2019考研英语一翻译真题来源和基本分析
(2018-12-22 19:03:08)2019考研英语一翻译解析
新东方 唐静
文章来源于英国著名杂志《旁观者》The Spectator,原文标题是Why is so much bad science published?文章作者Theodore Dalrymple,大约发表时间是2016年。文章经命题人改编过,与2014年到2018年的这几年,试题难度稳中有升。
试题原文和划线句如下:
It wasn’t until after my retirement that I had the time to read scientific papers in medical journals with anything like close attention. Until then, I had, like most doctors, read the authors’ conclusions and assumed that they bore some necessary relation to what had gone before. I had also naively assumed that the editors had done their job and checked the intellectual coherence and probity of the contents of their journals.
It was only after I started to write a weekly column about the medical journals, and began to read scientific papers from beginning to end, that I realised just how bad — inaccurate, misleading, sloppy, illogical — much of the medical literature, even in the best journals, frequently was. My discovery pleased and reassured me in a way: for it showed me that, even in advancing age, I was still capable of being surprised.
I came to recognise various signs of
a bad paper: the kind of paper that purports to show that people
who eat more than one kilo of broccoli a week were 1.17 times more
likely than those who eat less to suffer late in life from
pernicious anaemia. 46)
Why is so much bad science
published?
A recent paper, titled ‘The Natural
Selection of Bad Science’, published on the Royal
Society’s
According to the authors, the problem
is not merely that people do bad science, as they have always done,
but that our current system of career advancement positively
encourages it. They quote an anonymous researcher who said pithily:
‘Poor methods get results.’ What is important is not truth, let
alone importance, but publication, which has become almost an end
in itself. There has been a kind of inflationary process at work:
47)
In addition to the pressure to publish,
there is a preference in journals for positive rather than negative
results. To prove that factor
The easiest way to generate positive
associations is to do bad science, for example by trawling through
a whole lot of data without a prior hypothesis. For example, if you
took 100 dietary factors and tried to associate them with flat
feet, you would find some of them that were associated with that
condition, associations so strong that at first sight they would
appear not to have arisen by chance.
Once it has been shown that the
consumption of, shall we say, red cabbage is associated with flat
feet, one of two things can happen: someone will try to reproduce
the result, or no one will, in which case it will enter scientific
mythology. The penalties for having published results which are not
reproducible, and prove before long to be misleading, usually do
not cancel out the prestige of having published them in the first
place: and therefore it is better, from the career point of view,
to publish junk than to publish nothing at all. A long list of
publications, all of them valueless, is always
impressive.
48)Attempts have been made to
(control this inflation命题人改编为curb this kind
tendency),(for example by trying, when it comes
to career advancement这部分被出题人删除), to incorporate some measure of
quality as well as quantity into the assessment of an applicant’s
published papers. This is the famed citation index, that
is to say the number of times a paper has been quoted elsewhere in
the scientific literature, the assumption being that an important
paper will be cited more often than one of small account.
49)
(这部分原文我大量删除,具体待整理)
Boiling down an individual’s output to
simple, objective metrics, such as number of publications or
journal impacts, entails considerable savings in time, energy and
ambiguity. Unfortunately, the long-term costs of using simple
quantitative metrics to assess researcher merit are likely to be
quite great.
50)
In other words, what we need is more emphasis on personal contact and even nepotism in the way careers are advanced: but tell it not in Gath, publish it not in the streets of Askelon; lest the daughters of the Philistines rejoice…

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