版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领
文档简介
2002年全国硕士研究生入学统一考试英语试题
SectionIIUseofEnglish
Comparisonsweredrawnbetweenthedevelopmentoftelevisioninthe20thcenturyandthediffusion
ofprintinginthe15thand16thcenturies.Yetmuchhadhappened21Aswasdiscussedbefore,it
wasnot22the19thcenturythatthenewspaperbecamethedominantpre-electronic23,
followinginthewakeofthepamphletandthebookandinthe24oftheperiodical.Itwasduring
thesametimethatthecommunicationsrevolution25up,beginningwithtransport,therailway,and
leading26throughthetelegraph,thetelephone,radio,andmotionpictures27the
20th-centuryworldofthemotorcarandtheairplane.Noteveryoneseesthatprocessin28Itis
importanttodoso.
Itisgenerallyrecognized,29,thattheintroductionofthecomputerintheearly20thcentury,
30bytheinventionoftheintegratedcircuitduringthe1960s,radicallychangedtheprocess,
31itsimpactonthemediawasnotimmediately32Astimewentby,computersbecame
smallerandmorepowerful,andtheybecame“personal"too,aswellas33,withdisplaybecoming
sharperandstorage34increasing.Theywerethoughtof,likepeople,35generations,with
thedistancebetweengenerationsmuch36.
Itwaswithinthecomputeragethattheterm"informationsociety”begantobewidelyusedtodescribe
the37withinwhichwenowlive.Thecommunicationsrevolutionhas38bothworkand
leisureandhowwethinkandfeelbothaboutplaceandtime,buttherehavebeen39viewsaboutits
economic,political,socialandculturalimplications."Benefits”havebeenweighed40"harmful”
outcomes.Andgeneralizationshaveproveddifficult.
21.[A]between[B]before[C]since[D]later
22.[A]afterIB]by[C]during[D]until
23.[A]means[B]method[C]medium[D]measure
24.[A]process[B]company[C]light[D]form
25.[A]gathered[B]speeded[Clworked[D]picked
26.[A]on[B]out[C]over[D]off
27.[A]of[B]for[C]beyond[D]into
28.[A]concept[B]dimension[C]effect[DJperspective
29.[AJindeed[BJhence[C]however[D]therefore
30.[A]brought[B]followed[C]stimulated[D]characterized
31.[A]unless[B]since[C]lest[D]although
32.[A]apparent[B]desirable[C]negative[D]plausible
33.[A]institutional[BJuniversal[C]fundamental[D]instrumental
34.[A]ability[B]capability[C]capacity[D]faculty
35.[A]bymeansof[B]intermsof[C]withregardto[D]inlinewith
36.[A]deeper[B]fewer[C]nearer[D]smaller
37.[A]context[B]range[C]scope[D]territory
38.[A]regarded[B]impressed[C]influenced[D]effected
39.[A]competitive[BJcontroversial[CJdistracting[D]irrational
40.[A]above[B]upon[C]against[D]with
SectionIIIReadingComprehension
Text1
Ifyouintendusinghumorinyourtalktomakepeoplesmile,youmustknowhowtoidentifyshared
experiencesandproblems.Yourhumormustberelevanttotheaudienceandshouldhelptoshowthemthat
youareoneofthemorthatyouunderstandtheirsituationandareinsympathywiththeirpointofview.
Dependingonwhomyouareaddressing,theproblemswillbedifferent.Ifyouaretalkingtoagroupof
managers,youmayrefertothedisorganizedmethodsoftheirsecretaries;alternativelyifyouare
addressingsecretaries,youmaywanttocommentontheirdisorganizedbosses.
Hereisanexample,whichIheardatanurses9convention,ofastorywhichworkswellbecausethe
audienceallsharedthesameviewofdoctors.AmanarrivesinheavenandisbeingshownaroundbySt.
Peter.Heseeswonderfulaccommodations,beautifulgardens,sunnyweather,andsoon.Everyoneisvery
peaceful,politeandfriendlyuntil,waitinginalineforlunch,thenewarrivalissuddenlypushedasidebya
maninawhitecoat,whorushestotheheadoftheline,grabshisfoodandstompsovertoatablebyhimself.
“Whoisthat?”thenewarrivalaskedStPeter.uOh,thafsGodJcamethereply,Ubutsometimeshethinks
he'sadoctor.^^
Ifyouarepartofthegroup,whichyouareaddressing,youwillbeinapositiontoknowthe
experiencesandproblemswhicharecommontoallofyouandif11beappropriateforyoutomakea
passingremarkabouttheinediblecanteenfoodorthechairman'snotoriousbadtasteinties.Withother
audiencesyoumustn'tattempttocutinwithhumorastheywillresentanoutsidermakingdisparaging
remarksabouttheircanteenortheirchairman.Youwillbeonsafergroundifyousticktoscapegoatslike
thePostOfficeorthetelephonesystem.
Ifyoufeelawkwardbeinghumorous,youmustpracticesothatitbecomesmorenatural.Includeafew
casualandapparentlyoff-the-cuffremarkswhichyoucandeliverinarelaxedandunforcedmanner.Often
it'sthedeliverywhichcausestheaudiencetosmile,sospeakslowlyandrememberthataraisedeyebrowor
anunbelievinglookmayhelptoshowthatyouaremakingalight-heartedremark.
LookforthehumorItoftencomesfromtheunexpected.Atwistonafamiliarquote“Ifatfirstyou
don'tsucceed,giveup”oraplayonwordsoronasituation.Searchforexaggerationandunderstatements.
Lookatyourtalkandpickoutafewwordsorsentenceswhichyoucanturnaboutandinjectwithhumor.
41.Tomakeyourhumorwork,youshould.
[A]takeadvantageofdifferentkindsofaudience[B]makefunofthedisorganizedpeople
[C]addressdifferentproblemstodifferentpeople[D]showsympathyforyourlisteners
42.Thejokeaboutdoctorsimpliesthat,intheeyesofnurses,theyare.
[A]impolitetonewarrivals[B]veryconsciousoftheirgodlikerole
[C]entitledtosomeprivileges[D]verybusyevenduringlunchhours
43.Itcanbeinferredfromthetextthatpublicservices・
[A]havebenefitedmanypeople[B]arethefocusofpublicattention
[C]areaninappropriatesubjectforhumor[D]haveoftenbeenthelaughingstock
44.Toachievethedesiredresult,humorousstoriesshouldbedelivered.
[A]inwell-wordedlanguage[B]asawkwardlyaspossible
[C]inexaggeratedstatements[D]ascasuallyaspossible
45.Thebesttitleforthetextmaybe.
[A]UseHumorEffectively[B]VariousKindsofHumor
[C]AddHumortoSpeech[D]DifferentHumorStrategies
Text2
Sincethedawnofhumaningenuity,peoplehavedevisedevermorecunningtoolstocopewithwork
thatisdangerous,boring,burdensome,orjustplainnasty.Thatcompulsionhasresultedinrobotics—the
scienceofconferringvarioushumancapabilitiesonmachines.Andifscientistshaveyettocreatethe
mechanicalversionofsciencefiction,theyhavebeguntocomeclose.
Asaresult,themodernworldisincreasinglypopulatedbyintelligentgizmoswhosepresencewebarely
noticebutwhoseuniversalexistencehasremovedmuchhumanlabor.Ourfactorieshumtotherhythmof
robotassemblyarms.Ourbankingisdoneatautomatedtellerterminalsthatthankuswithmechanical
politenessforthetransaction.Oursubwaytrainsarecontrolledbytirelessrobot-drivers.Andthankstothe
continualminiaturizationofelectronicsandmicro-mechanics,therearealreadyrobotsystemsthatcan
performsomekindsofbrainandbonesurgerywithsubmillimeteraccuracy—fargreaterprecisionthan
highlyskilledphysicianscanachievewiththeirhandsalone.
Butifrobotsaretoreachthenextstageoflaborsavingutility,theywillhavetooperatewithless
humansupervisionandbeabletomakeatleastafewdecisionsforthemselves—goalsthatposeareal
challenge.uWhileweknowhowtotellarobottohandleaspecificerror,“saysDaveLavery,managerofa
roboticsprogramatNASA,uwecan'tyetgivearobotenough'commonsense9toreliablyinteractwitha
dynamicworld.”
Indeedthequestfortrueartificialintelligencehasproducedverymixedresults.Despiteaspellof
initialoptimisminthe1960sand1970swhenitappearedthattransistorcircuitsandmicroprocessorsmight
beabletocopytheactionofthehumanbrainbytheyear2010,researcherslatelyhavebeguntoextendthat
forecastbydecadesifnotcenturies.
Whattheyfound,inattemptingtomodelthought,isthatthehumanbrain'sroughlyonehundred
billionnervecellsaremuchmoretalented—andhumanperceptionfarmorecomplicated-thanpreviously
imagined.Theyhavebuiltrobotsthatcanrecognizetheerrorofamachinepanelbyafractionofa
millimeterinacontrolledfactoryenvironment.Butthehumanmindcanglimpsearapidlychangingscene
andimmediatelydisregardthe98percentthatisirrelevant,instantaneouslyfocusingonthemonkeyatthe
sideofawindingforestroadorthesinglesuspiciousfaceinabigcrowd.Themostadvancedcomputer
systemsonEarthcan'tapproachthatkindofability,andneuroscientistsstilldon'tknowquitehowwedo
it.
46.Humaningenuitywasinitiallydemonstratedin.
[A]theuseofmachinestoproducesciencefiction
[B]thewideuseofmachinesinmanufacturingindustry
[C]theinventionoftoolsfordifficultanddangerouswork
[D]theelite'scunningtacklingofdangerousandboringwork
47.Theword"gizmos”(Line1,Paragraph2)mostprobablymeans.
[A]programs[B]experts[C]devices[D]creatures
48.Accordingtothetext,whatisbeyondman'sabilitynowistodesignarobotthatcan・
[A]fulfilldelicatetaskslikeperformingbrainsurgery[B]interactwithhumanbeingsverbally
[C]havealittlecommonsense[D]respondindependentlytoachangingworld
49.Besidesreducinghumanlabor,robotscanalso,
[A]makeafewdecisionsforthemselves[B]dealwithsomeerrorswithhumanintervention
[C]improvefactoryenvironments[D]cultivatehumancreativity
50.Theauthorusestheexampleofamonkeytoarguethatrobotsare,
[A]expectedtocopyhumanbrainininternalstructure[B]abletoperceiveabnormalitiesimmediately
[C]farlessablethanhumanbraininfocusingonrelevantinformation
[D]bestusedinacontrolledenvironment
Text3
Couldthebadolddaysofeconomicdeclinebeabouttoreturn?SinceOPECagreedtosupply-cutsin
March,thepriceofcrudeoilhasjumpedtoalmost$26abarrel,upfromlessthan$10lastDecember.This
near-triplingofoilpricescallsupscarymemoriesofthe1973oilshock,whenpricesquadrupled,and
1979-80,whentheyalsoalmosttripled.Bothpreviousshocksresultedindouble-digitinflationandglobal
economicdecline.Sowherearetheheadlineswarningofgloomanddoomthistime?
TheoilpricewasgivenanotherpushupthisweekwhenIraqsuspendedoilexports.Strengthening
economicgrowth,atthesametimeaswintergripsthenorthernhemisphere,couldpushthepricehigher
stillintheshortterm.
Yettherearegoodreasonstoexpecttheeconomicconsequencesnowtobelessseverethaninthe1970s.
Inmostcountriesthecostofcrudeoilnowaccountsforasmallershareofthepriceofpetrolthanitdidin
the1970s.InEurope,taxesaccountforuptofour-fifthsoftheretailprice,soevenquitebigchangesinthe
priceofcrudehaveamoremutedeffectonpumppricesthaninthepast.
Richeconomiesarealsolessdependentonoilthantheywere,andsolesssensitivetoswingsintheoil
price.Energyconservation,ashifttootherfuelsandadeclineintheimportanceofheavy,energy-intensive
industrieshavereducedoilconsumption.Software,consultancyandmobiletelephonesusefarlessoilthan
steelorcarproduction.ForeachdollarofGDP(inconstantprices)richeconomiesnowusenearly50%less
oilthanin1973.TheOECDestimatesinitslatestEconomicOutlookthat,ifoilpricesaveraged$22abarrel
forafullyear,comparedwith$13in1998,thiswouldincreasetheoilimportbillinricheconomiesbyonly
0.25-0.5%ofGDP.Thatislessthanone-quarteroftheincomelossin1974or1980.Ontheotherhand,
oil-importingemergingeconomies-towhichheavyindustryhasshifted-havebecomemore
energy-intensive,andsocouldbemoreseriouslysqueezed.
Onemorereasonnottolosesleepovertheriseinoilpricesisthat,unliketherisesinthe1970s,ithas
notoccurredagainstthebackgroundofgeneralcommodity-priceinflationandglobalexcessdemand.A
sizableportionoftheworldisonlyjustemergingfromeconomicdecline.TheEconomisescommodityprice
indexisbroadlyunchangingfromayearago.In1973commoditypricesjumpedby70%,andin1979by
almost30%.
51.Themainreasonforthelatestriseofoilpriceis.
[A]globalinflation[B]reductioninsupply[C]fastgrowthineconomy[DJIraq'ssuspensionof
exports
52.Itcanbeinferredfromthetextthattheretailpriceofpetrolwillgoupdramaticallyif・
[A]priceofcruderises[B]commoditypricesrise[C]consumptionrises[D]oiltaxesrise
53.TheestimatesinEconomicOutlookshowthatinrichcountries,
[A]heavyindustrybecomesmoreenergy-intensive
[B]incomelossmainlyresultsfromfluctuatingcrudeoilprices
[C]manufacturingindustryhasbeenseriouslysqueezed
[D]oilpricechangeshavenosigniHcantimpactonGDP
54.Wecandrawaconclusionfromthetextthat・
[A]oil-priceshocksarelessshockingnow[B]inflationseemsirrelevanttooil-priceshocks
[C]energyconservationcankeepdowntheoilprices
[DJthepriceriseofcrudeleadstotheshrinkingofheavyindustry
55.Fromthetextwecanseethatthewriterseems・
[A]optimistic[B]sensitive[C]gloomy[D]scared
Text4
TheSupremeCourfsdecisionsonphysician-assistedsuicidecarryimportantimplicationsforhow
medicineseekstorelievedyingpatientsofpainandsuffering.
Althoughitruledthatthereisnoconstitutionalrighttophysician-assistedsuicide,theCourtineffect
supportedthemedicalprincipleof“doubleeffect,“acenturies-oldmoralprincipleholdingthatanaction
havingtwoeffects-agoodonethatisintendedandaharmfulonethatisforeseen-ispermissibleifthe
actorintendsonlythegoodeffect.
Doctorshaveusedthatprincipleinrecentyearstojustifyusinghighdosesofmorphinetocontrol
terminallyillpatients9pain,eventhoughincreasingdosageswilleventuallykillthepatient.
NancyDubler,directorofMontefioreMedicalCenter,contendsthattheprinciplewillshielddoctors
who“untilnowhavevery,verystronglyinsistedthattheycouldnotgivepatientssufficientmediationto
controltheirpainifthatmighthastendeath.”
GeorgeAnnas,chairofthehealthlawdepartmentatBostonUniversity,maintainsthat,aslongasa
doctorprescribesadrugforalegitimatemedicalpurpose,thedoctorhasdonenothingillegalevenifthe
patientusesthedrugtohastendeath."It'slikesurgery/9hesays."Wedon'tcallthosedeathshomicides
becausethedoctorsdidn'tintendtokilltheirpatients,althoughtheyriskedtheirdeath.Ifyou'rea
physician,youcanriskyourpatient'ssuicideaslongasyoudon'tintendtheirsuicide.”
Onanotherlevel,manyinthemedicalcommunityacknowledgethattheassisted-suicidedebatehas
beenfueledinpartbythedespairofpatientsforwhommodernmedicinehasprolongedthephysicalagony
ofdying.
JustthreeweeksbeforetheCourfsrulingonphysician-assistedsuicide,theNationalAcademyof
Science(NAS)releasedatwo-volumereport,ApproachingDeath:ImprovingCareattheEndofLife.It
identifiestheundertreatmentofpainandtheaggressiveuseof^ineffectualandforcedmedicalprocedures
thatmayprolongandevendishonortheperiodofdying”asthetwinproblemsofend-of-lifecare.
Theprofessionistakingstepstorequireyoungdoctorstotraininhospices,totestknowledgeof
aggressivepainmanagementtherapies,todevelopaMedicarebillingcodeforhospital-basedcare,andto
developnewstandardsforassessingandtreatingpainattheendoflife.
Annassayslawyerscanplayakeyroleininsistingthatthesewell-meaningmedicalinitiativestranslate
intobettercare."Largenumbersofphysiciansseemunconcernedwiththepaintheirpatientsare
needlesslyandpredictablysuffering,totheextentthatitconstitutes“systematicpatientabuse."Hesays
medicallicensingboards“mustmakeitclear...thatpainfuldeathsarepresumptivelyonesthatare
incompetentlymanagedandshouldresultinlicensesuspension.^
56.Fromthefirstthreeparagraphs,welearnthat.
[A]doctorsusedtoincreasedrugdosagestocontroltheirpatients9pain
[B]itisstillillegalfordoctorstohelpthedyingendtheirlives
[C]theSupremeCourtstronglyopposesphysician-assistedsuicide
[D]patientshavenoconstitutionalrighttocommitsuicide
57.Whichofthefollowingstatementsistrueaccordingtothetext?
[A]Doctorswillbeheldguiltyiftheyrisktheirpatients9death.
[B]Modernmedicinehasassistedterminallyillpatientsinpainlessrecovery.
[C]TheCourtruledthathigh-dosagepain-relievingmedicationcanbeprescribed.
[DJAdoctor'smedicationisnolongerjustifiedbyhisintentions.
58.AccordingtotheNAS'sreport,oneoftheproblemsinend-of-lifecareis.
[A]prolongedmedicalprocedures[Blinadequatetreatmentofpain
[CJsystematicdrugabuse[D]insufficienthospitalcare
59.Whichofthefollowingbestdefinestheworduaggressive^^(Line3,Paragraph7)?
[A]Bold[B]Harmful[C]Careless[D]Desperate
60.GeorgeAnnaswouldprobablyagreethatdoctorsshouldbepunishedifthey・
[A]managetheirpatientsincompetently[B]givepatientsmoremedicinethanneeded
[C]reducedrugdosagesfortheirpatients[D]prolongtheneedlesssufferingofthepatients
Almostallourmajorproblemsinvolvehumanbehavior,andtheycannotbesolvedbyphysicaland
biologicaltechnologyalone.Whatisneededisatechnologyofbehavior;butwehavebeenslowtodevelop
thesciencefromwhichsuchatechnologymightbedrawn.61)Onedifficultyisthatalmostallefwhatis
calledbehavioralsciencecontinuestotracebehaviortostatesofmind,feelings,traitsofcharacter,human
nature,andsoon.Physicsandbiologyoncefollowedsimilarpracticesandadvancedonlywhenthey
discardedthem.62)Thebehavioralscienceshavebeenslowtoehancepertlybecausetheexplanatoecitems
oftenseemtobedirectlyobservedandpartlybecauseotherkindsofexplanationshavebeenhardto行nd.
Theenvironmentisobviouslyimportant,butitsrolehasremainedobscure.Itdoesnotpushorpull,it
selects,andthisfunctionisdifficulttodiscoverandanalyze.63)Therslenfnaturalselectioninevolution
wasformulatedonlyalittlemorethanahundredyearsago,andtheselectiveroleoftheenvironmentin
shapingandmaintainingthebehavioroftheindividualisonl、begimiinetoberecognizedandstudied.As
theinteractionbetweenorganismandenvironmenthascometobeunderstood,however;effectsonce
assignedtostatesofmind,feelings,andtraitsarebeginningtobetracedtoaccessibleconditions,anda
technologyofbehaviormaythereforebecomeavailable.Itwillnotsolveourproblems,however,untilit
replacestraditionalprescientificviews,andthesearestronglyentrenched.Freedomanddignityillustrate
thedifficulty.64)Theyarethepossessionsoftheautonomous(self-goveminR)manoftraditionaltheon;
andtheyareessentialtopracticesinwhichapersonisheldresponsibleforhisconductandgivencreditfor
hisachievements.Ascientificanalysisshiftsboththeresponsibilityandtheachievementtotheenvironment.
Italsoraisesquestionsconcerning“values."Whowilluseatechnologyandtowhatends?65)Untilthese
issuesareresolved,atechnolocyofbehaviorwillcontinuet。berejected,andwithitpossiblytheonl、way
tosolveourproblems.
61.难题在于所谓的行为科学几乎全都依然从心态、情感、性格特征、人性等方面去寻找行为的根源。
62.行为科学之所以发展缓慢,部分原因是用来解释行为的依据似乎往往是直接观察到的,部分原因是其
他的解释方式一直难以找到。
63.自然选择在进化中的作用仅在一百多年前才得以阐明,而环境在塑造和保持个体行为时的选择作用则
刚刚开始被认识和研究。
64.自由和尊严(它们)是传统理论定义的自主人所拥有的,是要求一个人对自己的行为负责并因其业绩
而给予肯定的必不可少的前提。
65.(如果)这些问题得不到解决,研究行为的技术手段就会继续受到排斥,解决问题的唯一方式可能也随
之继续受到排斥。
SectionIV:Writing(20points)
2001年全国硕士研究生入学统一考试英语试题7
2001年全国硕士研究生入学统一考试英语试题
SectionIIClozeTest
Thegovernmentistobanpaymentstowitnessesbynewspapersseekingtobuyuppeopleinvolvedin
prominentcases31thetrialofRosemaryWest.
Inasignificant32oflegalcontrolsoverthepress,LordIrvine,theLordChancellor,will
introducea33billthatwillproposemakingpaymentstowitnesses34andwillstrictly
controltheamountof35thatcanbegiventoacase36atrialbegins.
InalettertoGeraldKaufman,chairmanoftheHouseofCommonsMediaSelectCommittee,Lord
Irvinesaidhe37withacommitteereportthisyearwhichsaidthatselfregulationdidnot38
sufficientcontrol.
39ofthelettercametwodaysafterLordIrvinecauseda40ofmediaprotestwhenhe
saidthe41ofprivacycontrolscontainedinEuropeanlegislationwouldbelefttojudges42
toParliament.
TheLordChancellorsaidintroductionoftheHumanRightsBill,which43theEuropean
ConventiononHumanRightslegally44inBritain,laiddownthateverybodywas45to
privacyandthatpublicfigurescouldgotocourttoprotectthemselvesandtheirfamilies.
“Pressfreedomswillbeinsafehands46ourBritishjudges,“hesaid.
Witnesspaymentsbecamean47afterWestwassentencedto10lifesentencesin1995.Upto19
witnesseswere48tohavereceivedpaymentsfortellingtheirstoriestonewspapers.Concernswere
raised49witnessesmightbeencouragedtoexaggeratetheirstoriesincourtto50guilty
verdicts.
31.[A]asto[B]forinstance[Clinparticular[D]suchas
32.[A]tightening[B]intensifying[C]focusing[D]fastening
33.[A]sketch[B]rough[C]preliminary[D]draft
34.[A]illogical[BJillegal[C]improbable[DJimproper
35.[A]publicity[B]penalty[C]popularity[D]peculiarity
36.[A]since[B]if[C]before[D]as
37.[A]sided[B]shared[C]complied[D]agreed
38.[A]present[B]offer[C]manifest[D]indicate
39.[A]Release[B]Publication[C]Printing[D]Exposure
40.[A]storm[BJrage[C]flare[DJflash
41.[A]translation[B]interpretation[C]exhibition[D]demonstration
42.[A]betterthan[B]otherthan[C]ratherthan[D]soonerthan
2001年全国硕士研究生入学统一考试英语试题8
43.[A]changes[BJmakes[CJsets[DJturns
44.[A]binding[B]convincing[C]restraining[DJsustaining
45.[A]authorized[B]credited[C]entitled[D]qualified
46.[A]with[B]to[C]from[D]by
47.[A]impact[B]incident[C]inference[D]issue
48.[A]stated[B]remarked[C]said[D]told
49.[A]what[B]when[C]which[D]that
50.[A]assureIB]confide[C]ensure[D]guarantee
SectionHIReadingComprehension
Specializationcanbeseenasaresponsetotheproblemofanincreasingaccumulationofscientific
knowledge.Bysplittingupthesubjectmatterintosmallerunits,onemancouldcontinuetohandlethe
informationanduseitasthebasisforfurtherresearch.Butspecializationwasonlyoneofaseriesofrelated
developmentsinscienceaffectingtheprocessofcommunication.Anotherwasthegrowing
professionalisationofscientificactivity.
Noclear-cutdistinctioncanbedrawnbetweenprofessionalsandamateursinscience:exceptionscan
befoundtoanyrule.Nevertheless,theword“amateur”doescarryaconnotationthatthepersonconcerned
isnotfullyintegratedintothescientificcommunityand,inparticular,maynotfullyshareitsvalues.The
growthofspecializationinthenineteenthcentury,withitsconsequentrequirementofalonger,more
complextraining,impliedgreaterproblemsforamateurparticipationinscience.Thetrendwasnaturally
mostobviousinthoseareasofsciencebasedespeciallyonamathematicalorlaboratorytraining,andcan
beillustratedintermsofthedevelopmentofgeologyintheUnitedKingdom.
AcomparisonofBritishgeologicalpublicationsoverthelastcenturyandahalfrevealsnotsimplyan
increasingemphasisontheprimacyofresearch,butalsoachangingdefiniti
温馨提示
- 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
- 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
- 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
- 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
- 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
- 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
- 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。
最新文档
- 2025年度美团商家食品安全监管与服务协议4篇
- 2025版售后客服外包服务费用年度总结合同2篇
- 中介协助个人住宅租赁协议样本版A版
- 2025版医疗机构与保险机构合作协议范本4篇
- 2025年度智能安防系统项目监理合同2篇
- 2025年度装配式建筑产业基地承包施工合同4篇
- 二零二五版泉水潺流会计岗位劳动合同培训与晋升协议2篇
- 2025标前新型建筑材料研发与应用合作协议3篇
- 2025年鸭苗养殖户与孵化厂合作销售合同范本3篇
- 2024食品代加工保密协议及食品安全风险评估合作协议3篇
- 机电安装工程安全培训
- 洗浴部前台收银员岗位职责
- 2024年辅警考试公基常识300题(附解析)
- GB/T 43650-2024野生动物及其制品DNA物种鉴定技术规程
- 暴发性心肌炎查房
- 工程质保金返还审批单
- 【可行性报告】2023年电动自行车项目可行性研究分析报告
- 五月天歌词全集
- 商品退换货申请表模板
- 实习单位鉴定表(模板)
- 数字媒体应用技术专业调研方案
评论
0/150
提交评论