(单词翻译:单击)
"A commonplace criticism of American culture is its excessive preoccupation with material goods and corresponding neglect of the human spirit. Americans, it is alleged1, worship only "the almighty2 dollar". We scramble3 to "keep up with the Joneses". The love affair between Americans and their automobiles4 has been a continuing subject of derisive5 commentary by both foreign and domestic critics. Americans are said to live by quantitative6 ethic7. Bigger is better, whether in bombs or sedans. The classical virtues8 of grace, harmony, and economy of both means and ends are lost on most Americans. As a result, we are said to be swallowing up the world's supply of natural resources, which are irreplaceable. Americans constitute 6 percent of the world's population but consume over a third of the world's energy. These are now familiar complaints. Indeed, in some respects Americans may believe the "pursuit of happiness" to mean the pursuit of material things".