高二英語聽力:NO BOUNDARIES

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英語聽力頻道為大家整理的高二英語聽力:NO BOUNDARIES,供大家參考:)
    [00:04.78]Reading NO BOUNDARIES
    [00:09.64]Imagine this:you are twenty-one years old
    [00:15.10]and a promising graduate student at one of the top universities in the world.
    [00:21.76]One day,your doctor tells you that you have an incurable disease
    [00:28.24]and may not have more than twelve months to live.
    [00:32.68]How would you feel? What would you do?
    [00:37.36]Most of us would probably feel very sad
    [00:42.21]and give up our dreams and hopes for the future.
    [00:46.89]Here is what Stephen Hawking thought:
    [00:50.83](There did not seem) much point in working on my PhD
    [00:56.11]I did not expect to survive that long.
    [01:00.26]Yet two years had gone by and I was not that much worse.
    [01:06.19]In fact,things were going rather well for me
    [01:11.34]and I had got engaged to a very nice girl, Jane Wilde.
    [01:17.22]But in order to get married,I needed a job,
    [01:22.36]and in order to get a job,I needed a PhD.
    [01:27.93]Instead of giving up,Hawking went on with his research,
    [01:33.88]got his PhD and married Jane.
    [01:38.85]Nor did he let the disease stop him from living the kind of life
    [01:44.41]he had always dreamt of.
    [01:47.57]He continued his exploration of the universe
    [01:52.22]and travelled around the world to give lectures.
    [01:56.48]In 2002,Hawking visited China
    [02:01.16]and spoke to university students in Hangzhou and Beijing.
    [02:07.11]As his disease has disabled him,
    [02:11.27]Hawking has to sit in his now-famous wheelchair and speak through a computer.
    [02:19.02]He told the students about his theories and thoughts on some of the greatest questions.
    [02:25.87]What is time,how did the universe begin,and what exactly are black holes?
    [02:34.41]Hawking became famous in the early 1970s,
    [02:39.87]when he and American Roger Penrose
    [02:44.44]made new discoveries about the Big Bang and black holes.
    [02:50.37]Since then,Hawking has continued to seek answers to questions
    [02:56.90]about the nature of the universe.
    [03:00.66]In 1988, he wrote A Brief History of Time,which quickly became a best-seller.
    [03:09.20]Readers were pleased and surprised to find that a scientist
    [03:15.13]could write about his work in a way that ordinary people could understand.
    [03:21.90]In the book,
    [03:24.64]Hawking explains both what it means to be a scientist and how science works.
    [03:31.91]He tells readers how discoveries are made and how they change the world.
    [03:38.28]Science,according to Hawking,is often misunderstood:
    [03:44.73]people often think that science is about "true" facts that never change.
    [03:51.60]Scientists,on the other hand,Hawking writes,
    [03:57.17]know that their job is never finished
    [04:01.21]and that even the best theorycan turn out to be wrong.
    [04:06.78]A scientific theory is the result Of the scientific method.
    [04:12.84]Scientists look at the world and try to describe and explain what they see.
    [04:20.21]First,they carefully observe what they are interested in.
    [04:25.95]To explain what they have seen,
    [04:29.71]they build a theory about the way in which things happen
    [04:34.86]and the causes and effects.
    [04:38.70]Finally,the scientists test the theory to seeif it matches what they have seen
    [04:45.86]and if it can predict future events.
    [04:50.12]If what they are observing can be tested in a practical way,
    [04:55.08]scientists will use experiments.
    [04:59.65]But if,like Hawking,
    [05:03.73]they are studying something that is too large or too difficult to observe directly
    [05:10.57]they will use a model to test the theory.
    [05:14.93]People who listen to Hawking's lectures
    [05:19.37]sometimes find it difficult to understand him,
    [05:24.10]because his thoughts and ideas
    [05:27.97]often seem as large as the universe he is trying to describe.
    [05:33.82]The speech computer is not the problem.
    [05:38.39]In fact,people who hear it often say it sounds just like a human voice.
    [05:45.23]Hawking is happy with it, too.
    [05:49.20]"The only trouble,"says Hawking,who is British,
    [05:54.06]"is that it gives me an American accent."
    [06:04.49]Reading MAKING A DIFFERENCE
    [06:09.95]It is not necessary to be a great scientist to make a difference,
    [06:16.29]but there are things we can learn from the best minds in this world.
    [06:22.07]Great scientists like Stephen Hawking always want to know more.
    [06:28.41]They are never satisfied with a simple answer
    [06:33.17]and are always looking for new questions.
    [06:37.61]The Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei was so curious that he used a microscope
    [06:46.15]and a telescope
    [06:49.39]in order to be able to take a closer look at things both great and small.
    [06:56.34]By asking why, how and what if,curious minds find new ideas and solutions.
    [07:06.19]If knowledge is power,as Sir Francis Bacon wrote in 1597,
    [07:13.45]then perhaps creativity can be described as the ability to use that power.
    [07:20.89]Scientists must be creative and use their imagination all the time.
    [07:27.76]When Zhang Heng,the Chinese astronomer and geographer,
    [07:33.33]wanted to draw a map of the heavens,
    [07:37.59]he was not satisfied with a simple paper map.
    [07:42.34]Instead, he built a model that could move
    [07:47.30]in order to show how the position of the stars changed from season to season.
    [07:54.46]We must believe in what we do,even when others do not.
    [08:00.31]Both Galileo and Zhang Heng
    [08:04.68]found it difficult to make people believe that their theories were correct.
    [08:10.84]People laughed at Zhang Heng when he first introduced his seismograph,
    [08:16.90]and it was only later that the world recognised his greatness.
    [08:22.83]Galileo's observations show that Copernicus,another great astronomer,
    [08:29.68]was right and that the earth moves around the sun,not the other way around.
    [08:36.73]At that time,the church said that the earth was the centre of the universe
    [08:43.49]and Galileo was not allowed to publish or discuss his observations.
    [08:49.06]Today,both Zhang Heng and Galileo are known as scientific pioneers
    [08:56.71]who helped us better understand the world.
    [09:00.84]Perhaps the most important thing if we want to make a difference
    [09:07.11]is to find something that we like to do and that we are good at.
    [09:13.27]Knowing who we are means knowing how we think and what we like to do.
    [09:20.43]Everyone has his or her special skills and interests,
    [09:26.67]and only by discovering what we do best
    [09:30.93]can we hope to reach our goals and truly make a difference.
    [09:37.41]Work Book unit 1 Integrating skills
    [09:47.44]Reading ALBERT EINSTEIN
    [09:52.20]When Stephen Hawking was writing A Brief History of Time,
    [09:57.86]his editors told him that he would lose half of his readers
    [10:03.19]for each equation he put in the book.
    [10:07.32]Despite this warning,Hawking found it necessary to include one equation.
    [10:14.30]His choice was the world's most famous equation,Albert Einstein's E = mc2.
    [10:23.96]As simple as the equation may seem,
    [10:28.22]it represents a theory so important
    [10:33.57]that it changed science and physics completely.
    [10:38.82]In fact, Einstein's discoveries made such a big difference
    [10:45.49]that he felt he had to apologise to Newton.
    [10:50.45]"Forgive me,"Einstein wrote, "you found the only way which,
    [10:57.21]in your age,was just about possible for a man of highest thought
    [11:04.06]and creative power.
    [11:07.22]Einstein had replaced Newton's theories with his own
    [11:13.38]and changed our understanding of the universe.
    [11:18.45]Before Einstein,
    [11:21.61]scientists believed that light travelled through space in a straight line.
    [11:27.96]But Einstein was able to prove that light coming from the stars
    [11:33.92]was bent as it passed the sun.
    [11:38.17]As a result,it appeared to scientists on earth that the stars had moved.
    [11:45.54]He worked out just how much the light would be bent;
    [11:50.50]he could also work out how far the stars would appear to have moved.
    [11:57.14]His discovery was completely new;
    [12:01.50]it was said that only three people could understand it at the time.
    [12:07.75]The difficulty was how he could prove his ideas to other scientists
    [12:14.72]Many of them did not accept his scientific ideas.
    [12:20.78]But Einstein went on with his research.
    [12:25.82]By 1919,scientists who had been watching the stars believed in his work
    [12:34.18]and he quickly became world-famous.
    [12:38.73]From that time on Einstein was greatly respected
    [12:44.40]as the leading scientist of the century.
    [12:49.36]The First World War (1914-1918) had brought him great sadness.
    [12:58.50]He had taken Swiss nationality in 1901
    [13:04.25]and therefore did not have to join the army,
    [13:08.48]as Switzerland did not take sides in the war.
    [13:13.63]Einstein thought that war was a terrible thing
    [13:18.48]and believed that fighting and killing in wars was wrong.
    [13:24.13]He did urge the United States to build an atomic bomb to defeat the Nazis,
    [13:31.28]but when Einstein saw the effect of the bomb,he regretted his actions.
    [13:38.26]What he wanted to see was an end to all the armies of the world.
    [13:44.61]When Hitler came into power in the early 1930s, Einstein,
    [13:51.58]who was a Jew,found it impossible to continue living in Germany.
    [13:57.93]His friends were beaten, or taken away,or their homes were destroyed.
    [14:04.77]While he was doing research in America,
    [14:09.42]Einstein wrote a letter to a newspaper to say that these acts were wrong.
    [14:16.50]It meant that he would never be able to visit Germany again.
    [14:21.86]That is why Einstein and his family left Europe for the USA in 1933