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Everybody gets sick. Disease and injury make us suffer throughout our lives until finally sonic attack on the body brings our existence to an end. Fortunately, most of us in modern industrialized societies can take relatively good health for granted most of the time. In fact, we tend to fully realize the importance of good health only when we or those close to us become seriously ill. At such times we keenly appreciate the ancient truth that health is our most precious asset, one for which we might readily give up such rewards as power, wealth, or fame.
Because ill health is universal problem, affecting both the individual and society, the human response to sickness is always socially organized. No society leaves the responsibility for maintaining health and treating ill health entirely to the individual. Each society develops its own concepts of health and sickness and authorizes certain people to decide who is sick and how the sick should be treated. Around this focus there arises, over time, a number of standards, values, groups, statuses, and roles: in other words, an institution. To the sociologist, then, medicine is the institution concerned with the maintenance of health and treatment of disease.
In the simplest pre-industrial societies, medicine is usually an aspect of religion. The social arrangements for dealing with sickness are very elementary, often involving only two roles: the sick and the healer. The latter is typically also the priest, who relies primarily on religious ceremonies, both to identify and to treat disease: for example, bones may be thrown to establish a cause, songs may be used to bring about a cure. In modern industrialized societies, on the other hand, the institution has become highly complicated and specialized, including dozens of roles such as those of brain surgeon, druggist, and hospital administrator, linked with various organizations such as nursing homes, insurance companies, and medical schools. Medicine, in fact, has become the subject of intense sociological interest precisely because it is now one of the most pervasive and costly institutions of modern society.
1. Which of the following statements is true according to Paragraph 1?
2.The word “authorize” in Paragraph 2 means ____.
3.In Paragraph 2, we learn that the sociologist regards medicine as____.
4.According to Paragraph 3, which of the following is NOT true?
5.The author of this passage is mainly concerned with____.

问题1选项
A.Nowadays most people believe they can have fairly good health.
B.Human life involves a great deal of pain and suffering.
C.Most of us are aware of the full value of health.
D.Ancient people believed that health was more expensive than anything else.
问题2选项
A.make way for
B.give power to
C.write an order for
D.make it possible for
问题3选项
A.a system whose purpose is to treat disease and keep people healthy
B.a universal problem that affects every society
C.a social responsibility to treat ill health
D.a science that focuses on the treatment of disease
问题4选项
A.In the past, bones might be used to decide why people fell ill.
B.In pre-industrial societies priests sometimes treated patients by singing.
C.Modern medicine is so complicated that sociology no longer has a place in it.
D.There were only two roles in an elementary medical system, the patient and the one who tried to cure him.
问题5选项
A.sociological aspects in medicine
B.medical treatment of diseases
C.the development of medical science
D.the role of religion in medicine
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