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
The never-ceasing pace of scientific accomplishment often surpasses the progress of moral thought, leaving people struggling to
The never-ceasing pace of scientific accomplishment often surpasses the progress of moral thought, leaving people struggling to
admin
2017-01-15
56
问题
The never-ceasing pace of scientific accomplishment often surpasses the progress of moral thought, leaving people struggling to make sense, initially at east, of whether heart transplants are ethical or test-tube babies desirable. Over the past three decades scientists have begun to investigate a branch of medicine that offers astonishing promise—the ability to repair the human body and even grow new organs—but which destroys early-stage embryos to do so. In "The Stem Cell Hope" Alice Park, a science writer at Time magazine, chronicles the scientific, political, ethical and personal struggles of those involved in the work.
Embryonic stem cells are pluripotent(多功能性的): they have the ability to change into any one of the 200-odd types of cell that compose the human body; but they can do so only at a very early stage. Once the bundle has reached more than about 150 cells, they start to specialize. Research into repairing severed spinal cords or growing new hearts has thus needed a supply of stem cells that come from entities that, given a more favorable environment, could instead grow into a baby.
Immediately after the announcement of the birth of Dolly the sheep—the clone of an adult ewe whose mammary(乳腺的)cells Ian Wilmut had tricked into behaving like a developing embryo-American scientists were hauled before the nation’s politicians who were uneasy at the implication that people might also be cloned. Concern at the speed of scientific progress had previously stalled publicly funded research into controversial topics, for example, into in vitro fertilization. But it did not stop the work from taking place: instead the IVF industry blossomed in the private sector, funded by couples desperate for a baby and investors who had spotted a profitable new market.
That is also what happened with human stem cells. After a prolonged struggle over whether to ban research outright—which pitted Nancy Reagan, whose husband suffered from Alzheimer’s disease, against a father who asked George Bush’s advisers, "Which one of my children would you kill?"—Mr. Bush blocked the use of government money to fund research on any new human embryonic stem-cell cultures. But research did not halt completely; Geron, a biopharmaceutical(生物制药的)company based in Menlo Park, California, had started "to mop up this orphaned innovation" , as Ms Park puts it, by recruiting researchers whose work brought them into conflict with the funding restrictions.
Meanwhile, in South Korea a scientist claimed not only to have cloned human embryos but also to have created patient-specific cultures that could, in theory, be used to patch up brain damage or grow a kidney. Alas, he was wrong. But a Japanese scientist did manage to persuade adult skin cells to act like stem cells. If it proves possible to scale up his techniques, that would remove the source of the controversy over stem-cell research.
Three months after he took office, Barack Obama lifted restrictions on federal funding for research on new stem-cell cultures, saying that he thought sound science and moral values were consistent with one another. But progress has been slow: the first human trials in America, involving two people with spinal-cord injuries who have been injected with stem celis developed by Geron, are only just under way. The sick children who first inspired scientists to conduct research into stem cells in order to develop treatments that might help them are now young adults. As Ms Park notes, the fight over stem-cell research is not over, and those who might benefit from stem-cell medicine remain in need.
We can infer from Paragraph 1 that______.
选项
A、scientific achievements occur at a slower rate than people’s expectation
B、repairing human bodies and growing new organs have already been realized
C、Alice Park has proved the meaning of stem cells in "The Stem Cell Hope"
D、people are concerned about moral and ethical implications of scientific research
答案
D
解析
推理题。根据文章第一段可知,科学进步的步伐经常超越人们的心理和道德接受的速度。从最初的心脏移植、试管婴儿到更先进的身体修复和器官在原体内的重新生长的科学愿景,人们一直在疑惑这样的科学成就是否合乎道德标准或值得期待,一位科学家就这些问题写了一篇关于这一研究在科学、政治、道德和私人层面上带来的潜在影响的文章。综上所述,我们可以推断出,人们对这些科研的道德影响很关注,故[D]为正确答案,同时排除[A]和[C]。根据第一段第二句“在过去的三十年里,科学家们已经开始研究将给我们带来神奇效果的医学分支——人体修复和新器官的培育生长”,可知[B]陈述错误,故排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/lVJK777K
0
专业英语四级
相关试题推荐
Toooftenyoungpeoplegetthemselvesemployedquitebyaccident,notknowing【C1】______liesinthewayofopportunityforpromot
Toooftenyoungpeoplegetthemselvesemployedquitebyaccident,notknowing【C1】______liesinthewayofopportunityforpromot
Toooftenyoungpeoplegetthemselvesemployedquitebyaccident,notknowing【C1】______liesinthewayofopportunityforpromot
Toooftenyoungpeoplegetthemselvesemployedquitebyaccident,notknowing【C1】______liesinthewayofopportunityforpromot
Themajorityofnursesarewomen,butinthehigherranksofthemedicalprofessionwomenareina______.
Fivehundredyearslater,theneedforincreasedtradeandanerrorinnavigation______toanotherEuropeanencounterwithAmeric
RiteofPassageisagoodnovelbyanystandards;______,itshouldrankhighonanylistofsciencefiction.
Accordingtothepassage,theaverageIQis______.
随机试题
厨房液化气灶操作人员必须掌握安全操作液化气灶的基本知识,对其具体要求是________。
中国茶道几乎汲取了佛禅思想中的精华。()
杜甫的名句“朱门酒肉臭,路有冻死骨”属于()
我爸烟龄二十多年,从记事起他就经常说要戒烟,直到现在也没成功。他早起第一件事情就是吸烟,饭后也是吸烟,睡前也要吸烟,即使在不让吸烟的地方他也要躲在角落里吸烟,一天吸一盒多烟。由于母亲做了手术,家里绝对不能抽烟,他就到卫生间抽,卫生间里烟味太大,于是被撵到了
流行性腮腺炎最主要的病理特征
A.地西泮B.硫喷妥钠C.戊巴比妥D.苯巴比妥E.司可巴比妥用于静脉麻醉的巴比妥类药是()
商人甲在住宿的宾馆见到一女孩乙在自己房门外走来走去,将其叫进房间攀谈,知道其不满14周岁,不愿上学,没有工作。甲抚摸其身体见其没有反抗遂将其奸淫后给其200元钱。正在递钱时,房客丙、丁敲门进入,见状威胁要向公安机关告发甲强奸,要甲拿出1000元,见甲犹豫,
下列属于非经常性损益的是()。Ⅰ.乙公司向甲公司按照年利率20%进行资金拆借1000万,年底甲公司收到乙公司的利息100万Ⅱ.甲公司因地震导致产成品大量毁损,计提1000万元存货跌价准备Ⅲ.单独测试的应收账款坏账准备的转回Ⅳ.银行支付储户的利
甲企业从2020年1月起以融资租赁方式出租给乙企业一栋房屋,原值为200万元,租期5年,年租金40万元(不含税),税务机关确定纳税人为承租方(该省规定允许按原值减除20%的余值计税)。下列处理正确的有()。
()不是社会化的载体。
最新回复
(
0
)