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[20130901]A Short History of Nearly Everything[serial]

2018年03月17日 ⁄ 综合 ⁄ 共 1971字 ⁄ 字号 评论关闭

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http://ting.hujiang.com/wanwujianshi/15154661676/

And ocean salinity of course represented only the
merest sliver(细条) of my ignorance. I didn't know what a proton was, or a protein, didn't know a
quark from a quasar, didn't understand how geologists could look at a layer of rock on a
canyon wall and tell you(连读) how old it was, didn't know anything really.I became
gripped(抓紧->引起兴趣) by a quiet, unwonted(异常的) urge to know a little about these matters and to understand how people figured them out.
That to me remained the greatest of all amazements-how scientists work things out.
How does anybody know how much the Earth weighs or how old its rocks are or what really is way down there in the center? How can they know how and when the universe started and what it was
like when it did? How do they know what goes on inside an atom? And how, come to that-or perhaps above all-can scientists so often seem to know nearly everything but then still can't predict an earthquake or even tell us whether we should take an umbrella
with us to the races next Wednesday? 

当然,海水的咸度只是我不知道的事情中的极小部分。我不知道什么是质子,什么是蛋白质,不知道"夸克"和"类星体"都是什么劳什子,不理解地质学家怎么只要看一眼峡谷壁上的一层岩石,就能说出它的年龄--我确实什么也不知道。我心里渐渐迫切想要知道一点儿这些问题,尤其想懂得人家是怎样测算出来的。科学家们是怎样解决这些问题的--这对我来说始终是最大的奇事。他们怎么知道地球的重量,怎么知道岩石的年龄,怎么知道地心深处实际上是什么东西?他们怎么知道宇宙是怎样开始的,什么时候开始的,它开始的时候又是什么样子的?他们怎么知道原子内部的情况?科学家怎么往往好像差不多什么都知道,而又仍不能预测地震,甚至不能准确地告诉我们下星期三看比赛时该不该带雨伞?这到底是怎么回事--尤其是在经过回想以后?

So I decided that I would devote a portion of my life,three years, as it now turns out, to reading books and journals and finding
saintly, patient experts prepared to answer a lot of outstandingly
dumb questions.
The idea was to see if it isn't possible to understand and appreciate-marvel at, enjoy even-the wonder and accomplishments of science at a level that isn't too technical or demanding, but isn't entirely superficial either.

于是,我决定今生要拿出一部分时间--结果是花了三年时间--来读书看报,寻访很有耐心、德高望重、愿意回答许多典型的令人哑口无言的问题的专家。我倒想要看看,是不是有可能在不大专门或不需要很多知识的,而又不完全是很肤浅的层面上,理解和领会--甚至是赞叹和欣赏--科学的奇迹和成就。

That was my idea and my hope, and that is what the book that follows is intended to be.
Anyway, we have a great deal of ground to cover and much less than 650,000 hours in which to do it, so let's begin.

这曾经是我的想法,我的希望,本书就是按照这个意图来写的。反正,我们要涉及的范围很广,而办这件事又远远用不着100万个小时,因此我们就开始吧。


/*英语听写连载.坚持一件事.~*/

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