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2015年公共管理硕士辅导:英语精读(30)
发布时间:2009/12/5 23:01:43 来源:城市学习网 编辑:紫藤
  Unit 30
  Text
  Alvin Toffler writes about the fact that technology is advancing much faster today than ever before in history. The symbols of technology are no longer factory smokestacks or assembly lines. As we are headed for the future, the pace will quicken still further.
  The Fantastic Spurt in Technology
  A. Toffler
  To most people the term technology conjures up images of smoky steel mills or noisy machines. Perhaps the classic representation of technology is still the assembly line created by Henry Ford half a century ago and made into a social symbol by Charlie Chaplin in Modern Times. This symbol, however, has always been inadequate and misleading, for technology has always been more than factories and machines. The invention of the horse collar in the middle ages led to major changes in agricultural methods and was as much a technological advance as the invention of the Bessemer furnace centuries later. Moreover, technology includes techniques, or ways to do things, as well as the machines that may or may not be necessary to apply them. It includes ways to make chemical reactions occur, ways to breed fish, plant forests, light theaters, count votes or teach history.
  The old symbols of technology are even more misleading today, when the most advanced technological processes are carried out far from assembly lines or blast furnaces. Indeed, in electronics, in space technology, in most of the new industries, quiet and clean surroundings are characteristic -- even sometimes essential. And the assembly line -- the organization of large numbers of men to carry out simple repetitive functions -- is outdated. It is time for our symbols of technology to change -- to catch up with the quickening change in technology itself.
  This acceleration is frequently dramatized by a brief account of the progress in transportation. It has been pointed out, for example, that in 6000 BC the fastest transportation available to man over long distances was the camel caravan, averaging eight miles per hour (mph). It was not until about 1600 BC when the chariot was invented that the maximum speed was raised to roughly twenty miles per hour.
  So impressive was this invention, so difficult was it to exceed this speed limit, that nearly 3,500 years later, when the first mail coach began operating in England in 1784, it averaged a mere ten mph. The first steam locomotive, introduced in 1825, could have a top speed of only thirteen mph and the great sailing ships of the time labored along at less tan half that speed. It was probably not until the 1880's that man, with the help of a more advanced steam locomotive, managed to reach a speed of one hundred mph. It took the human race millions of years to attain that record.
  It took only fifty-eight years, however, to go four times that fast, so that by 1938 men in airplanes were traveling at better than 400 mph. It took a mere twenty-year flick of time to double the limit again. And by the 1960's rocket plants approached speeds of 4,00 mph. and men in space capsules were circling the earth at 18,000 mph.
  Whether we examine distances traveled, altitudes reached, or minerals mined, the same accelerative trend is obvious. The pattern, here and in a thousand other statistical series, is absolutely clear and unmistakable. Thousands of years go by, and then, in our won times, a sudden bursting of the limits, a fantastic spurt forward.
  The reason for this is tat technology feeds on itself. Technology makes more technology possible, as we can see if we look for a moment at the process of innovation. Technological innovation consists of three stages, linked together into a self-reinforcing cycle. First, there is the creative, feasible idea. Second, its practical application. Third, its diffusion through society.
  The process is completed, the loop closed, when the diffusion of technology embodying the new idea, in turn, helps generate new creative ideas. Today there is evidence that the time between each of the steps in this cycle has been shortened. [NextPage]   Thus it is not merely true, as frequently noted, that 90 percent of all the scientists who ever lived are now alive, and that new scientific discoveries are being mad every day. These new ideas are put to work much more quickly than ever before. The time between the first and second stages of the cycle -- between idea and application -- has been radically reduced. This is a striking difference between ourselves and our ancestors. It is not that we are more eager or less lazy than our ancestors, but we have, with the passage of time, invented all sorts of social device to hasten the process.
  But if it takes less time to bring a new idea to the marketplace, it also takes less time for it to sweep through the society. For example, the refrigerator was introduced in the United States before 1920, yet its peak production did not come until more than thirty years later. However, by 1950 -- in only a few years -- television had grown from a laboratory novelty to the biggest part of show business. So the interval between the second and third stages of the cycle -- between application and diffusion -- has likewise been cut, and the pace of diffusion is rising with astonishing speed.
  The stepped-up pace of invention, application and diffusion, in turn, accelerates the whole cycle still further. For new machines or techniques are not merely a product, but a source, of fresh creative ideas.
  NEW WORDS
  fantastic
  a. unbelievably large or great 极大的;难以置信的
  spurt
  n. a short sudden increase of activity, effort or speed; burst 猛增;突然加速;迸发
  conjure
  vt. cause (sth.) to appear in the mind 唤起;使想起
  smoky
  a. giving out much smoke
  mill
  n. factory or workshop
  classic
  a. typical 经典的,典型的
  representation
  n. sth. that represents 代表
  represent vt.
  symbol
  n. sign, mark, or object which represents a person, idea, value, etc. 象征
  inadequate
  a. not adequate; insufficient
  misleading
  a. causing wrong conclusions; causing mistakes
  mislead vt.
  invention
  n. the act of inventing; sth. invented
  horse collar
  马轭
  agricultural
  a. of agriculture
  furnace
  n. 熔炉,炉子
  apply
  vt. put into use or operation 应用,运用
  occur
  vt. take place; happen
  breed
  vt. raise (esp. animals) 饲养
  vote
  n. 选票;选举(权)
  advanced
  a. far on in development; modern
  blast
  n. 鼓风;送风
  blast furnace
  鼓风炉;高炉
  electronics
  n. 电子技术;电子学
  surroundings
  n. (used with a pl. v. ) everything around and about a place; conditions of life 环境
  characteristic
  a. showing the individual character 表示特性的
  essential
  a. necessary; most important
  organization
  n. the act of organizing; an organized body or system
  repetitive
  n. the act of organizing; an organized body or system
  repetitive
  a. of or characterized by the act of repeating
  repetition n.
  function
  n. special duty (of a person) or purpose (of a thing) 职责,功能,作用
  outdated
  a. no longer in general use; old-fashioned 过时的
  quicken
  v. make or become quick(er)
  acceleration
  n. 加速
  dramatize
  vt. put into dramatic from; express or represent (sth.) in a dramatic or exaggerated way
  account
  n. report or description
  transportation
  n. the business of carrying people or goods from one place to another 运输
  transport vt.
  BC abbr.
  Before ( the birth of) Christ 公元前
  available
  a. capable of being got, obtained, used, etc. 可获得的;可利用的
  camel
  n. 骆驼
  caravan
  n. (往返于沙漠地带的)商队
  average
  vt. have as an average 平均为
  per
  prep. for each 每
  mph
  abbr. miles per hour
  chariot
  n. two-wheeled carriage pulled by horses (古时)双轮马拉战车
  maximum
  n. & a. (being) the largest number, amount, etc.
  roughly
  ad. about; more or less but not exactly
  impressive
  a. making a deep impression on the mind and feelings 给人深刻的印象的
 [NextPage]   exceed
  vt. go or be beyond a limit, measure, or degree 超过
  coach
  n. large, old-fashioned, closed carriage pulled by horses 四轮大马车
  operate
  v. (cause to ) work, be in action
  mere
  a. nothing more than
  locomotive
  a. railway engine 火车头
  race
  n. main division of any living things; nation or tribe 属;人种
  airplane
  n. 飞机
  flick
  n. sudden, light blow or stroke; sudden short movement 轻弹;突然的轻快动作
  rocket
  n. 火箭
  capsule
  n. the part of a spaceship in which the pilots live and work and from which the engine is separate when the takeoff is completed 宇宙密封舱
  altitude
  n. 高,(尤指海拔)高度
  mineral
  n. 矿物,矿石
  accelerative
  a. 加速的
  trend
  n. general direction; tendency 趋向;倾向
  pattern
  n. the way in which sth. happens or develops 模式
  statistical
  a. 统计的;统计学的
  unmistakable
  a. clearly recognizable
  innovation
  n. the introduction of sth. new; new idea, method, or invention 革新;新方法
  stage
  n. point, period or step in development 阶段;时期
  cycle
  n. series of events taking place in a regularly repeated order 循环;周期
  feasible
  a. capable or being carried out or done; possible 可行的
  diffusion
  n. the act of spreading out (knowledge, etc.) widely 扩散;传播
  embody
  vt. give form to express 体现
  generate
  vt. cause to exist or occur; produce 发生;产生
  shorten
  v. make or become shorter
  scientific
  a. of science; guided by the rules of science
  radically
  ad. fundamentally; essentially; extremely
  striking
  a. very noticeable; attracting attention 显著的
  ancestor
  n. 祖先
  marketplace
  n. square or open place in a town where a market is held
  refrigerator
  n. 冰箱
  frige
  n. refrigerator
  peak
  n. the highest point or level; the pointed top fo a mountain or hill 顶峰;山峰
  novelty
  n. sth. new and unusual; innovation 新奇的事物
  novel
  a. 新颖的,新奇的
  likewise
  ad. in the same way
  astonishing
  a. very surprising; amazing
  stepped-up
  a. increased in size, speed, or extent
  accelerate
  v. (cause to) move faster 加速
  PHRASES & EXPRESSIONS
  conjure up
  cause to appear as a picture in the mind 使联想起
  labo(u)r along
  move slowly and with difficulty
  go by
  pass ( in place or time)
  feed on
  (of animals) live on (food); draw strength, support or satisfaction from
  in turn
  in proper sequence or succession 依次,轮流,转而
  put to work
  apply
  PROPER NAMES
  Henry Ford
  亨利.福特
  Charlie Chaplin
  查利.卓别麟
  Bessemer
  贝西默(姓氏)
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