得那样有意义,有朝气,我们对生活就不会总是充满热情。

       ⑶我们对待生命如此倦怠,在对待自己的各种天赋及使用自己的器官上又何尝不是如此?只有那些聋了的人才更加珍惜光明。那些成年后失明、失聪的人更是如此。然而,那些耳聪目明的正常人却不好好地去利用他们的天赋。他们视而不见、充耳不闻,无任何鉴赏之心。事情往往就是这样,一旦失去了的东西,人们才会留恋它,人得了病对会想到健康的幸福。

       ⑷我有过这样的想法,如果让每一个人在他成年后的某个阶段瞎上几天,聋上几天该有多好。黑暗将使他们更加珍惜光明;寂寞将教会他们真正领略喧哗的欢乐。

       ⑸最近一位朋友来看我,他刚从林中散步回来。我问他看到些什么,他说没有什么特别的东西。要不是我早习惯了这样的回答,我真会大吃一惊。我终于体会到了这样一个道理:明眼人往往熟视无睹。

       ⑹我多么希望看看这世界上的一切,如果说凭我的触觉能得到如此大的乐趣,那么能让我亲眼看一下该有多好。奇怪的是明眼人对这一切却如此冷漠!那点缀世界的五彩缤纷和千姿百态在他们看来是那么平庸。也许人就是这样,有了的东西不知道欣赏,没有的东西一味追求。在明眼人的世界上,视力这种天赋不过增添一点方便罢了,并没有赋予他们的生活更多的意义。

       ⑺假如我是一位大学校长,我要设一门必修课程:“如何使用你的眼睛”。教授应该让他的学生知道看清他们面前一闪而过的东西会给他们的生活带来多大的乐趣,从而唤醒人们那麻木、呆滞的心灵。

       ⑻请你思考一下这个问题:假如你只有三天光明,你将如何使用你的眼睛?想到三天以后,太阳再也不会在你的眼前升起,你又将如何度这那宝贵的三日?你又会让你的眼睛停留在何处。

                                                                                                                                                                                            ——(美)海伦·凯勒

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    There was good news last week for people who struggle to get eight hours of sleep a night: they may not need so much shut-eye after all.

    Researchers from UCLA and elsewhere looked at sleep habits of remote hunter-gatherers in Tanzania, Namibia and Bolivia — groups with pre-industrial lifestyles whose sleep patterns are believed to reflect those of ancient humans. The researchers found that, on average, members of each group sleep a bit less than six and a half hours a night.

    The study, published in the academic journal Current Biology, indicates that “natural” sleep is less than eight hours a night and that modern society's numerous electronic distractions (分心) aren't necessarily to blame for people getting just six or seven hours of sleep.

    “The story that often gets out is that if you sleep for less than seven hours, you're going to die early,” he told me. “That's not true.”

    Yet Americans are addicted to getting more sleep — and on turning to medical shortcuts to help them.

    According to the Centers for Disease Control, as many as 70 million U.S. adults suffer from sleep disorders or sleeplessness. Only a third of Americans get the government's recommended seven to nine hours of sleep a night.

    About 9 million American adults use sleeping pills to help get a good night's rest, the CDC found. Siegel said the number of people relying on medicines “has gone up rather rapidly since then.”

    Industry consulting firm Global Data estimates that worldwide sales for sleeplessness medicines will run about $1.4 billion next year and reach $1.8 billion by 2023, recovering from lower sales in recent years because of cheaper generics(仿制药) hitting the market.

    Dr. Roy Artal, a sleep specialist in West Los Angeles, said it's understandable that busy people in today's go-go world would turn to medicines to speed up the sleep process. But all they're doing is building a reliance on powerful drugs for relatively little improvement.

    “There's no magic pill that makes us sleep when we want and wake up when we want,” Artal said. “The effects of sleeping pills tend to be modest.”

    He and other experts say the answer to sleeplessness isn't to be found in a pill bottle. It's in what's called “sleep hygiene (保健).”