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    Do you believe that things are connected for no scientific reason at all? For example, do you avoid saying the word “four” to avoid bad luck? If so, you have a superstition (迷信). And you're not alone — all kinds of people have them.

    For example, Portugal's soccer superstar Cristiano Ronaldo always steps onto the pitch (球场) with his right foot first, according to The Telegraph. And sports players are not alone in having superstitions. A visitor once asked the Nobel Prize winning scientist Niels Bohr whether he really believed that the horseshoe he'd hung at his country home was lucky. “Of course not,” the Danish physicist said. “But I understand it's lucky whether you believe in it or not.”

    One recent study found that even scientists at MIT and other top US schools tended to look for a meaning in natural events, similar to the connection between stepping on the pitch and playing soccer well, according to The Atlantic. When the researchers gave the scientists little time to answer questions, they were twice as likely to agree with statements such as “Trees produce oxygen so that animals can breathe” as they were when they had more time to think about their reply.

    It seems that fear can make people think differently in this way, too. In a British study, students imagined meeting a “witch” who said she would cast (施魔法) an evil spell(符咒) on them. About half said a scientist should not be worried about the spell. Yet each of them said that, personally, they wouldn't let the witch do it to them.

    So why are so many of us superstitious? Well, it seems to be our way of dealing with the unknown. “Many people quite simply just want to believe,” Brian Cronk, a professor of psychology at Missouri Western State University, said in a 2008 interview. “The human brain is always trying to work out why things happen, and when the reason is not clear, we tend to make up some pretty bizarre (古怪的) explanations.”

    And these explanations aren't completely unhelpful. In fact, superstitions can sometimes work and bring real luck, according to psychologists at the University of Cologne in Germany in the May 2010 issue of the journal Psychological Science. They found that believing in something can improve performance on a task like an exam.

    So, what about you? What superstitions do you follow to keep you safe and successful?

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理性的光芒照亮了世界。阅读材料,回答问题。

材料一  霍布斯认为,人们在组成国家后已把全部自然权利转让给了主权者,既然君主是主权的体现者,国民的总意志,那么他的利益便理所当然地体现了臣民的利益,他本人就是全体臣民的化身。如此,则臣民对君主的任何反抗都意味着对自己的反抗。材料二  洛克以为,那种关于把全部权利上交给主权者的主张荒唐得近乎滑稽。人们组成国家的目的是为了保护自己的自由、财产和安全,如果把一切权利都转让了出去,使君主有权任意处置自己的自由及生命,那么这与自然状态下有何区别?……天赋人权绝不可转让或遭剥夺,保护这些权利正是政府存在的目的,抹杀人权的国家没有存在的意义,而侵犯人权的政府即是暴政、专制。

                                     ——摘自陈绪纲《读(社会契约论)》

材料三  伏尔泰赞美孔丘“只诉诸道德,不宣传神怪”。他相信儒学是最好最合人类理性的哲学,并以中国为理想国,提倡以中国文化为标准。孟德斯鸠、卢梭则指出真实的中国根本不如尊孔人士想象和描述的那么美妙,他们对中国文化,尤其是无制衡的专制主义进行了猛烈的抨击和揭露。

                                ——摘编自庞忠甲《论儒学的国际影响》