题干

2015年是世界反法西斯战争胜利70周年,半个世纪以来,人们不断的反思两次世界大战的灾难,不断探索防止和消除战争的方法,并做出了不懈努力。阅读下列材料,回答问题。

材料一:   列宁预言:“远东的全部外交史和经济史使人毫不怀疑,在资本主义基础上,要防止美日之间日益尖锐的冲突是不可能的。”

材料二:   20世纪50年代中期以后,阿登纳说:“如果我们欧洲不想在起了根本变化的世界上走下坡路的话,必须走向联合……否则欧洲各国将会沦为超级大国的附庸。”

材料三:   中东是世界上最为动荡的地区之一,第二次世界大战后的半个多世纪里,它一直沉浸在战火与鲜血之中。美国学者斯派克曼指出:“谁控制了边缘地带,谁就控制了欧亚大陆;谁控制了欧亚大陆,谁就掌握了世界命运。”这里的“边缘地带”几乎包括了整个中东地区。   

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    Norman Garmezy, a development psychologist at the University of Minnesota, met thousands of children in his four decades of research. A nine-year-old boy in particular stuck with him. He has an alcoholic mother and an absent father. But each day he would walk in to school with a smile on his face. He wanted to make sure that "no one would feel pity for him and no one would know his mother's incompetence.” The boy exhibited a quality Garmezy identified as “resilience”.

    Resilience presents a challenge for psychologists. People who are lucky enough to never experience any sort of adversity (逆境) won't know how resilient they are. It's only when they're faced with obstacles, stress, and other environmental threats that resilience, or the lack of it, comes out. Some give in and some conquer.

    Garmezy's work opened the door to the study of the elements that could enable an individual's success despite the challenges they faced. His research indicated that some elements had to do with luck, but quite large set of elements was psychological, and had to do with how the children responded to the environment. The resilient children had what psychologists call an “internal lens of control(内控点)”. They believed that they, and not their circumstances, affected their achievements. The resilient children saw themselves as the arrangers of their own fates.

    Ceorge Bonanno has been studying resilience for years at Columbia University's Teachers College. He found that some people are far better than others at dealing with adversity. This difference might come from perception(认知) whether they think of an event as traumatic(创伤), or as an opportunity to learn and grow. “Stressful” or “traumatic” events themselves don't have much predictive power when it comes to life outcomes. "Exposure to potentially traumatic events does not predict later functioning,” Bonanno said. "It's only predictive if there's a negative response.” In other words, living through adversity doesn't guarantee that you'll suffer going forward.

    The good news is that positive perception can be taught. "We can make ourselves more or less easily hurt by how we think about things," Bonanno said. In research at Columbia, the neuroscientist Kevin Ochsner has shown that teaching people to think of adversity in different ways--to reframe it in positive terms when the initial response is negative, or in a less emotional way when the initial response is emotionally “hot”---changes how they experience and react to the adversity.