问答题
{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Read the following passage carefully and then translate
each underlined part into Chinese.
71. {{U}}A recent phenomenon in present-day science and
technology is the increasing trend toward "directed" or "programmed" research;
i.e. research whose scope and objectives are predetermined by private or
government organizations rather than researchers themselves.{{/U}} Any scientist
working for such organizations and investigating in a given field therefore
tends to do so in accordance with a plan or program designed
beforehand.
At the beginning of the century, however, the
situation was quite different. At that time there were no industrial research
organizations in the modern sense; the laboratory unit consisted of a few
scientists at the most, assisted by one or two technicians. Nevertheless, the
scientist, often working with inadequate equipment in unsuitable rooms, was free
to choose any subject for investigation he liked, since there was no
predetermined program to which he had to conform.
72. {{U}}As the
century developed, the increasing magnitude and complexity of the problems to be
solved made it impossible, in many cases, for the individual scientist to deal
with the huge mass of new data, techniques and equipment that were required for
carrying out research accurately and efficiently.{{/U}} The increasing scale and
scope of the experiments needed to test new hypotheses and develop new
techniques and industrial processes led to the setting up of research groups or
teams using highly-complicated equipment in elaborately-designed laboratories.
Owing to the large sum of money involved, it was then felt essential to direct
these human and material resources into specific channels with clearly-defined
objectives. In this way it was considered that the quickest and most practical
results could be obtained. This, then, was programmed (programmatic)
research.
One of the effects of this organized and standardized
investigation is to cause the scientist to become increasingly involved in
applied research (development), especially in the branches of science which seem
most likely to have industrial applications. Private industry and even
government departments tend to concentrate on immediate results and show
comparatively little interest in long-range investigations. 73. {{U}}In
consequence, there is a steady shift of scientists from the pure to the applied
field, where there are more jobs available, frequently more highly- paid and
with better technical facilities than jobs connected with pure research in a
university.{{/U}}
Owing to the interdependence between pure and
applied science, it is easy to see that this system, if extended too far,
carries considerable dangers for the future of science-not only pure science,
but applied science as well.