和谐英语

历年考研英语真题mp3之阅读理解A(2001-1)

2016-05-29来源:和谐英语

2001 Passage1
Specialisation can be seen as a response to the problem of an increasing accumulation of scientific knowledge.
By splitting up the subject matter into smaller units,
one man could continue to handle the information and use it as the basis for further research.
But specialisation was only one of a series of related developments in science affecting the process of communication.
Another was the growing professionalisation of scientific activity.
No clear-cut distinction can be drawn between professionals and amateurs in science:
exceptions can be found to any rule.
Nevertheless, the word 'amateur' does carry a connotation
that the person concerned is not fully integrated into the scientific community
and,in particular, may not fully share its values.
The growth of specialisation in the nineteenth century,
with its consequent requirement of a longer,
more complex training, implied greater problems for amateur participation in science.
The trend was naturally most obvious in those areas of science based especially on a mathematical or laboratory training,
and can be illustrated in terms of the development of geology in the United Kingdom.
A comparison of British geological publications over the last century
and a half reveals not simply an increasing emphasis on the primacy of research,
but also a changing definition of what constitutes an acceptable research paper.
Thus, in the nineteenth century,
local geological studies represented worth while research in their own right;
but, in the twentieth century,
local studies have increasingly become acceptable to professionals only if they incorporate,
and reflect on, the wider geological picture.
Amateurs, on the other hand,have continued to pursue local studies in the old way.
The overall result has been to make entrance to professional geological journals harder for amateurs,
a result that has been reinforced by the widespread introduction of refereeing,first by national journals in the nineteenth century
and then by several local geological journals in the twentieth century.
As a logical consequence of this development,
separate journals have now appeared aimed mainly towards either professional or amateur readership.
A rather similar process of differentiation has led to professional geologists coming together nationally within one or two specific societies,
whereas the amateurs have tended either to remain in local societies or to come together nationally in a different way.
Although the process of professionalisation and specialisation was already well under way in British geology during the nineteenth century,
its full consequences were thus delayed until the twentieth century.
In science generally, however, the nineteenth century must be reckoned as the crucial period for this change in the structure of science.