填空题
{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}
You are going to read a list of headings and a text
about science. Choose the most suitable heading from the list A—F for each
numbered paragraph (41--45). The first paragraph of the text is not numbered.
There is one extra heading which you don't need to use. Mark your answers on
ANSWER SHEET 1.
[A] The Need for Science
[B] The Methods of Science
[C] The Challenge
of Unsolved Problems
[D] The Specific Features of the Laws of Science
[E]
The Steps in Establishing a Scientific Theory
[F] The Rapid Increase of
Scientific Knowledge
It is the business of the scientist to
accumulate knowledge about the universe and all that is in it. and to find. if
he is able. common factors which underlie and account for the facts that he
knows. He chooses, when he can, the method of the "controlled
experiment".
41. ______.
In the course of his inquiries the
scientist may find what he thinks is one common explanation for an increasing
number of facts. The explanation, if it seems consistently to fit the various
facts, is called a hypothesis. If a hypothesis continues to stand the test of
numerous experiments and remains unshaken, it becomes a law.
42.
______.
The "laws" of science differ from the "laws" of a
country in two ways. First, a scientific law is liable at any time to need
modifying. This happens when a fact is discovered which seems to contradict what
the "law" would lead one to expect. The "law" may, in fact. have to be abandoned
altogether. Second. a scientific "law" says, "This is likely to be the
explanation", or "This accounts for the facts as far as we know them". But the
"law" of the country says, "You must..." or "You must not..." The scientific
"law" has no moral force; it is not binding on human behavior nor approved or
opposed by human conscience.
43. ______.
The evidence as to
the vastness of the universe and the complexity of its arrangements continues to
grow at an amazing rate. The gap between what we know and all that can be known
seems not to diminish, but rather to increase with every new discovery.
Fresh unexplored regions are forever opening out. The rapidity of
the growth of scientific knowledge, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries,
is apt to give students and teachers the impression that no sooner is a problem
stated than the answer is forthcoming. A more detailed study of the history of
science corrects the impression that fundamental discoveries are made with
dramatic suddenness. Even in our present age no less than fifty years separate
the discovery of radioactivity from the explosion of the first atomic bomb. The
teacher, giving his brief accounts of scientific discovery, is apt to forget the
long periods of misunderstanding, of false hypotheses and general uncertainty,
which almost invariably precede the clear statement of scientific truth.
44.
______.
The vast mass of information which scientists have
gained has provided the answer to the fundamental questions which, through the
centuries, have puzzled and sometimes tortured the human mind. There are many
such questions. The study of parasites has provided evidence that organisms
which could be self-supporting have become parasites, but hardly any light has
been shed on the problem of why they should have done so. What enables an
organism to respond to the poisonous secretions of harmful bacteria and organize
its resources to defend its life?
45. ______.
To raise the
standard of living in any country, two things are required, scientific
knowledge, and a population sufficiently educated to understand how to apply it.
Without the latter, the expected benefits will not come.
{{B}}Notes:{{/B}}
ado 麻烦,忙乱。be binding on 对......有约束力。parasite 寄生虫。shed light on 使某事物更清楚些。
secretion 分泌物。