单项选择题

We are all conditioned by the way we are brought up. Our values are determined by our parents, and in a larger sense, by the culture in which we live. The Chinese, for example, are not accustomed to ~the drinking of milk, and may actually become sick if they are compelled to drink a glassful of the beverage. Americans, On the other hand, thrive on milk, although they have many taboos (禁忌) of their own.
Some years ago, I gave a dinner party during which I served a delicious hors d’oeuvre (餐前小吃) filled with a meat that tasted somewhat like chicken. My guests wondered what the meat was, but Ii refused to tell them until they had eaten their fill. I then explained that they had just dined on the flesh of freshly killed rattlesnake. The reaction was nausea(哎吐)—and in some cases violent vomiting, tf I had served rattlesnake to a Chinese, he would doubtlessly have requested a second helping, for in China the dish is considered a delicacy. Another interesting case is the young man I met recently in New york City. An American by birth, he had been removed from his native state of Oregon at the age of six months when his parents went to Japan as missionaries. Orphaned before his firstbirthday, he was reared by a Japanese family in a remote village. The young man was unmistakably American in appearance, with blond hair and blue eyes. But he had a Japanese style of walking, Japanese facial expressions, and he thought like a Japanese. Though he had learned to speak English fluently, he felt uncomfortable and out of place in an American city. He soon returned to Japan.

This passage suggests that ().

A. we can select our values
B. our values are learned
C. our values change as we mature
D. some values are correct, while others are wrong

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