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
Imagine a chart that begins when man first appeared on the planet and tracks the economic growth of societies from then forward.
Imagine a chart that begins when man first appeared on the planet and tracks the economic growth of societies from then forward.
admin
2011-02-11
37
问题
Imagine a chart that begins when man first appeared on the planet and tracks the economic growth of societies from then forward. It would be a long, flat line until the late 16th or early 17th century, when it would start trending upward. Before then the fruits of productive labor were limited to a few elites -- princes, merchants and priests. For most of humankind life was as the English philosopher Thomas Hobbes famously described it in 1651 -- "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short". But as Hobbes was writing those words, the world around him was changing. Put simply, human beings were getting smarter.
People have always sought knowledge, of course, but in Western Europe at that time, men like Galileo, Newton and Descartes began to search systematically for ways to understand and control their environment. The scientific revolution, followed by the Enlightenment, marked a fundamental shift. Humans were no longer searching for ways simply to fit into a natural or divine order, but they were seeking to change it. Once people found ways to harness energy -- using steam engines -- they were able to build machines that harnessed far more power than any human or horse could ever do. And people could work without ever getting tired. The rise of these machines drove the Industrial Revolution, and created a whole new system of life. Today the search for knowledge continues to produce an ongoing revolution in the health and wealth of humankind.
If the rise of science marks the first great trend in this story, the second is its diffusion. What was happening in Britain during the Industrial Revolution was not an isolated phenomenon. A succession of visitors to Britain would go back to report to their countries on the technological and commercial innovations they saw them. Sometimes societies were able to learn extremely fast, as in the United States. Others, like Germany, was benefited from starting late, leapfrogging the long-drawn-out process that Britain went through.
This diffusion of knowledge accelerated dramatically in recent decades. Over the last 30 years we have watched countries like Japan, Singapore, South Korea and now China grow at a pace that is three times that of Britain or the United States at the peak of the Industrial Revolution. They have been able to do this because of their energies and exertions, of course, but also because they cleverly and perhaps luckily adopted certain ideas about development that had worked in the West -- reasonably free markets, open trade, a focus on science and technology, among them.
The diffusion of knowledge is the dominant trend of our time and goes well beyond the purely scientific. Consider the cases of Turkey and Brazil. if you had asked an economist 20 years ago how to think about these two countries, he would have explained that they were classic basket-case, Third World economies, with triple-digit inflation, soaring debt burdens, a weak private sector and snail’s-pace growth. Today they are both remarkably well managed, with inflation in single digits and growth above 5 percent. And this shift is happening around the world. From Thailand to South Africa to Slovakia to Mexico, countries are far better managed economically than they have ever been. Even in cases where political constraints make it difficult to push far-reaching reforms, as in Brazil, Mexico or India, governments still manage their affairs sensibly, observing the Hippocratic oath not to do any harm.
We are sometimes reluctant to believe in progress. But the evidence is unmistakable. The management of major economies has gotten markedly better in the last few years. Careful monetary policy has tempered the boom-and-bust economic cycles of the industrial world, producing milder recessions and fewer shocks. Every day one reads of a new study comparing nations in everything from Internet penetration to inflation. All these studies and lists are symbols of a learning process that is accelerating, reinforcing the lessons of success and failure. Call it a best-practice world.
I realize that the world I am describing is the world of the winners. There are billions of people, locked outside global markets, whose lives are still accurately described by Hobbes’s cruel phrase. But even here, there is change. The recognition of global inequalities is more marked today than ever before, and this learning is forcing action. There is more money being spent on vaccines and cures for diseases in Africa and Asia today than ever before in history. Foreign-aid programs face constant scrutiny and analysis. When things don’t work, we learn that, too, and it puts a focus either on the aid program or on local governments to improve.
This may sound overly optimistic. There are losers in every race, but let not the worries over who is winning and losing the knowledge race obscure the more powerful underlying dynamic: knowledge is liberating. It creates the possibility for change and improvement everywhere. It can create amazing devices and techniques, save lives, improve living standards and spread information. Some will do well on one measure, others on another. But on the whole, a knowledge-based world will be a healthier and richer world.
The caveat I would make is not about one or another country’s paucity of engineers or computers. These problems can be solved. But knowledge is not the same thing as wisdom. Knowledge can produce equally powerful ways to destroy life, intentionally and unintentionally. It can produce hate and seek destruction. Knowledge does not by itself bring any answer to the ancient Greek question "What is a Good Life?" It does not produce good sense, courage, generosity and tolerance. And most crucially, it does not produce the farsightedness that will allow us all to live together -- and grow together -- on this world without causing war, chaos and catastrophe. For that we need wisdom.
It can be inferred that during the Enlightenment, people in Western Europe ______.
选项
A、were looking for better ways of seeking knowledge
B、were not satisfied with their past achievements
C、were trying to fit into the natural environment
D、were tired of working
答案
B
解析
推断题。第二段第三句开始,作者说在Enlightenment 期间,西欧国家的人不再满足于适应自然环境,而是寻找改变它的方法,可见他们对于以往取得的成就并不满足,故B正确。选项C、D与原文直接相反,选项A原文中未提及。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/ZgeO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
AcupunctureRecently,acupuncturehasbecomea【1】_____wordinAmerica.【1】_____.AcupuncturewasperformedinChina
A、publicschoolsmayfailtomeettheirexpectationsB、privateschoolsaretooreligiousC、theyareteachersthemselvesD、theyc
PresidentBushhasproposedaddingoptionalpersonalaccountsasoneofthecentralelementsofamajorSocialSecurityreformp
Values,Characteristics,PersonalHabitsandCourtesiesofAmericansAlthoughAmericanshategeneralizationsandholdaneth
A、thepresident’sfamilyB、thepresident’sintegrityC、officials’abuseofmoneyD、officials’illegalmansionsC考查推理判断能力。新闻的中心问
A、Listeningtoinformationandthendiscussingitwithothers.B、Beinginvolvedingrouporclassprojects.C、Readingbooksand
ChildrenintheUKarenotreadingenoughathome,favouringtelevisionandcomputergamesinstead,accordingtonewresearch.
Therearethreebasicsectionswhichmakeupareceiver:thetunerorradiosignalreceivingsection,thepreamplifiercontrols
A、commons.B、farmers.C、aristocrats.D、workers.C
A、PowerB、Skills.C、Patience.D、Weapons.C
随机试题
Doyoufindgettingupinthemorningsodifficultthatit’spainful?Thismightbecalledlaziness,butDr.Kleitmanhasanew
输卵管妊娠是:异位妊娠是:
BOD表示
A、总水分B、结合水C、非结合水D、自由水E、平衡水存于细小毛细管中的物料细胞中的水分是
监理目标控制的前提工作是()。
地面工程施工时,水泥混凝土垫层铺设在基土上,当气温长期处在()温度下时应设置伸缩缝?
台阶式用地的台阶之间应用护坡或挡土墙连接,相邻台地间高差大于1.5m时,应在挡土墙或坡比值大于()的护坡顶加设安全防护设施。
在建设工程项目可行性研究阶段,计算投资应依据的定额或指标是()。
区域性股权交易市场,俗称“四板”。下列关于“四板"说法错误的是()。
下列属于债券投资风险的是()。Ⅰ.利率风险Ⅱ.提前赎回风险Ⅲ.信用风险Ⅳ.汇率风险
最新回复
(
0
)