单项选择题

下列各 A.益母草膏与妇血康颗粒 B.妇科千金片与当归四物汤 C.补中益气丸与金匮顺气丸 D.附子理中丸与黄连上清片 E.祛痰止咳颗粒与通宣理肺丸 因配伍禁忌而不宜合用的药组是

A.益母草膏与妇血康颗粒
B.妇科千金片与当归四物汤
C.补中益气丸与金匮顺气丸
D.附子理中丸与黄连上清片
E.祛痰止咳颗粒与通宣理肺丸
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The age at which young children begin to make moral discriminations about harmful actions committed against themselves or others has been the focus of recent research into the moral development of children. Until recently, child psychologists supported pioneer developmentalist Jean Piaget in his hypothesis that because of their immaturity, children under age seven do not take into account the intentions of a person committing accidental or deliberate harm, but rather simply assign punishment for offences on the basis of the magnitude of the negative consequences cause. According to Piaget, children under age seven occupy the first stage of moral development, which is characterized by moral absolutism (rules made by authorities must be obeyed) and imminent justice (if rules are broken, punishment will be meted out). Until young children mature, their moral judgments are based entirely on the effect rather than the cause of an offence. However, in recent research, Keasey found that six-year-old children not only distinguish between accidental and intentional harm, but also judge intentional harm as naughtier, regardless of the amount of damage produced. Both of these findings seem to indicate that children, at an earlier age than Piaget claimed, advance into the second stage of moral development, moral autonomy, in which they accept social rules but view them as more arbitrary than do children in the first stage. Keasey's research raises two key questions for developmental psychologists about children under age seven: do they recognize justifications for harmful actions, and do they make distinctions between harmful acts that are preventable and those acts that have unforeseen harmful consequences? Studies indicate that justifications excusing harmful actions might include public duty, self-defense, and provocation. For example, Nesdale and Rule concluded that children were capable of considering whether or not an aggressor's actions was justified by public duty: five year olds reacted very differently to 'Bonnie wrecks Ann's pretend house' depending on whether Bonnie did it 'so somebody won't fall over it' or because Bonnie wanted 'to make Anne feel bad.' Thus, a child of five begins to understand that certain harmful actions, though intentional, can be justified: the constraints of moral absolutism no longer solely guide their judgments. Psychologists have determined that during kindergarten children learn to make subtle distinctions involving harm. Darley observed that among acts involving unintentional harm, six-year-old children just entering kindergarten could not differentiate between foreseeable, and thus preventable, harm and unforeseeable harm for which the offender cannot be blamed. Seven months later, however, Darley found that these same children could make both distinctions, thus demonstrating that they had become morally autonomous.As to the punishment that children under seven are assigned to wrongdoing, Piaget suggestsA.the punishment is to be administered immediately following the offence.B.the more immature a child, the more severe the punishment assigned.C.the punishment for acts of intentional harm is less severe than it is for acts involving accidental harm.D.the severity of the assigned punishment is primarily determined by the perceived magnitude of negative consequences.