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纽约时报文章,非常中肯:Historical Tremors [复制链接]

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只看楼主 倒序阅读 使用道具 楼主  发表于: 2008-05-15
IT is a cruel and poignant certainty that the children who died in the wreckage of their school during the earthquake this week in Dujiangyan, China, knew all too well that their country once led the world in the knowledge of the planet’s seismicity. 5KssfI a  
wD@ wOC  
They would have been taught, and proudly, that almost 2,000 years ago an astronomer named Chang Heng invented the world’s first seismoscope. It was a bizarrely imagined creation, with its centerpiece a large bronze vessel surrounded by eight dragons, each holding a sphere in its mouth. _b &Aa%  
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A complex system of internal levers ensured that if an earthquake ever disturbed the vessel, a ball would drop from a dragon’s care into the mouth of a bronze frog positioned underneath. By observing which dragon had dropped its ball, Chang Heng could ascertain the location of the quake. And always, as the emperor for whom Chang Heng fashioned the device noted, the earthquakes came from the mountains in the west, where Dujiangyan lies. / $'M  
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As we watch with mounting melancholy the devastation from Sichuan, a question lingers, and troublingly. Why, if the Chinese had come to know so much about earthquakes so early on in their immensely long history, were they never able to minimize the effects of the world’s contortions — to at least the degree that America has? Why did they leave the West to become leaders in the field, and leave themselves to become mired, time and again, in the kind of tragic events that we are witnessing this week? 0b2;  
#QW% ;^  
The question applies to very much more than the science of earthquakes. In almost every area of technology the Chinese were once supreme, without competition. The stirrup, so hugely important in peace and war, was invented by the Chinese. Printing, gunpowder, the use of the compass — the three inventions that Francis Bacon once said defined the modern world — are all thought to have been first made in China. So too, many think, were vaccination, toilet paper, segmental arch bridges, iron chains and perhaps chess — the list seems endless. @2\UjEo~  
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And yet, in the 16th century China’s innovative energies inexplicably withered away, and modern science became the virtual monopoly of the West. There had been any number of Chinese Euclids and Archimedes but there was never to be a Chinese Newton or Galileo. The realm fell steadily behind, century by century; it became impoverished, backward and prey to the caprices of nature. [U7r>&  
0%3T'N%  
There is a peculiar paradox in the Sichuan disaster. Dujiangyan is known across the nation as the site of one of China’s greatest ancient wonders. In 256 B.C. an engineer named Li Bing, concerned about the catastrophic annual flooding of the Min River, completed a huge water diversion and irrigation scheme. It involved cutting a long trench through a granite mountainside — achieved by the patient process of burning grass bonfires on top of the rocks and pouring cold water until the granite cracked. It took decades, but Li Bing’s 2,300-year-old project still stands less than a mile from the town’s ruined school, and it still works. Tn$| Xa+:s  
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And yet, did the Chinese continue with their early expertise in flood prevention? Just as with Chang Heng’s seismic mastery, Li Bing’s expertise counted for nothing; year upon year, thousands of Chinese die in immense inundations in the great rivers that course across the country; some 400 dams sustained damage in this week’s quake. QFhQfn  
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Historians have long debated why the Chinese so signally failed to exploit their early promise. Lack of internal competition, some suggest. Others blame the long-held central ambition of every young Chinese man to become a Confucian mandarin, a bureaucrat, rather than an engineer or scientist. "||G`%aO+t  
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Not a few others, however — admirers of China and optimists in the main — say that in the long sweep of Chinese history, a mere 400 or 500 dark, non-scientific years are a mere blip, a hiccup, and that China’s innovative energies are now roaring back, with the universities and scientific institutions brimming as they did back in the golden ages of the great dynasties. *yW9-(  
/ZSdY_%s  
That had better be the case. China, in its headlong attempts to modernize, has often demonstrated a dismayingly cavalier attitude toward the well-being of its people: skyscrapers are built with little attention to safety standards and are invariably far from earthquake-resistant; huge dams — not least the monstrosity that has so ruined the Three Gorges of the Yangtze — are erected in a slapdash fashion; subways, like the system burrowing through the waterlogged alluvium beneath Shanghai, are built with incautious haste; freeway tunnels are bored through earthquake fault zones. uJ,I6P~9  
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If the country does not occasionally stand back and pause for breath, then its future — at least so far as nature’s occasional moments of seismic madness are concerned — will continue to be marked by calamity. Until this week Dujiangyan was a place of which China could be proud; today its wreckage stands as a tragic monument to a culture that turned its back on its remarkable and glittering history. w_q =mKu  
Ki3 wqY  
Simon Winchester is the author of “The Man Who Loved China.” ,Ne v7X[0  
<Q.-WV]Z  
圣人不死,大盗不止
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只看该作者 1楼 发表于: 2008-05-15
    $e![^I]`  
怎么说呢
情况属实 望予批准
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只看该作者 2楼 发表于: 2008-05-16
历史性的震颤
    这是一个残酷而具有讽刺意味的事实:一个曾经以地震学知识称著于世的国家----中国,孩子们却在地震废墟中死去。 :+|os"  
  他们曾经被引以自傲地告知,两千年一位名叫张衡的天文学家发明了世界上第一台地震仪。这是一个奇思妙想的创造,仪器的内部中央有一根铜质“都柱”,外部周围有八个龙。复杂的内部杠杆系统可以确保当某个地方发生地震时,樽体随之运动,触动机关,使发生地震方向的龙头张开嘴,吐出铜球,落到铜蟾蜍的嘴里。根据地动仪铜球的掉落的方向,张衡藉以判断地震的方位。而皇帝也能经常通过张衡为其铸造的地动仪得知,地震来自西部山区,都江堰就位于其中。(待续,让我们一边救灾,同时也不妨反思)
[ 此贴被twtw在2008-05-16 19:51重新编辑 ]
圣人不死,大盗不止
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只看该作者 3楼 发表于: 2008-05-16
看了 mEe JK3D[  
的确值得我们反思
叹人生世间名利牵!
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