首页
登录
职称英语
A triumph for scientific freedom This week’s Nobel
A triumph for scientific freedom This week’s Nobel
游客
2023-07-30
59
管理
问题
A triumph for scientific freedom
This week’s Nobel Prize winners in medicine—Australians Barry J. Marshall and J. Robin Warren— toppled the conventional wisdom in more ways than one. They proved that most ulcers were caused by a lowly bacterium, which was an outrageous idea at the time. But they also showed that if science is to advance, scientists need the freedom and the funding to let their imaginations roam.
Let’s start with the Nobel pair’s gut instincts. In the late 1970s, the accepted medical theory was that ulcers were caused by stress, smoking, and alcohol. But when pathologist Warren cranked up his microscope to a higher-than-usual magnification, he was surprised to find S-shaped bacteria in specimens taken from patients with gastritis. By 1982, Marshall, only 30 years old and still in training at Australia’s Royal Perth Hospital, and Warren, the more seasoned physician to whom he was assigned, were convinced that the bacteria were living brazenly in a sterile, acidic zone—the stomach—that medical texts had declared uninhabitable.
Marshall and Warren’s attempts to culture the bacteria repeatedly failed. But then they caught a lucky breaker rather, outbreak. Drug-resistant staph was sweeping through the hospital. Preoccupied with the infections, lab techs left Marshall’s and Warren’s petri dishes to languish in a dark, humid incubator over the long Easter holiday. Those five days were enough time to grow a crop of strange, translucent microbes.
Marshall later demonstrated that ulcer-afflicted patients harbored the same strain of bacteria. In 1983, he began successfully treating these sufferers with antibiotics and bismuth (the active ingredient in Pepto-Bismol). That same year, at an infectious disease conference in Belgium, a questioner in the audience asked Marshall if he thought bacteria caused at least some stomach ulcers. Marshall shot back that he believed bacteria caused all stomach ulcers.
Those were fighting words. The young physician from Perth was telling the field’s academically pedigreed experts that they had it all wrong. "It was impossible to displace the dogma," Marshall explained to me in a jaunty, wide-ranging conversation several years ago. "Their agenda was to shut me up and get me out of gastroenterology and into general practice in the outback."
At first, Marshall couldn’t produce the crowning scientific proof of his claim: inducing ulcers in animals by feeding them the bacterium. So in 1984, as he later reported in the Medical Journal of Australia. "a 32-year-old man, a light smoker and social drinker who had no known gastrointestinal disease or family history of peptic ulceration"—a superb test subject, in other words—" swallowed the growth from’ a flourishing three-day culture of the isolate."
The volunteer was Marshall himself, Five days later, and for seven mornings in a row, he experienced the classic and unpretty symptoms of severe gastritis.
Helicobacter pylori have since been blamed not only for the seething inflammation ,of ulcers but also for virtually all stomach cancer. Marshall’s antibiotic treatment has replaced surgery as standard care. And the wise guy booed off the stage at scientific meetings has just won the Nobel Prize.
What does all this have to do with scientific freedom? Today, US government funding favors "hypothesis-driven" rather than "hypothesis-generating" research. In the former, a scientist starts with a safe supposition and conducts the experiment to prove or disprove the idea. "If you want to get research funding; you better make sure that you’ve got the experiment half done," Marshall told me. "You have to prove it works before they’ll fund you to test it out."
By contrast, in hypothesis-generating research, the scientist inches forward by hunch, gathering clues and speculating on their meaning. The payoff is never clear. With today’s crimped science budgets and intense competition for grants, such risky research rarely gets funded. Proceeding on intuition, Mar- shall told me, "is a luxury that not many researchers have."
It helps, he added, to be an outsider. "The people who have got a stake in the old technology arc never the ones to embrace the new technology. It’s always someone a bit on the periphery--who hasn’t got anything to gain by the status quo—who is interested in changing it." [br] In hypothesis-driven research, the scientist inches forward by hunch, gathering clues and speculating on their meaning.
选项
A、Y
B、N
C、NG
答案
B
解析
从第十段第一句可知本句话错误
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/2883634.html
相关试题推荐
Evenifgovernmentshaveestablishedregulationsonscientificandtechnological
AtriumphforscientificfreedomThisweek’sNobel
AtriumphforscientificfreedomThisweek’sNobel
AtriumphforscientificfreedomThisweek’sNobel
AtriumphforscientificfreedomThisweek’sNobel
AtriumphforscientificfreedomThisweek’sNobel
AtriumphforscientificfreedomThisweek’sNobel
AtriumphforscientificfreedomThisweek’sNobel
Whatcanweloamfromtheapproachtoscientificresearchinothercultures?
Whatcanweloamfromtheapproachtoscientificresearchinothercultures?
随机试题
[audioFiles]audio_eufm_j32_001(20082)[/audioFiles]A、Awalk.B、Adrive.C、Ameet
[originaltext]M:Doyouknowwhathappenedtometoday?Iwassoembarrassed.W
遏制医疗费用急剧上涨,目前来看最好的办法是A.进行有效的健康干预 B.有效预防
幼儿记忆的基本特点是( )。A.有意记忆占优势,无意记忆逐渐发展 B.机械记
应收账款周转率提高意味着()。 Ⅰ.短期偿债能力增强Ⅱ.收账费用减少 Ⅲ.收
某县为省直接管辖县,该县人民医院发生了患方认为是医疗事故的争议,患方首先提出了要
A.减少脂肪摄入 B.少食多餐易消化无刺激性食物 C.限制蛋白质摄入 D.
营业部提供的咨询服务不包括()。A:向投资者介绍开户、委托、交割等操作规程及注意
货币之所以具有时间价值,主要是因为()。A.货币可以作为财富的象征 B.现
患者男,35岁。牙龈增生影响进食数年。有癫痫病史。检查:全口牙龈增生,前牙区为重
最新回复
(
0
)