• Matéria: Inglês
  • Autor: Robocraftano
  • Perguntado 8 anos atrás

(PUCRS - adapted) Read the text

What is beauty? Define beauty? One may as well dissect a soap bubble. We know it when we see it - or so we think.

Philosophers define it as a moral equation. What is beautiful is good, said Plato. Poets look for high standards. Beauty is truth, truth is beauty, wrote John Keats.

Science examines beauty and pronounces it a strategy. "Beauty is health", a psychologist tells me. "It's a sign saying 'I'm healthy and fertile. I can pass on your genes.'"

At its best, beauty celebrates. From the painted Txikão Indian in Brazil to Madonna in her metal bra, humanity likes to abandon its everyday look and masquerade as a more powerful, romantic, or sexy being.

At its worst, beauty discriminates. Studies suggest attractive people make more money, get more attention in class and are seen as friendlier. We do judge people by their looks. In an era of feminist and politically correct values, not to mention the belief that all men and women are created equal, the fact that all men and women are not - and that some are more beautiful than others - disturbs, confuses, even angers.

The search for beauty is costly. 1In the United States last year people spent six billion dollars 2on fragrance and another six billion on make-up. In the mania to lose weight 20 billion were spent on diet products and services - in addition to the billions that were paid out for health club memberships and cosmetic surgery.

The sad, sometimes ugly side of beauty: In a 1997 magazine survey, 15 percent of women and 11 percent of men sampled said they'd sacrifice more than five years of their life to be at their ideal weight. According to one study, 80 percent of women are dissatisfied with their bodies. In one of its worst manifestations, discontent with one's body can wind up as an eating disorder, such as anorexia or bulimia. Both can be fatal. Today eating disorders, once mostly limited to wealthy Western cultures, occur around the world, in countries as different as Fiji, Japan and Argentina.

The preoccupation with beauty can be a neurosis, and yet there is something therapeutic about paying attention to how we look and feel. "People are so quick to say beauty is superficial", says Ann Marie Gardner, beauty director of "W" magazine. "They're fearful. They say: 'It doesn't have substance.' What many don't realize is that it's fun to reinvent yourself, as long as you don't take it too seriously".

The prepositions in (ref.1) and on (ref. 2) are correctly used in all alternatives but

Escolha uma:
a. she's always in a bad mood on Mondays.
b. he'll go on a leave in the summer.
c. in the evenings I see her on TV.
d. on September I'll be in vacation.
e. in two months you can be on the road.

Respostas

respondido por: Astraeus
4
D) On september I'll be in vacation. O correto seria "on vacation".
Eu não entendi porque você colocou o texto, já que não parecia necessário para a pergunta. Bem, foi um bom texto, eu gostei dele. É duro como a beleza faz com que as pessoas fiquem insatisfeitas consigo mesmas, e é duro que elas tentem tanto para atingir as expectativas da sociedade. :/
Espero ter ajudado!

Robocraftano: Muito obrigado!
Astraeus: De nada!
Perguntas similares