1、 Important sentences Unit 1 课文后p10-12 的十道paraphrase句子,加上以下的8句,计18句 1. In one evening, they manage to cut through the entire hierarchy and procedures the boss has painstakingly established for the purpose of being spared this kind of importuning. 2.These people have been socializi
2、ng happily every working day of their lives, give or take a few melees, rumors, and complaint petitions. 3.Out of the natural goodness of its corporate heart and the spirit of the holiday season, the company wishes only to give its employees a roaring good time, and the employees, out of loyalty a
3、nd the thrill of getting to know their bosses off-duty as equals, delight in the opportunity. 4.More serious is the fact that, in spite of the liquor and high spirits, it still counts as sexual harassment when anyone with supervisory powers makes unreciprocated overtures to a lower-ranking employee
4、 5.The people who do the planning are paid for their trouble, so those who benefit need not consider they have incurred a debt. 6.But etiquette’s solution of having everyone greeted in a receiving line was rejected as too stiff. So one can hardly blame employees for recalling a long-ingrained pr
5、inciple of the workplace: seeing the boss and having a good time are best not scheduled at the same time. 7.It is often erroneously assumed that the style of the party ought to be what employees are used to: their own kind of music, food, and other things the executive level believes itself to have
6、 outgrown. 8.And the real opportunity for career advancement is not petitioning a boss but rescuing one who has been cornered or stranded, thus demonstrating that one knows how to talk charmingly about nonbusiness matterers. Unit 2 (计12句) 1. Just shy of 50, she says she’d never ha
7、ve wanted to do what her mother did-give up a career to raise a family. 2. Once upon a time, people who lived alone tended to be those on either side of marriage. 3. It's a marketing man's dream: a demographic with the anxieties of teenagers and the bank accounts of the middle-aged. 4.The Single,
8、 long a stock figure in stories, songs and personal ads, was traditionally someone at the margins of society: a figure of fun, pity or awe. 5.The current generation of home-aloners came of age during Europe’s shift from social democracy to the sharper, more individualistic climate of American-styl
9、e capitalism. 6.While pensioners, particularly elderly women, make up a hefty proportion of those living alone, the newest crop of singles are high earners in their 30s and 40s who increasingly view living alone as a lifestyle choice. 7.In London, luxury complexes with tiny flats, gyms and easy
10、access to urban pleasures are springing up for young and driven professionals. 8.And divorced or widowed people who hook up later in life tend to have set ways and long personal histories with the requisite complications. 9.The communications revolution, the shift from a business culture of stab
11、ility to one of mobility and the mass entry of women into the workforce have wreaked havoc on Europeans’ private lives.. (unit 2 para 3) 10.But an increasing number of Europeans are choosing to be so at an ever-earlier age. This isn’t the stuff of gloomy philosophical meditations, but a fact of Eu
12、rope’s new economic landscape, embraced by demographers, real –estate developers and ad executives alike. 11.The move from cozy families to urban singledom opens new vistas for marketers. In the past, the Holy Grail for advertisers was the couple with 2.3 children 12. Nightly group dinners are’t m
13、andatory, though people do have to pitch in and cook for a week every two months Unit 3 1.Medical advances in wonder drugs, daring surgical procedures, radiation therapies, and intensive-care units have brought new life to thousands of people. Yet to many of them, modern medicine has become a dou
14、ble-edged sword.(from paragraph 1 ) 1. Doctor’s power to treat with an array of space-age techniques has outstripped the body’s capacity to heal. (from paragraph 1 ) 2. Most often it is at the two extremes of life that these difficult ethical questions arise—at the beginning for the very sick newb
15、orn and at the end for the dying patients(from paragraph 6 ) 3. The dilemma posed by modern medical technology has created the growing new discipline of bioethics. (from paragraph 7 ) 4. More than a dozen states recognize “living wills” in which the patients leave instructions to doctors not to pr
16、olong life by feeding them intravenously or by other methods if their illness becomes hopeless. (from paragraph 10 ) 5. Meanwhile, the hospice movement, with its emphasis on providing comfort—not cure—to the dying patient, has gained momentum in many areas. (from paragraph 10 ) 6. Ethicists also f
17、ear that under the guise of medical decisions not to treat certain patients, death may become too easy, pushing the country toward the acceptance of euthanasia. (from paragraph 12 ) 7. At the other end of the life span, technology has so revolutionized newborn care that it is no longer clear when h
18、uman life is viable outside the womb. (from paragraph 14 ) 8. “But I feel strongly that retardation or the fact that someone is going to be less than perfect is not good grounds for allowing an infant to die.” (from paragraph 16 ) 9. The current trend is toward nontreatment as doctors grapple with
19、 questions not just of who should get care but when to take therapy away. (from paragraph 19 ) 10. Since 1972, Americans have enjoyed unlimited access to a taxpayer-supported, kidney-dialysis program that offers life-prolonging therapy to all patients with kidney failure. (from paragraph 23 ) 11.
20、Burn units—though extremely effective—also provide very expensive therapy for very few patients. (from paragraph 24 ) As medical scientists push back the frontiers of therapy, the moral dilemma will continue to grow for doctors and patients alike, making the choice of to treat or not to treat the b
21、asic question in modern medicine. (from paragraph 25 ) Unit 4 1. It is amazing to Americans how anyone gets around, yet Parisians seem to do well. 2. People from different cultures may unconsciously infringe on each other’s sense of space. 3.Thus although Americans are taught to p
22、erceive and react to the arrangement of objects in space and to think of space as being "wasted" unless it is filled with objects, the Japanese are trained to give meaning to space itself and to value "empty" space. 4.Spatial consciousness in many Western cultures is based on a perception of object
23、s in space, rather than of space itself. Westerners perceive shapes and dimensions, in which space is a realm of light, color, sight, and touch. 5.It was only when the intellectually crude Roman culture became influenced by the abstract thinking of Greek culture that the Latin language developed a
24、 significant vocabulary of abstract, non-spatial terms. 6.Edward Hall, in The Silent Language, suggests that the layout of space characteristic of French cities is only one aspect of the theme of centralization that characterizes French culture. 7.This pattern of spatial perception among the Ho
25、pi seems to be similar to their pattern of time perception, in which periods of time are not seen as separate pieces of duration, as they are in the Western cultures, but are integrated as pieces of a connected pattern. 8.Spatial perceptions may be adaptations to specific environments: the degree
26、of population density; the amount of arable land; the absence or existence of natural barriers such as the sea or mountains; the amount of distinguishing landmarks in a region. 9.Another aspect of the cultural patterning of space concerns the functions of spaces. In middle-class America, specific s
27、paces are designated for specific activities. Any intrusion of one activity into a space that it was not designed for is immediately felt as inappropriate.(unit 4para 4) 10.Spaces in India are segregated so that high caste and low caste, males and females, secular and sacred activities are kept a
28、part. The pattern has been used for thousands of years, as demonstrated by the archaeological evidence uncovered in ancient Indian cities. 11.Anthropologists studying various cultures as a whole have seen a connection in the way they view both time and space. Unit 9 1. Swimming of
29、f the coast of Argentina, a female right whale singles out just one of the suitors that are hotly pursuing her. 2.Yet even enthusiasts don't ascribe emotions to the very bottom end of the food chain. 3. He maintains that the question of feelings boils down to whether or not animals are conscious.
30、 4.Still, the idea of animals feeling emotions remains controversial among many scientists. Researcher’s skepticism is fueled in part by their professional aversion to anthropomorphism, the very nonscientific tendency to attribute human qualities to nonhumans. 5.Even the most strident skeptics of a
31、nimal passion agree that many creatures experience fear----which some scientists define as a primary emotion that contrasts with secondary emotions such as love and grief. 6.One of the most obvious animal emotions is pleasure. Any who has ever held a purring cat or been greeted by a bounding, bar
32、king, tail-wagging dog knows that animals often appear to be happy. Beastly joy seems particularly apparent when the animals are playing with one another or sometimes, in the case of pets, with people. 7.Yet because feelings are intangible, and so tough to study scientifically, “most researchers
33、don’t even want to talk about animal emotions. 8.Scientists studying these behemoths have reported countless cases of elephants trying to revive dead or dying family members, as well as standing quietly beside an animal’s remains for many days, periodically reaching out and touching the body with t
34、heir trunks. 9. Primatologist Jane Goodall, who has studied chimpanzees in Tanzania for four decades, says that chips “chase, somersault, and pirouette around one another with the abandon of children.” 10. After mating, the two cetaceans liger side by side , stroking one another with their flipp
35、ers and finally rolling together in what looks like an embrace. 11. Many scientists also say that it is impossible to prove animals have emotions using standard scientific methods----repeatable observations that can be manipulated in controlled experiments---- leading them to conclude that such fee
36、lings must not exist. 12. Today, however, amid mounting evidence to the contrary, “the tide is turning radically and rapidly,” says Bekoff, who is at the forefront of this movement. 13. Essential to escape predators and other dangers, fear--- and its predictable flight, fight, or freeze respon
37、ses--- seems to be hard-wired into many species. 14. The new case for animal emotions comes in part from the growing acceptability of field observations, particularly when they are taken in aggregate. 15. In one experiment, Siviy placed pairs of rats in a distinctive plexiglass chamber and all
38、owed them to play. After a week, he could put one animal alone in the chamber and, anticipating its upcoming play session, it would become “very active, vocalizing, and pacing back and forth with excitement.” 16..In animals studied so far, including humans, emotions seem to arise from ancient parts
39、 of the brain that are located below the cortex, regions that have been conserved across many species throughout evolution. 17. The plural of anecdote is data Unit 10 1. Once one begins to censor the acquisition of objective knowledge, one is on the slippery slope of all. 2.Th
40、e social obligations that scientists have, as distinct from those responsibilities they share with all citizens (such as supporting a democratic society and taking care of the rights of others), come from them having access to specialized knowledge of how the world works that is not easily accessibl
41、e to others. 3.There may well be problems with insurance and testing, but are these any different from those related to someone considered to be at increased risk of contracting AIDS or cancer? 4.One should not abandon the possibility of using a scientific idea to do good because one could use the
42、 same idea to do bad. There is no knowledge that is not susceptible to manipulation for evil purposes. 5.To those who doubt whether the public or politicians are capable of making the correct decisions about science and its applications, I commend the advice of Thomas Jefferson: “I know no safe
43、 depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise that control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their direction.” 6.Technology is much older than science and, unaide
44、d by any science, it gave rise to early crafts such as agriculture and metalworking. 7.Are there, as literary critic George Steiner has argued, certain orders of truth which would infect the marrow of politics and would poison beyond all cure the already tense relations between social classes an
45、d these communities? In short, are there doors in front of current research that should be marked “too dangerous to open? 8.Whatever new technology is introduced, it is not for scientists to make moral or ethical decisions about its use, as they have no special rights or skills in this regard. The
46、re is grave danger in asking scientists to be more socially responsible if they would also be given the right and authority to make such decision on their own. 9.The idea that knowledge is dangerous is deeply embedded in our culture. Adam and Eve were forbidden to eat from the biblical Tree of Kn
47、owledge, and in Milton’s Paradise Lost the serpent addresses the Tree as the “Mother of Science” 10.Are there areas of research that are so socially sensitive that they should be avoided, even proscribed? One possible area is the genetic basis of intelligence, and particularly the possible link bet
48、ween race and intelligence. 11.Dangers and ethical issues come into play when scientific research is done in practice, for example in experiments involving humans and other animals or when science is applied to technology, or in issues related to safety. 12.Indeed, western literature is fille
49、d with images of scientists meddling with nature, with disastrous results. Scientists are portrayed as a soulless group, unconcerned with ethical issues. 13. Dangers and ethical issues come into play when scientific research is done in practice, for example in experiments involving humans and oth
50、er animals or when science is applied to technology, or in issues related to safety. 14.There is thus an important distinction between science and technology: between knowledge and understanding on the one hand, and the application of that knowledge to making something, or using it in some practi






