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
There is something intrinsically fascinating about the idea of evolution. What principles govern the evolution of a species? And
There is something intrinsically fascinating about the idea of evolution. What principles govern the evolution of a species? And
admin
2019-09-23
35
问题
There is something intrinsically fascinating about the idea of evolution. What principles govern the evolution of a species? And what does evolution tell us about the place of Homosapiens in the grand order of things? The writer George Bernard Shaw held that a mystical guiding force impels life to evolve toward eventual perfection. Modern scientists may not believe in this guiding force or in the possibility of perfection, but many would agree that life has been improving itself through evolution for billions of years. (Note that this conveniently makes Homosapiens, a very recent product of evolution, one of the newest and most improved versions of life.) In the view of these scientists, constant competition among species is the engine that drives the process of evolution and people’s life upward.
To Darwin, nature was a surface covered with thousands of sharp
wedges
, all packed together and jostling for the same space. Those wedges that fared best moved toward the center of the surface, improving their position by knocking other wedges away with violent blows. The standard example that textbooks give of such competitive wedging is the interaction between the brachiopods and the clams.
Clams
were long held to be ancient undersea competitors of
brachiopods
due to the fact that the two species inhabited the same ecological niche. Clams are abundant today, whereas brachiopods (dominant in ancient times) are not. Modern clams are also physiologically more complex than brachiopods are. The standard interpretation of these facts is that the clams’ physiology was an evolutionary improvement that gave them the ability to "knock away" the brachiopods.
In recent years, however, the prominent naturalists Stephen Jay Gould and C. Brad Calloway have challenged the validity of this example as well as the model it was meant to support. Gould and Calloway found that over most geological time clams and brachiopods went their separate ways. Never did the population of brachiopods dip as that of the clams rose, or vice versa. In fact, the two populations often grew simultaneously, which belies the notion that they were fighting fiercely over the same narrow turf and resources. That there are so many more clams than brachiopods today seems rather to be a consequence of mass deaths that occurred in the Permian period. Whatever caused the mass deaths — some scientists theorize that either there were massive ecological or geological changes, or a
comet
crashed down from the heavens — clams were simply able to weather the storm much better than brachiopods.
Out of these observations, Gould and Calloway drew a number of far-reaching conclusions. For instance, they suggested that direct competition between species was far less frequent than Darwin thought. Perhaps nature was really a very large surface on which there were very few wedges, and the wedges consequently did not bang incessantly against each other. Perhaps the problem facing these wedges was rather that the surface continually altered its shape, and they had to struggle independently to stay in a good position on the surface as it changed.
So where does that leave Homosapiens if evolution is a response to sudden, unpredictable and sweeping changes in the environment rather than the result of a perpetual struggle? No longer are we the kings of the mountain who clawed our way to the top by advancing beyond other species. We are instead those who looked to the mountains when floods began to rage below and then discovered that living high up has its definite advantages, so long as our mountain doesn’t decide to turn into a volcano.
It can be inferred from Gould and Calloway’s findings about clams and brachiopods that
选项
A、the two species never competed for the same turf
B、they fought fiercely for the same resources
C、clams had genetic ability to evade disasters
D、brachiopods were physiologically less complex than clams
答案
A
解析
细节题。根据第3段第4句“事实上,这两个物种的数量经常同时增长,这与它们为同样狭窄的地盘和有限的资源而大打出手的观点不符”,可以排除B,同时推断A正确。根据第2段第6句“现代蛤类在生理上比腕足动物更复杂”,但并未说古代的时候便是如此,因此排除D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/3tMO777K
本试题收录于:
CATTI二级笔译综合能力题库翻译专业资格(CATTI)分类
0
CATTI二级笔译综合能力
翻译专业资格(CATTI)
相关试题推荐
Despite(1)thatalcoholicbeveragesmay(2),aleadingmedicalexpertisadvising:don’t(3)justyet.Anybodywho’sever
Formorethantwocenturies,American’scollegesanduniversitieshavebeenthebackboneofthecountry’sprogress.Theyhaveed
Whatissuggestedforyourinvestment?
Whatkindofpeoplewereearlycolonialnewspapersdesignedfor?
Earthquakesoftenhappennearvolcanoes,butthisisnotalwaystrue.Thecentersofsomeare【L1】______.Thebottomoftheseas
A、Becauseelephantsaremildanimals.B、Becauseelephantsaretrainedtocarrygoods.C、Becausepeoplehavedesignedsafewaysf
RichDiseasesinPoorCountriesNon-communicablediseasesusedtobearich-worldproblem.Atthattime,peopleinpoorcount
MalnutritionandtheDiseasesofPovertyMalnutritiondisproportionatelyaffectsthoseinsub-SaharanAfrica.Over35percent
Whenyougoonasoloadventure,youlearntoexpectthe【C1】_______.However,travelers【C2】______anticipatetheunexpectedcould
It’salsoimportanttostrengthenourcommunitiesbyunleashingthecompassionofAmerica’sreligiousinstitutions.
随机试题
试回答波形梁护栏技术检验的相关问题。波形梁钢护栏的出厂检验项目必检项目有外观质量、外形尺寸、防腐层厚度及()。
投影面平行面分正平面和水平面两种。()
骨肉瘤的主要转移途径
用B超检查健康动物的脾脏,探查位置应在
当代生物社会学家威尔逊认为决定人的一切行为的本质力量是()。
人类对技术的乐观或悲观倾向由来已久,但普林斯顿大学历史学家爱德华?泰纳的说法可能会使你大吃一惊:技术不仅没有给人类缔造福祉,反而极大地报复了人类。泰纳写道:就在我们欢庆又把自然世界的混乱削减了几分之时,我们制造的新机器开始脱离我们的控制,获得自身生命,通过
给定资料 1.2013年11月12日,十八届三中全会闭幕。为期4天的全会听取并讨论了习近平受中央政治局委托作的工作报告,审议通过《中共中央关于全面深化改革若干重大问题的决定》。 全会提出,城乡二元结构是制约城乡发展一体化的主要障碍。必须健全体制机制
关于内隐记忆与外显记忆的关系,下列表述正确的有()
y=f(x)是由方程x2y2+y=1(y>0)确定的,则y=f(x)的驻点为
WhichofthefollowingisNOTtrueoftheJapanese?InJapan,thenewspaperscollectedbychildren
最新回复
(
0
)