| 分类: 翻译练习 |
原文被我改编过,题目是,Ships in the
Desert
Like the population explosion, the scientific and
technological revolution began to pick up speed slowly during the
eighteenth century. And this ongoing revolution has also suddenly
accelerated exponentially. For example, it is now an axiom in
many fields of science that more new and important discoveries have
taken place in the last ten years that. in the entire previous
history of science. While no single discovery has had the kind
of effect on our relationship to the earth that unclear weapons
have had on our relationship to warfare, it is nevertheless true
that taken together, they have completely transformed our
cumulative ability to exploit the earth for sustenance -- making the
consequences, of unrestrained exploitation every bit as unthinkable
as the consequences of unrestrained nuclear war.
There is only
one precedent for this kind of challenge to our thinking, and again
it is military. The invention of nuclear weapons and the subsequent
development by the
Unit-ed States
and the Soviet Union
of many thousands of strategic nuclear weapons forced a
slow and painful recognition that the new power thus acquired
forever changed not only the relationship between the two
superpowers but also the relationship of humankind to the
institution at war-fare itself. The consequences of all-out war
between nations armed with nuclear weapons suddenly included the
possibility of the destruction of both nations – completely and
simultaneously. That sobering realization led to a careful
reassessment of every aspect of our mutual relationship to the
prospect of such a war. As early as 1946 one strategist concluded
that strategic bombing with missiles "may well tear away the veil
of illusion that has so long obscured the reality of the change in
warfare – from a fight to a process of destruction.”

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