首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
You will hear an interview with Prof. Jesse Ausubel about his optimistic attitudes towards environmental issues today. As you li
You will hear an interview with Prof. Jesse Ausubel about his optimistic attitudes towards environmental issues today. As you li
admin
2016-07-10
63
问题
You will hear an interview with Prof. Jesse Ausubel about his optimistic attitudes towards environmental issues today. As you listen, answer the questions or complete the notes in your test booklet for Questions 21 to 30 by writing no more than three words in the space provided on the right. You will hear the interview twice. You now have 1 minute to read Questions 21 to 30.
W: What makes you such an optimist?
M: Working in The Rockerfeller University here in New York, I am overwhelmed every week by what people are learning. Genetics offers the most dramatic example, but in materials science and so many fields it’s almost as astonishing. Modern science is very young. Even if you go back to Galileo, it’s only 400 years old. Large-scale organized research is less than 100 years old. The chance to do things much better is enormous. Take energy. It’s a big cause for environmental concern. If you look at the whole system from mining fuel to powering my desk lamp, right now it is about 5 percent efficient. The other 95 percent of the energy in the fuel gets wasted along the way. We can’t jump quickly to 50 percent. But we have centuries of opportunity ahead of us. Whether you look at transport or energy or food systems, they all look juvenile to me. I mean that in a positive sense:they have great potential.
W: You began your career as an environmental scientist. Do you think environmentalists are part of the problem or part of the solution now?
M: The Greens themselves are part of a dynamic ecology, raising the alarms. Functionally, they are earth-sensing instruments. They are absolutely necessary. I started my career in the mid-1970s in marine pollution, and then in 1977 I became one of the first people to work full-time on global warming. I felt my main job was raising the alarm. That’s important. But after seven or eight years, I thought if I’m going to have a long career in the environment, I’d like to provide solutions too. So I spent five years as director of programmes at National Academy of Engineering. Engineers have a different way of thinking from Greens. They like machines that work, and they do enormously important environmental work. A problem is that the two groups don’t talk to each other much. Greens are not very good at taking a long view. They see that forests are disappearing or emissions are rising, and they see disaster looming. But I have an enthusiasm for history, especially the history of technology. My father was a historian of the 19th century industrial revolution in Britain. History is very powerful at showing that things fall as well as rise, including technologies. In fact, the history of technology is largely the history of substitution.
W: For example?
M: Here in New York, the density of horses a century ago was environmentally disastrous. Their replacement by automobiles had a huge environmental benefit. But of course every system has fallout. Cars were dangerous. If they had stayed as dangerous as they were in the 1930s, the automotive system could not have grown. They needed headlights and windshield wipers and seat belts. Then other problems grew, like urban air pollution. So we developed catalytic converters. And as pollution gets worse, there are hybrid vehicles and hydrogen fuel cells. They might allow the world with, say, two billion cars, compared with the 600 million we have right now. It’s not so much that there are limits to growth, in the famous phrase, but rather that any technology, like any empire, contains the seeds of its end. Instead of the technology growing exponentially and destroying everything around it, some other technology will generally take over that is superior. At one billion people in the world there might have been an alternative way of living. But at 6.4 billion and with 4 or 5 billion who don’t have much but want more, then you have no choice but to get better at providing the services people want. I don’t think my green colleagues have enough faith in their own scientific and technical peers.
W: So what do you say to people who think that climate change will overwhelm us? Even if a solution is technically achievable, can we make the changes?
M: The climate change problem is very simple. It requires favoring natural gas, nuclear and energy efficiency, as well as some adaptations. Intellectually the problem was solved in the early to mid-1980s. But making the necessary social change is different. And we shouldn’t be surprised at the problems. Quite a few of my friends who were involved in the international Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, whose report came out last spring, were furious because they felt it received inadequate media attention. But the newspapers were covering the death of the pope and the wedding of Prince Charles and Camilla Parker-Bowles. Social status and sexuality are what interest us. That’s not going to change. The trick is to come up with technologies that are digestible, that slip into the way we live, the way iPods and laptops do.
选项
答案
taken over
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/FzWd777K
本试题收录于:
公共英语五级笔试题库公共英语(PETS)分类
0
公共英语五级笔试
公共英语(PETS)
相关试题推荐
What’sthepassagemainlyabout?Whichofthefollowingquestionscan’tbesolvedbyappliedlinguistics?
WhatwasSteve’sattitudetowardswomenwhowrotelovestories?ThepassageasawholesuggeststhatSteve’snovelswere______
WhatwasSteve’sattitudetowardswomenwhowrotelovestories?WhatwereHelen’sfeelingsaboutthemovefromLondontoStrett
WhatwasSteve’sattitudetowardswomenwhowrotelovestories?WhatdidHelenhavetobecarefultohide?
Answerquestionsbyreferringtothefollowingarticle.Whicharticle...ATheGovernmentisgoingtogivenew"jobspli
What’sthemainobjectiveofastudentwhoattendsacertainnumberofcourses?
______islocatedinmetropolitanMelbourne?______providesthenumberofitspostgraduates?
NoteveryPresidentisaleader,buteverytimeweelectaPresidentwehopeforone,especiallyintimesofdoubtandcrisis.I
SectionⅣWritingThenumberofyoungpeoplewholivetogetherbeforemarriagehasincreasedinrecentyears.Theadvocates
NoteveryPresidentisaleader,buteverytimeweelectaPresidentwehopeforone,especiallyintimesofdoubtandcrisis.I
随机试题
植物种子的胚乳发育过程、愈伤组织的形成、不定根的产生是()
试述卵巢激素的反馈性调节作用。
下列有关心理应激的说法中不正确的是
男,63岁。上腹隐痛3个月,向背部放射,腹痛逐渐加重并影响睡眠,蜷曲卧位略减轻,1周前发现皮肤巩膜黄染,无发热,应首先考虑的诊断是
A、清肝泻热,利胆退黄B、清热解毒,化瘀C、祛风镇痛,调经止血,补气养血D、消炎止痛,疏通经络,开窍醒神E、祛寒化痞,消食,调肝益肾二十五味鬼臼丸的功能是
背景资料:某工程公司进行护坡锚杆作业。当天工地主要负责人、安全员、电工等有关人员不在现场。下锚杆钢筋笼时,班组长因故请假也不在现场,13名民工在无人指挥的情况下自行作业,因钢筋笼将配电箱引出的380V电缆线磨破,使钢筋笼带电,造成5人触电死亡。这起事故
账实核对的内容包括()。
某公司新员工培训结束后,三个培训主管在讨论有多少学员不能通过培训考核,对话如下:甲:有的学员是能通过考核的。乙:有的学员是不能通过考核的。丙:有一个学员不能通过考核。如果他们三人中只有一个人说的话是真的,则()。
1/3
Fromthefirsttwoparagraphs,weknowthatWhatcanbethereasonofpeopleeatingculturedmeatinsteadoftherealthing?
最新回复
(
0
)