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ss | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | wayne.tistory.com | 01033383436 | 제작일 190203 00:28:56



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(1) Your generous donations have made such a difference in the lives of little children who have been stricken with cancer.

(2) They might not know your names, but we know that many of our patients can run around in the sunshine now, happy and carefree, because of you.

(3) Now, as cancer research has progressed, we have the opportunity to introduce an exciting and newly proven treatment that promises to save even more young lives.

(4) To get this treatment up and running this year, we are hoping that you would consider supporting us with $10,000.

(5) To meet this need, we ask that you make an initial donation of half that amount followed by a final donation by the end of November.

(6) We know that you will find your greatest reward in the knowledge that you have blessed countless young lives.

(7) We thank you once again for all you have done in the past, and appreciate your consideration of this new request.

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(8) Dear Sir or Madam: I am writing in response to your advertisement in the Columbia Journal Classifieds for a copywriter.

(9) I am a copywriter with 8 years’ experience of conceptualizing and producing engaging copy for catalogs, annual reports, brochures and all types of collateral material.

(10) In addition, my writing abilities have helped me create original works of art for clients like Mead Coated Papers and Oxford Healthcare.

(11) I am knowledgeable about MS Word and WordPerfect, as well as both Macintosh and PC platforms.

(12) Much of my work has been crafted for the following clients: Macmillan Reference Library, Watson Guptill Publications, Hawaii University Press, and Arcade Fashion & Lifestyle Magazine.

(13) I have confidence in my ability to produce powerful, gripping copy for your organization.

(14) My experience allows me to complete any project from concept to the final stages at a fast pace to meet deadlines, and to package it for the Web.

(15) I look forward to hearing from you.

(16) Thank you for your time and consideration.

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(17) Do you want to save on electricity costs through solar power but can’t or don’t want to put panels on your roof?

(18) Residents in the Town of Whately now have the exclusive opportunity to sign up for a regional community shared solar farm being built in the town by Nexamp, the veteran-founded and Massachusetts-based solar provider.

(19) Through Nexamp’s Solarize My Bill community solar program, Whately households and businesses can take advantage of the environmental and economic benefits of going solar without installing solar panels on their property.

(20) By subscribing to a share of the clean electricity generated by a local community solar project, participants can directly offset their electric bill and save on electricity costs with no upfront investment or long-term commitment.

(21) To learn more about how you can save while supporting local sources of renewable energy, visit www.SolarizingtheBill.com or call 600-445-2124 to speak with a member of the Nexamp community solar team.

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(22) I want to thank you for bringing members of "Puerto Ricans for a Positive Image" to the American Broadcasting System (ABS) this week to meet with me and other ABS senior executives.

(23) The heartfelt passion for portraying more positive images of the Puerto Rican community was certainly heard by our executives.

(24) As we discussed in our meeting, it was never our intent to misrepresent images to your community, and the show in question no longer airs on ABS.

(25) ABS is known for the diversity of its characters, and over the years we have been continually recognized by multiple groups for stories that challenge stereotypes and bring different perspectives and voices to the screen.

(26) We apologize for any inadvertent offense taken and can assure you that we will continue to strive to reflect the vast diversity of our audience with respect and, where appropriate, with self-deprecating humor.

(27) Thank you again for meeting with us and for voicing your concerns.

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(28) In the evenings, clutching cups of tea and plates of supper, we would gather in the chintz armchairs in the sitting room.

(29) Always keeping a wary eye on the overweight, but ever-hungry dogs and our supper, we would settle down to talk well into the night.

(30) I learnt a lot of my family’s history during those long summer evenings.

(31) As daylight faded from the sky, the lamps in the room would be turned on, and the gas fire would be lit.

(32) The four of us would sit talking, and I would ask so many questions that even Daphne, with her sharp memory and fund of family stories, could not always answer them.

(33) Then, some time after midnight, with the two dogs gently snoring in their favourite armchairs, we would yawningly creep up to our beds.

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(34) On a Saturday in the fall of 2009, when Brandon and I were assessing the possibilities for a free and unscheduled day, we decided to go shopping for our dream farmhouse.

(35) We had both been feeling ready for something new.

(36) We were feeling the same excitement that our children have at nightfall, looking into the darkness trying to find a firefly to catch.

(37) We were hoping for something magical, something we could wrap our arms around and take home with us.

(38) So we packed a lunch for the kids and informed them we were going on an adventure.

(39) They gave us questioning looks, inquisitively pleading, "but where are we going?"

(40) Once strapped into their car seats they were only interested in the destination.

(41) Of course, we did not have a destination and we refrained from sharing that bit of information.

(42) After packing a few books and toys to occupy kids, we went shopping for our dream farmhouse.

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(43) When I started to spend time in the region, I began hearing stories about sea otters.

(44) These days, the otters aren’t so few and far between.

(45) In fact, when I confessed my lifelong dream of someday seeing a sea otter, people almost laughed at me!

(46) There are lots, I was told, along the outer coast.

(47) Finally, my moment came.

(48) I was on a small boat and there they were, their dark heads sticking out above the white water where the waves were crashing up against the rocky coastline.

(49) They weren’t close, and the rough waves made it hard to see, but in that moment I knew what it was to have a dream come true.

(50) It was a reminder that things can change, that species can recover, and that I could let go of some of the concern for the otters that I’d been holding inside since I was a girl.

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(51) Writers can feel achingly alone, but I am tremendously fortunate to be part of wonderfully supportive scholarly, academic, and family groups.

(52) My deepest debts for this work are owed to those who have preceded me in establishing food studies as an accepted discipline.

(53) In countless ways, this work would not be possible without theirs.

(54) I have recommended many of their works in the suggestions for further reading that follow each entry and in the general suggestions that conclude the volume.

(55) But I have also benefited from the personal support and encouragement of many individuals — too many to name here — at gatherings such as the conference of the Association for the Study of Food and Society and the Oxford Symposium of Food and Cookery.

(56) A more welcoming and nurturing group of scholars cannot be imagined.

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(57) Three-year-olds don't have to deal with the same rules and realities adults do.

(58) Because of that, children tend to be more imaginative and creative with their ideas.

(59) They see possibilities where the rest of us see rules, boundaries, or impossibilities.

(60) That’s why they’re famous for writing on walls — you see a perfectly painted living room that shouldn't be touched: they see a blank canvas.

(61) Even if it’s just for 30 minutes, seeing life from the angle of a semi-careless child can give you a new perspective on how you spend your time and deal with household problems or work challenges.

(62) For that reason alone, it’s valuable to imagine yourself acting as you would if you were just a child: free-spirited, boundless, uncontrollably creative, and unafraid to try new things.

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(63) Most linguists and local community members agree that education and literacy in the local language are necessary to maintain vitality, or to revitalize a language threatened with endangerment.

(64) Some local communities reject this notion, wanting to preserve their oral traditions and to rely solely on them.

(65) There is, however, a cost to this decision, as it limits the domains in which the language can be used.

(66) Regardless, most regard literacy as essential for local languages.

(67) Yet more than half of all languages have no written form, and so a writing system needs to be developed for them in order to use them in education and literacy programs.

(68) Basic pedagogical and reference materials are needed, including textbooks, dictionaries and usable descriptive grammars.

(69) Such materials are readily available for languages of wider communication, but not for the majority of local languages.

(70) In addition, reading material is needed for literacy as well.

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(71) There is a misconception that older people belong to a special tribe, all with the same problems, opinions and attitudes.

(72) Yet older people are just as different from each other as are members of younger generational groups.

(73) How can it be otherwise in view of the wide range of different experiences everyone has as their life progresses from childhood to old age?

(74) There are differences formed by family backgrounds, education, careers and relationships.

(75) All these help shape a person’s character and outlook on life.

(76) This does not confer superior virtues on the elderly.

(77) They may have wisdom, good humour and tolerance, but are just as likely to be cantankerous, boring and narrow-minded.

(78) Like everyone else, the old are a mixed bunch, but each is an individual with their own particular interests and personality.

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(79) While we usually think negatively of deviance, it actually can prove functional in a society.

(80) Any hostility toward deviants promotes behavioral conformity with social expectations.

(81) It strengthens group identity by separating the nonconforming from the well-behaved members centering on an agreement on the norms.

(82) We may be familiar with the phrase "the exception makes the rule."

(83) Deviance shows us the boundary, or line, that must not be crossed, highlighting not only the importance of the norm but its relative permissible zone for behavior.

(84) For example, if there is a rule that "food is not permitted in the classroom," a person with the candy bar or bag of chips might not be admonished by the teacher; yet a person arriving to class with a fast-food meal experiences rebuke and ejection.

(85) Others in the class now know where the line is drawn and can adjust their patterns of behavior accordingly.

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(86) You can save yourself a lot of time and energy if, over the next few years, you give serious consideration to what is most important to you and what you want to do with your life.

(87) Avoid the myth, however, that you are supposed to come up with some ambitious, detailed life plan and then follow it until the end of the rainbow.

(88) Things happen that are unexpected and unforeseen.

(89) Events in the world will alter the landscape.

(90) Opportunities will come your way that you never would have considered before.

(91) Friendships and networking will open up other possibilities.

(92) Your priorities and values will evolve as you gain new experiences and are exposed to other options.

(93) Anything you plan now will likely shift as you learn new things, develop new skills, and grow in new directions.

(94) In fact, it is imperative that you remain open to these changes.

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(95) If you have a new job and you are going to resign from your current job, may I make a common sense suggestion?

(96) Unless there is a very special circumstance, I strongly suggest you not resign from your current job with only the verbal agreement or an informal email telling you that you have the future job.

(97) I get chills up my spine when people do this or even consider it.

(98) There is still that chance something unforeseen could happen between the verbal offer and actuality.

(99) You should announce your intention to resign from the job only when you have in your possession a written and signed offer or employment contract, on company letterhead, with an accompanying start date for your new job.

(100) For me, this is as much an issue of common sense as suggesting you should look both ways before crossing a street.

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(101) Whether you’re a wrestler planning to win a league title next season, or a student with an entrepreneurial spirit who wants to start your own business and build a successful career, you need to plan the right steps.

(102) And don’t get caught up in thinking that any success you experience as a student has no bearing on or relationship to future success in the "real" world.

(103) You are in the "real" world—your world.

(104) Success now breeds success later, even if the fields or venues change.

(105) Don’t discount what you might consider "small" successes.

(106) Michael Jordan’s first step to basketball success was making his high school team after being cut earlier.

(107) Your successes — however great or small — in academics, social clubs, fine arts, or sports can pave the way to future success.

(108) What’s important at the moment is not how much you achieve, but how much you learn about the process of achieving.

(109) Because once you learn the process, you can apply it in the field or area of your choice, where you want to use the gifts you have.

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(110) Whenever our urge is to fight a specific biological change, we should ask the following triplet of questions.

(111) Will our efforts have made much difference a few hundred years hence?

(112) If not, this means we are fighting a battle we will inevitably lose.

(113) Next, will our great-grandchildren’s great-grandchildren be that bothered if the state of the world has been altered, given that they will not know exactly how it is today?

(114) If the answer to this second question is no, this means we are fighting battles we do not need to win.

(115) If change is inevitable, which it is, we should then ask a third question: how can we maximize the benefits that our descendants derive from the natural world?

(116) In other words, how can we promote changes that might be favourable to the future human condition, as well as avoid the losses of species that might be important in unknown ways in future?

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(117) We are about to embark on creating one of the most important habits of all: gratitude.

(118) After conducting and reviewing hundreds of studies, the University of California, Berkeley, concluded that gratitude is one of the most reliable methods for increasing happiness and life satisfaction.

(119) It boosts feelings of optimism, joy, pleasure, and enthusiasm.

(120) It reduces anxiety and depression, strengthens the immune system, lowers blood pressure, reduces symptoms of illness, and makes us less bothered by aches and pains.

(121) It encourages us to exercise more and take better care of our health.

(122) Grateful people get more hours of sleep each night, spend less time awake before falling asleep, and feel more refreshed upon awakening.

(123) Gratitude makes people more resilient and helps them recover from traumatic events.

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(124) Some believe there is no value to dreams, but it is wrong to dismiss these nocturnal dramas as irrelevant.

(125) There is something to be gained in remembering.

(126) We can feel more connected, more complete, and more on track.

(127) We can receive inspiration, information, and comfort.

(128) Albert Einstein stated that his theory of relativity was inspired by a dream.

(129) In fact, he claimed that dreams were responsible for many of his discoveries.

(130) Asking why we dream makes as much sense as questioning why we breathe.

(131) Dreaming is an integral part of a healthy life.

(132) The great news is that this is true whether or not we remember our dreams.

(133) Many people report being inspired with a new approach for a problem upon awakening, even though they don’t remember the specific dream.

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(134) Today’s rapidly changing technological landscape can represent a challenge for consumers who might lack trust in technology and be skeptical of its purported benefits.

(135) Anthropomorphic thought can help remedy this skepticism and distrust, and is especially consequential in consumer-product interactions where being mindful and conscious are important criteria for evaluation and accountability.

(136) For example, in a vehicle simulation study, Waytz and colleagues found that participants reported higher levels of trust in autonomous vehicles (e.g., self-driving cars) that featured anthropomorphic cues (e.g., a name, gender, voice) than in those vehicles that lacked anthropomorphic cues.

(137) Moreover, participants in the simulated anthropomorphized vehicle felt less stressed from an observer’s point of view, and in the event of an accident, were less likely to blame their vehicles.

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(138) Corporations establish rewards to drive performance.

(139) Often these rewards focus on meeting budgets and avoiding risk.

(140) Rewards of this type cause managers to invest in safe products that pose little chance of a big loss but also tittle chance of a big profit.

(141) These rewards totally block any motivation to explore riskier paths.

(142) The companies reward the speed at which low-risk products are created and marketed, even if they are hoping for radical new ideas.

(143) The outcome is little appetite for risk and an overdose of incremental ideas.

(144) Interestingly, managers get frustrated with the outcome, blind to the behavior that the organization is explicitly or implicitly rewarding.

(145) A badly designed measurement or reward system mutes the rest of the rules, even if optimally designed.

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(146) Values and their supporting beliefs arc lenses through which we see the world.

(147) The views that these lenses provide are often of what life ought to be like, not what it is.

(148) For example, Americans value individualism so highly that they tend to see almost everyone as free and equal in pursuing the goal of success.

(149) This value blinds them to the significance of the circumstances that keep people from achieving success.

(150) The dire consequences of family poverty, parents’ low education, and dead-end jobs tend to drop from sight.

(151) Instead, Americans see the unsuccessful as not taking advantage of opportunities, or as having some inherent laziness or dull minds.

(152) And they "know" they are right, because the mass media dangle before their eyes enticing stories of individuals who have succeeded despite the greatest of handicaps.

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(153) I would guess that there are a few dancers who believe, as I once did that injuries are caused primarily by accidents: slipping, tripping, running into someone or something, or forgetting to point your foot at the right instant and inadvertently twisting your ankle.

(154) But the longer I’ve danced, the more I’ve understood that accidents are quite rare as causes of dance injuries.

(155) The majority of injuries are caused — and prevented — by how you work at your dancing, consistently and over time.

(156) Working incorrectly just once usually won’t hurt you: your body is quite resilient and can bounce back from some amount of abuse.

(157) But if you work incorrectly again and again, class after class, performance after performance, day after day, and year after year, your body — or some part of it — will finally give out.

(158) It will simply refuse to function anymore.

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(159) The answer to the question about the fading of colour in painting (and in fabric) is fairly simple.

(160) Ultraviolet radiation is a high energy form of light and, as sunbathers are only too aware, is present in ordinary daylight.

(161) Over time, ultraviolet radiation can gradually break up the molecules in pigment, leaving smaller, colourless molecules as products.

(162) There is also a second process of degradation in which pigment molecules may react chemically with oxygen molecules in the atmosphere, a process known as oxidation.

(163) As with photolysis, this alters the structure of the molecule and, as a consequence, changes the manner in which it absorbs light of various colours.

(164) As the amount of coloured pigment in a given area on a canvas gradually diminishes, so the colour seems to us, as onlookers, to fade.

(165) So a given pigment doesn’t actually change colour: it simply becomes weaker in the mix of pigments over time.

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(166) Since the pull of gravity influences the stability of the body during the performance of physical activity, the balance or appropriate distribution of those gravitational forces upon the body is essential to promoting stability or ‘balance’.

(167) The location of the centre of gravity, or the point around which the mass or sum of gravitational forces is equally distributed or ‘balanced’, is thus of vital importance in the performance of physical skills.

(168) We know that the lower the centre of gravity and the closer it is to the base of support, the more stable an object.

(169) Thus when rugby players scrummage they attempt to get their body weight as low as possible to avoid being pushed backwards.

(170) Likewise, when those involved in a tug-of-war pull on the rope they try to lower their centre of gravity by leaning backwards and planting their feet well in front of them to increase stability and decrease their chances of being pulled forward by their opponents.

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(171) One of the next major waves of medical advancement will be in the development of genomic sequencing, which will help doctors sequence human DNA to discover the precise cause of an illness, and develop a specific treatment for it.

(172) Experts believe this process will be easy to commercialize relatively quickly, as sequencing gets cheaper.

(173) Using advances in genomic research, scientists are developing blood tests that can detect cancer, while also beginning to apply academic research to real-world scenarios.

(174) As researchers get better at identifying the specific genes that are mutating and causing cancer, drug companies will need to produce medications that address these problems more quickly.

(175) In the next decade, scientists expect to have more specialized "precision medicines" to treat cancer.

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(176) Though we cannot choose most of the challenges we face in life, we can choose how we’re going to face them.

(177) Are we going to have a bad experience, crumble under the pressure, run away, or avoid challenges altogether?

(178) Or are we going to find the strength and inner resources to rise to the challenges and fully actualize our potential?

(179) That’s the term psychologists use for becoming the person you are meant to be – actualize your potential.

(180) Facing yiyr teenage years in the right way will give you this opportunity.

(181) When you face the challenges before you right now, learn from them and grow with them, you become that person.

(182) The challenges in your life require you to call on the inner resources residing deep inside you.

(183) By doing that, you come to know yourself and to develop your innate capacities.

(184) That is what we mean by actualizing your potential, and being challenged presents you with the opportunities to do it.

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(185) Social media facilitates price comparison on the part of consumers, thus making them more aware of online and in-store discounts and subsequently encouraging consumer price sensitivity.

(186) What makes the social media space even more effective is the fact that not only do marketers have a new medium through which to share pricing and promotion information, but quite often it is one’s own friends, family or other connections who are passing along price and promotion information from brands.

(187) When deals are activated by a consumer, he/she is given the opportunity to share their deal experience with specific individuals via email or more broadly via social media platforms.

(188) Given the influence of word-of-mouth information, this is even more impactful as a source.

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(189) In certain malls, there is a fair amount of sunlight that comes in from a central skylight or a few strategically placed skylights.

(190) Most mall developers refuse to use the true outside world in any significant way, one fearing that this may encourage the shopper to want to leave the mall and go elsewhere-to another world.

(191) The notion of shopping as theater or "retail drama" kicks in at this point.

(192) "The idea," according to Laura Byrne Paquet, "is to replicate the artificial feeling of a theater or a Hollywood sound stage, where shoppers can be the stars of their own show."

(193) This concept is carried forth in a phenomenal way; if the shoppers and others are "part of the cast" there is the archway as a stage and the ability to try on "costumes," touch "props" and in general, engage in the dramatic ritual of shopping.

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(194) In the Great Bear Rainforest, the bears drag salmon into the forest, where insects and fungi turn the salmon into food for the trees, which then provide homes to birds in their branches and to wolves in dens under their roots.

(195) When a tree falls over in a big windstorm, berry bushes grow on the fallen tree and insects decompose the wood.

(196) Bears eat the berries and also insects such as ants and termites that live in the fallen log.

(197) Sometimes wolves eat bears, but mostly they eat salmon and the deer that live among the big trees.

(198) People also eat salmon and deer, and use the bark and wood of the cedar trees.

(199) Changes to one part of this ecosystem, even a small part, have consequences for everything else.

(200) Our future cannot be separated from the future of the rainforest.

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(201) Aristotle said, "We are what we repeatedly do.

(202) Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit."

(203) Developing conscious habits is a tool to achieve an integrated life.

(204) Developing good or productive habits and eliminating bad or destructive habits involves looking at what you need to implement in your life, as well as what you need to eliminate.

(205) Stephen Covey says, "Our character basically is a composite of our habits."

(206) Take a look at your habits and ask yourself what is moving you closer to your goals and what is moving you away from them.

(207) Understand that it takes 21 days to begin a new habit (that’s 21 consecutive days, so yes, every time you do something new ... or choose not to ... it does make a difference, so this relatively painful process of change isn’t definite, it just takes a few weeks – and on the 22nd day, it will actually be harder for you to not do your new habit than it will be to continue doing it.

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(208) Globalization drives the culture of fast fashion.

(209) Currently, there is also a lightly different drive to promote the idea of transitioning to slow fashion.

(210) However, this gradual shift requires time, measured not in months or years but in decades or generations.

(211) Recycling and remanufacturing which do not equate with models in nature always lead to a question mark.

(212) Therefore, a different approach to address the challenges facing sustainable fashion is absolutely necessary.

(213) We suggest the shift should be directed towards nature.

(214) We must try and discover the mechanisms that drive nature’s incessant creation of organisms without piling up mountains of waste.

(215) Researchers have already begun the study of biodegradation, mineralization and biomass formation, which is nature’s way of creating zero waste.

(216) Discovery of the laws of zero waste in nature could then be mimicked in the production of fast-compostable textile fibres.

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(217) Praise that arouses delight and pride in a baby and toddler can have very different effects on older children, particularly in the classroom.

(218) When Roy Baumeister studied the effects of praise, he found that it generated more anxiety than pleasure in school-aged children.

(219) Children accustomed to the background hum of praise seemed to become dependent on praise to initiate any activity.

(220) A child who was accustomed to classroom praise spend less time focusing on a project and soon stopped working to wait for a teacher’s assessment.

(221) Praise seemed to hinder concentration, too.

(222) Children’s absorption in a task often called flow seemed to be disrupted by the reminder that someone was watching.

(223) When they were singing or playing an instrument, swimming or hitting a ball, or doing anything that involved deep skills run on autopilot, their performance was particularly badly affected by praise.

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(224) The pirarucu is one of the largest freshwater fish in the world at up to ten feet long and weighing more than four hundred pounds.

(225) That’s a true river monster!

(226) Because of its size, it is called arapaima, or "dragon fish."

(227) All fish can breathe in water, right?

(228) Not this one.

(229) Unlike most fish, which use their gills to take in oxygen from water, the pirarucu needs to come to the surface about every ten minutes to breathe air.

(230) This helps it survive in the muddy lakes of the Amazon, where little oxygen is available.

(231) The pirarucu is one of the native fishermen’s favorite meals.

(232) Every part of the fish is eaten.

(233) Even the pirarucu’s tough scales are considered valuable and are used as files, like sandpaper.

(234) But the pirarucu is endangered.

(235) To make sure this gorgeous giant will be around for a long time to come, only certain native people are allowed to catch a limited number of pirarucu each year.

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(236) The Theater at Epidaurus was an example of ancient Greek civic architecture meant to be enjoyed by the general public.

(237) The art of the theater was an important part of ancient Greek culture and religion, as religious ceremonies were incorporated with music and dance, and performed in public spaces.

(238) Greek drama, including tragedies and comedies, was performed in outdoor spaces like the Theater at Epidaurus.

(239) At the heart of the theater was the circular orchestra, the central performance area.

(240) Fifty-five rows of semicircular tiered seats were carved into a hillside, which allowed as many as fourteen thousand spectators a good view of the orchestra.

(241) The design of the Theater at Epidaurus is so effective that it is still in use today, and the acoustics are so perfect that no electrified sound system is needed when performances are held at the site.

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(242) Verreaux’s sifaka lives in the forest of south-western Madagascar.

(243) This species lives in small groups of up to about 12 individuals.

(244) Groups contain more or less equal numbers of adult males and females.

(245) The group defends a small territory.

(246) They use their scent to mark the territory’s boundary.

(247) Sifakas mate in December, at the height of the dry season.

(248) A single young is born five months later and it is weaned after seven months.

(249) Sifakas moves through the trees by leaping.

(250) The distance they can jump is increased slightly by small flaps of skin under the animal’s short forearms.

(251) On the ground, sifakas move by hopping sideways on both hind feet.

(252) The forearms are held out to the side for balance.

(253) Verreaux’s sifaka eat all types of plant material apart from the roots.

(254) In the rainy season they prefer to eat easily digested soft fruits and flowers, but in the dry season they rely on wood, bark and leaves.

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(255) As the matriarch of one of America’s first families, Abigail Adams strongly influenced two presidents-her husband, John Adams, and her son John Quincy Adams.

(256) She is also recognized as one of the country’s greatest and most productive letter writers.

(257) Abigail was born on November 11, 1744, in Weymouth, Massachusetts.

(258) One of three daughters of a Congregational minister, William Smith, and his wife, Ellizabeth, Abigail was a sickly child and was unable to attend school.

(259) Small, quiet, and reserved, with piercing dark eyes, she was also strong-willed and had a quick and curious mind.

(260) In spite of her lack of formal schooling, Abigail was a voracious reader who took advantage of her father’s well-stocked library to study literature, history, and philosophy.

(261) She taught herself French and was tutored by her maternal grandmother, whom she adored and who favored a "happy method of mixing instruction and amusement together."

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(262) Children learn a great many useful life lessons from friendship problems.

(263) It is, almost always, a mistake to step in too soon to protect them from this-sometimes literally-hands-on learning.

(264) It is also a mistake to assume that every child, either boy or girl, is going to have the same pattern of friends as you do.

(265) Children are different from each other and different from their parents.

(266) Some prefer to have, or simply end up with, a larger group of friends with no one person standing out as a special friend.

(267) Some will be content with serial best friends, just one or two of them at a time, and are not, therefore, invited to all the parties but are content.

(268) And some children are quite happy with few or no friends.

(269) These children will often have passions and interests that they can follow intently at home and may find the general play of the playground dull.

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(270) Have you ever been to an event and had someone else’s reaction make you feel totally out of place?

(271) At the beginning of the evening you felt spectacular, but one strange look or slight awkward laugh made you feel that you had committed a fashion sin.

(272) Who hasn’t been in that position?

(273) One person, looking us up and down, makes us feel smaller for having what we have and dressing in what we wear.

(274) If this person is willing to judge others so harshly, though, imagine how often she judges herself.

(275) If you know who you are, such a person will not be able to tear you down by simply projecting her insecurity onto you.

(276) You will never feel the need to win the affection of such a person if you are content with what you have under your clothes and under your skin.

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(277) Today biennales are the centre stage for contemporary art in the art world.

(278) Not only do they showcase and discuss the nature of contemporary life, but they also differ from the modern world fairs, because they explicitly project multiple fractured histories and identities.

(279) The desire to overturn previous political and theoretical structures is central to the discussions around contemporary biennales.

(280) For instance, when asked ‘What makes a biennial?’ world-renowned curator Rosa Martinez answered that ‘The idea biennial is a profoundly political and spiritual event.

(281) It contemplates the present with the desire to transform it’, and is indicative of a larger social, political and economic flow within contemporary society.

(282) We might even say that biennales are perceived as trendsetters, or predictors of intercultural flows that focus on the political nature of art in a global setting.

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(283) Peer groups of young males in nonhuman primate societies, called bachelor groups, serve a variety of functions.

(284) In squirrel monkeys males approaching breeding age become social outcasts; their mothers and sisters want nothing to do with them.

(285) Young males may travel together separately from or on the edge of a large troop of monkeys – either of which affords them more protection than traveling alone.

(286) In species such as langurs and rhesus monkeys, groups of young males commonly depart together in search of a new living community.

(287) Peer groups function differently for male chimpanzees, who don't emigrate.

(288) They may patrol their home range together to deter males from other groups from getting into their community.

(289) They also hunt cooperatively and share the food, and groom one another in deference to rank or coalition partnership.

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(290) Even after people learned the scientific method, many still pursued and believed in really weird things, and many old ideas died hard deaths.

(291) It’s hard to believe, but even simple things such as washing your hands to prevent infection were not fully accepted by the medical community until relatively recently on the human timeline.

(292) Even after it was discovered and documented that washing hands drastically reduced deadly fevers, the idea took a while to catch on.

(293) It was just too revolutionary, too weird.

(294) The idea of germs and microscopic organisms challenged a variety of other ideas, including that the source of disease was probably linked to things that stank, which was sort of true when you thought about it.

(295) In a world that had already invented the telephone and the lightbulb, hand-washing to prevent sickness met enough resistance that doctors argued about it for decades.

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(296) The 1980s, a time of true global interdependence, was a lost decade for many economically disadvantaged countries.

(297) Despite consistent reductions in mortality rates and other disease burdens, a marked deterioration in living conditions occurred in many countries.

(298) In several regions, most notably Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa, advances in health care and education eroded.

(299) Unemployment rates rose in many parts of the world, as did the global poverty rate.

(300) By 1989, one out of five people was living in "absolute poverty," which the World Bank defines as suffering from malnutrition to the point of being unable to work.

(301) By the end of the 1980s, low-income countries had accumulated a debt of $1.3 trillion.

(302) Crippled by massive debt burdens, many countries saw their growth rates slow and living standards decrease.

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(303) Companies that inspire, companies that command trust and loyalty over the long term, are the ones that make us feel we’re accomplishing something bigger than just saving a dollar.

(304) That feeling of alliance with something bigger is the reason we keep wearing the jersey of our hometown sports term even though they have not made it to the playoffs for ten years.

(305) It’s why some of us will always but products from a certain brand over other brands, even if the brand isn’t always the most affordable choice.

(306) Whether we like a admit it or not, we are not entirely rational beings.

(307) If we were, no one would ever fall in love and no one would ever start a business.

(308) Face with an overwhelming chance of failure, no rational person would ever take either of those risks.

(309) But we do.

(310) Every day.

(311) Because how we feel about something or someone is more powerful than what we think about it or them.

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(312) Ironically, some of the most powerful techniques for boosting your memory are also the oldest.

(313) Under the umbrella term ‘Mnemonics’ it has a silent ‘M’, these involve tapping into the fact that our brains have evolved to deal very well with both visual images and spatial locations.

(314) By turning facts into mental images, and imagining them along a route of locations, you can harness these natural memory powers to remember almost anything you like.

(315) The more improbable and emotionally charged the images the better, as our brains evolved to pay special attention to those features.

(316) Another part of your imagination that can boost your memory is your musical sense.

(317) Rhythm and rhyme are potent memory boosters.

(318) This explains why you might find it hard to remember the periodic table of elements, yet your memory banks are overflowing with old jingles!

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(319) Racially, South Africa is a nation deeply divided.

(320) Sport has helped to break down this division, at least in part.

(321) When the whites in South Africa held an election to decide whether to put an end to apartheid, 69 percent voted to give up their privilege, marking a rare peaceful transition of power.

(322) One reason for the favorable vote was South African President F.W.

(323) de Klerk’s warning that failure to pass the measure would return the country to isolation in business and sport.

(324) South Africa had last participated in the Olympics in 1960 and had been barred since then from international competition.

(325) Its apartheid racial policies had made it a pariah country in everything from politics to sports for three decades.

(326) With apartheid undone, South Africans could once again show their athletic ability.

(327) This was a compelling argument for many whites.

(328) Subsequently, South Africa has been allowed to compete in the Olympics and in other worldwide competitions, especially in rugby, which is very important to its people.

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(329) Of greater importance than the slight reduction in gravity’s pull is the so-called thin air that is present at high altitudes.

(330) Although air contains the same proportions of oxygen, nitrogen, and other gases at high altitudes as at sea level, in a similar volume of air there is less of each the higher up in altitude you go.

(331) This characteristic greatly affected athletes who competed in the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City, which is 7,350 ft (2,240 m) above sea level.

(332) In Mexico City, athletes had to breathe more vigorously and more often to get the oxygen they needed.

(333) This caused a serious problem for athletes in endurance events, but it assisted athletes in short sprints because they ran on their bodies’ stored energy supplies.

(334) When Bob Beamon set his world record in the long jump in Mexico City, he benefited from a slight reduction in gravity, reduced air resistance from less dense air, and the fact that his approach was a short spring and not a distance run.

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(335) Solar power and wind power are considered alternatives to fossil-fuel-based energy generation from coal, petroleum, and natural gas, which predominate worldwide energy production at the start of the 21st century.

(336) Both of them solve what is seen as the most prevalent negative consequence of fossil-fuel-based energy generation: air pollution.

(337) This includes air pollution from chemicals, particulate matter, organic compounds, toxic materials, and the emissions that lead to climate change.

(338) Solar power and wind power are also popular because they are renewable sources of energy production and so do not suffer the negative consequence of diminishing supplies.

(339) They are also domestic sources of energy production and so are not dependent on imports from what may be hostile countries.

(340) Finally, solar power and wind power have the technical capability to be distributed, meaning they are what is sometimes referred to as decentralized energy generation sources.

(341) They can be placed on individual homes and in small areas and do not rely on large, single generation stations that can be subject to large-scale blackouts, terrorist attacks, or other centralized vulnerabilities.

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(342) Loneliness and lack of self-esteem are among the most obvious conditions which can be alleviated by living with an animal friend.

(343) You are never alone with a dog or cat: walking the dog brings you into contact with other people and makes it infinitely easier to strike up a conversation with strangers.

(344) Local cat owners often get to know one another too, as it is common for cats to wander into their neighbours’ gardens (and houses!)

(345) and for neighbours to exchange cat-sitting duties during holiday times.

(346) Having the responsibility for a pet can increase your sense of your own value and importance.

(347) Caring for an animal reminds you that however low you might feel, you are capable.

(348) When you’re tempted to stay in bed and pull the covers over your head, you have to get up and feed the cat or walk the dog.

(349) That everyday routine with a creature who needs you can be extremely soothing.

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(350) Very briefly, the complex individual is one who can see things from another person’s point of view and who is flexible in his/her thought processes.

(351) For example, they are able to change their minds on an issue in the light of new information rather than rigidly "sticking to their guns."

(352) They also tend to avoid what might be called "black and white" thinking.

(353) For example, the positions of others on an issue are not lumped into the two categories of those for them and those against them but rather shades of differences or gradations of opinion are recognized and taken into account.

(354) Thus, they realize that the truth of a matter often lies somewhere in between two extremes.

(355) Last but not least, the complex person seems better able to hold off on a decision allowing more information to be taken into consideration.

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(356) Many thought that Hans Monderman, a Dutch traffic engineer, had hit his head on a mental speed bump during his early years.

(357) Wouldn’t the lack of signs, markings, and barriers cause destruction and death?

(358) Yet the engineer persisted in his belief that traffic signals, crosswalks, warning signs, curbs, and even lines painted down the middles of the road are not just annoying, but downright dangerous to drivers and pedestrians alike.

(359) He proposed integrating vehicle and foot traffic, in order to create a more holistic driving environment.

(360) Few would listen; however, Monderman was patient.

(361) By the early twenty-first century, Dutch officials finally gave him the green light to test his theories in a number of small towns there.

(362) The data astonished skeptics.

(363) Within several years, he showed statistically significant reductions in accidents and lost lives, causing his revolutionary ideas to reverberate around a traffic-clogged world.

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(364) The average tree grows its branches out until it encounters the branch tips of a neighboring tree of the same height.

(365) It doesn’t grow any wider because the air and better light in this space are already taken.

(366) However, it heavily reinforces the branches it has extended, so you get the impression that there’s quite a shoving match going on up there.

(367) But a pair of true friends is careful right from the outset not to grow overly thick branches in each other’s direction.

(368) The trees don’t want to take anything away from each other, and so they develop sturdy branches only at the outer edges of their crowns, that is to say, only in the direction of "non-friends."

(369) Such partners are often so tightly connected at the roots that sometimes they even die together.

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(370) The amount of information entering our consciousness at any instant is referred to as our cognitive load.

(371) When out cognitive load exceeds the capacity of our working memory, our intellectual abilities take a hit.

(372) Information zips into and out of our mind so quickly that we never gain a good mental grip on it.

(373) (Which is why you can’t remember what you wen to the kitchen to do.)

(374) The information vanishes before we’ve had an opportunity to transfer it into our long-term memory and weave it into knowledge.

(375) We remember less, and our ability to think critically and conceptually weakens.

(376) An overloaded working memory also tends to increase our distractedness.

(377) After all, as the neuroscientist Torkel Klingberg has pointed out, "We have to remember what it is we are to concentrate on."

(378) Lose your hold on that and you’ll find "distractions more distracting"

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(379) Tim Wallach, the third baseman for the Los Angeles Dodgers, was ready to hang it up.

(380) Once a great hitter, he had been batting poorly for two consecutive seasons.

(381) But Reggie Smith, a first-year batting coach on the team, wouldn’t let Wallach quit.

(382) He encouraged him and told him that he could get his "stroke" back with a little extra work.

(383) So during the off-season, Smith worked with him three times a week.

(384) This is the way Wallach described those sessions: "Reggie was positive from day one.

(385) Regardless of whether I felt I was having a bad day and was struggling, he’d find something good about what happened.

(386) You just don’t see that often.

(387) People tend to work off the negatives, but Reggie wouldn’t do that, and he wouldn’t let me do it either" Wallach finished the year with twenty-three home runs and a .280 batting average.

(388) He gave all the credit to Reggie Smith’s coaching and encouraging words.

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(389) The little girl was still young enough to see her guardian angel who was with her every day.

(390) She played with her angel.

(391) They laughed and sang together.

(392) She told her mother she always had fun with her ‘friend’.

(393) Her mother believed her daughter to have an ‘invisible’ friend so commonly reported by young children and thought to be a friend from her imagination.

(394) The mother asked her daughter the friend’s name and her daughter told her it was Amiel.

(395) The little girl and Amiel spent many, many hours together in her younger years.

(396) Every night at bedtime, Amiel would kiss the little girl good night.

(397) As the years moved on, the cloud became denser around Amiel and the little girl could no see or talk to her any more.

(398) The little girl did not really notice because she became involved with her friends from school and lots of school activities.

(399) But Amiel was still with the little girl even thought they didn’t talk or play anymore ‒ Amiel was her guardian angel.

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(400) A couple of years ago, a colleague of mine joined a project that had been running for a while.

(401) On his first day, my colleague met the project manager, and he explained a few things, then handed the new team member a set of documents.

(402) Some of those were huge — they contained the entire specification of complex application.

(403) The project manager was visibly proud of the fact that his team had produced such comprehensive documentation.

(404) A couple of hours later, I saw my colleagues sitting in his office, in front of a large pile of paper, looking rather unhappy.

(405) A question about how he was getting on with the project materials revealed that the poor guy wasn’t getting on well at all.

(406) He said he was "drowning in the specification", and that he couldn’t keep all the details in his mind.

(407) Eventually he learned many of those details, but more from discussions with the other team members over the next weeks than from reading the documentation.

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(408) Detecting the remarkable powers of Blaise Pascal, his father had formed very definite resolutions as to his education.

(409) His chief maxim was always to keep the boy above his work.

(410) And for this reason he did not wish him to learn Latin till he was twelve years of age, when he might easily acquire it.

(411) In the meantime, he sought to give him a general idea of grammar╺ of its rules, and the exceptions to which these rules are liable╺ and so to fit him to take up the study of any language with intelligence and facility.

(412) He endeavoured further to direct his son’s attention to the more marked phenomena of nature, and such explanations as he could give of them.

(413) But here the son’s perception outstripped the father’s power of explanation.

(414) He wished to know the reason of everything; and when his father’s statements did not appear to him to give the reason, he was far from satisfied.

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(415) Every puddle is a sign that the water has been blocked, stopped from travelling down through the ground.

(416) So if a puddle is persistent, then the first thing we can deduce is that the ground beneath the puddle is either nonporous or extremely wet.

(417) This is mainly interesting when we travel through a rural area and notice that the number of puddles suddenly increases, despite there not being any more rain in that area.

(418) This is a sign that the rocks beneath your feet have probably changed, even if the appearance of the mud has not changed.

(419) Since the rocks are responsible for a lot of the characteristics of the soil in an area and the soil strongly influences the types of plants and animals you will find, a sudden change in the number of puddles, without a very local downpour, is a sign that the rocks, soil, plants and animals all around you will also have changed.

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(420) Keep in mind that while coaching our children to future success, we can’t forget about the present.

(421) Understanding how what you are doing today benefits you today and not just somewhere down the road is an essential part of personal motivation.

(422) Sometimes seeing the big picture isn’t enough; in fact, the big picture can sometimes be overwhelming.

(423) For example, when writing the manuscript for this book, I spent many a morning procrastinating because I could only see the big picture.

(424) The big picture overwhelmed me!

(425) The ability to break a goal down into manageable pieces is important to motivation.

(426) When I saw that if I only did some work every day, I would eventually reach my goal of finishing an enormous project, I was motivated to do a little bit every day.

(427) I began to enjoy the journey of writing when I saw how writing every day benefitted me today and not just at some time in the future.

(428) In that sense, be careful using the big picture as motivation.

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(429) Arturo Toscanini had a phenomenal memory as well as a phenomenal ear.

(430) Once, he decided to conduct Ernest Schelling’s "Impressions from an Artist’s Life," and he invited Mr. Schelling himself to play solo piano.

(431) During rehearsal, Maestro Toscanini — who never looked at a score during rehearsal, although he kept one on the stage — stopped Mr. Schelling and stated that he believed the pianist had omitted a G flat.

(432) Mr. Schelling replied, "You are right.

(433) I did omit the G flat because I never wrote a G flat at that particular point in my original score."

(434) That surprised Maestro Toscanini, so he invited Mr. Schelling to look at the score with him.

(435) After looking at the score, it was Mr. Schelling who was surprised, and he said, "Mr. Toscanini, I did omit the G flat.

(436) In all the time I have played this piece I always omitted the G flat.

(437) Since the day I wrote it, I had completely forgotten it was there."

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(438) By the end of the millennium, emotions had become such a central part of psychology’s focus that many scholars viewed emotions as the motivational force guiding almost all of human behavior.

(439) Today, many psychological scientists agree that any decision we make, any relationship we pursue, any thing we want — all these judgments, behaviors, and desires are influenced by emotion.

(440) Even those decisions which, we believe, are shaped by rationality or logical principles about what is right or good are in fact more often triggered by a gut emotional response.

(441) We tell ourselves that such decisions aren’t driven by our emotions, and that we are relying on the mind’s most sophisticated reasoning processes, but research shows that we are very good at coming up with "sophisticated" reasons to justify what we want to think, and what we want to think is almost always shaped by how we feel.

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(442) Can you tell how a toy is made?

(443) While there is certainly room and a need for some manufactured plastic in our lives, we also need to make much more room for simple, natural materials.

(444) Does your children’s toy selection show an adequate representation of nature?

(445) Is there wood?

(446) Cloth?

(447) Natural fibers?

(448) Not only do these toys feel good to play with and connect children to the outside world, but they are also often strong enough to last a lifetime and even more.

(449) I think we should consider our toy materials in the same way that people talk about whole foods: the closer to the original source, the better.

(450) Can you picture your toy growing somewhere on the earth?

(451) Wooden blocks, felt balls, and cotton dolls are often some of the best toy.

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(452) A particular difficulty that attends efforts to determine the extent of cross-cultural convergence in emotional expression is the fact that cultured do not categorize emotions in the same way.

(453) Marc Benamou, studying the use of affective terms to describe the expressive character of music among western and Javanese subjects, ascertained that some Javanese emotion terms did not straightforwardly correspond to Western categories.

(454) This raises some doubts about how much we can trust studies that purport to compare cultures.

(455) Presumably, we can assume that when Javanese subjects report expressiveness in music using words for which English-speaking subjects have no term, the two groups of subjects are not recognizing the same expressive content.

(456) But more generally, we should be alert to the possibility that imperfect translations lead us to imagine greater agreement about musical expression than we would find if we had a more nuanced sense of the way the terms are used in the respective languages.

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(457) To know whether an artistic performance succeeds or fails requires that we know what counts as success or failure in any performance context.

(458) Music critics will consider a pianist’s tone, phrasing, tempo, accuracy, and ability to sustain a line or build to a climax.

(459) Speed and brilliance may be important considerations, which is not to say the fastest performance will be the best.

(460) But behind these considerations is an unstated assumption: that it is one person’s then unaided fingers that produce the sounds.

(461) The excitement a virtuoso pianist generates with a glittering shower of notes is intrinsically connected with this fact.

(462) An aurally identical experience that is electronically synthesized can never dazzle us in the same way: sound synthesizers can produce individual notes as fast as you please, while pianists cannot.

(463) Built into the thrill of hearing a virtuoso is admiration for what the performance represents as a human achievement.

(464) Forgery and other forms of fakery in the arts misrepresent the nature of the performance and so misrepresent achievement.

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(465) The story of how milk became America’s drink combines the perfection of industry with the perfection of consumer knowledge.

(466) For example, Spencer and Blanford attribute the increase in milk drinking to "significant improvements in the quality of mil and cream sold," which led to a "more generous use of those products."

(467) Consumers drank more milk because they had "greater knowledge of the food value of milk," which was the result of "favorable teaching and publicity" based on important findings and research".

(468) In other words, the rise of milk consumption, according to these economic studies, is due to the increasing perfection of milk — in both quality and price — and education of consumers about this perfection.

(469) The history of milk drinking becomes a history of this increased perfection through increased consumption and through a public/private promotion of the product.

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(470) Research suggests that a person’s level of self-complexity can have important consequences, particularly when people are confronted with negative events or difficulties in a given life domain.

(471) Imagine learning that you did poorly on a midterm exam.

(472) If you’re someone who is high in self-complexity—that is, you define yourself in terms of many nonoverlapping domains (for example, student, avid skier, committed volunteer, enthusiastic fan of Glee) — the negativity that results from your poor exam grade is relatively contained, affecting only how you feel about yourself as a student.

(473) But if you’re low in self-complexity such that your identity as a student overlaps to a great extent with the few other identities you have — then the negativity associated with your poor exam grade is likely to lower you evaluations of yourself as a student as well as spill over and affect how you evaluate your other, overlapping identities.

(474) In short, putting all your "self eggs" in one basket can be risky in the face of threatening, self-relevant events.

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(475) A few year ago, the video store down the road from our house closed and moved downtown.

(476) The reason for the move was that another video store had opened downtown and was already operating successfully.

(477) Businesses of a particular type tend to gather together in the same part of town.

(478) This is not necessarily because those areas have been designated for (say) theatres or law firms.

(479) Rather it is because no one wants their competitors to gain an advantage over them.

(480) If you set up your business near a competitor, you avoid losing any advantage that their location gives them.

(481) You also give yourself the chance to steal customers away from them.

(482) As more theatres cluster together, the area becomes known as the theatre district.

(483) It is then imperative for new theatres to open in the same are or face a potential loss of patrons.

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(484) We all know from experience that some of our dreams seem to be related to daily problems, some are vague and incoherent, and some are anxiety dreams that occur when we are worried or depressed.

(485) But whatever the source of the images in our sleeping brains may be, we need to be cautious about interpreting our own dreams or anyone else’s.

(486) A recent study of people showed that individuals are biased and self-serving in their dream interpretations, accepting those that fit in with their preexisting beliefs or needs and rejecting those that do not.

(487) For example, they will give more weight to a dream in which God commands them to take a year off to travel the world than one in which God commands them to take a year off to work in a relief camp.

(488) Our biased interpretations may tell us more about ourselves than do our actual dreams.

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(489) Customers like e-mail because it’s easy to use and it gives them immediate access to organizations.

(490) Most of the time, customers receive an automated response indicating that their e-mail has been received and stating when they can expect to get a response.

(491) However, even automated responses need to be phrased appropriately.

(492) Some years ago, a clothing company used to send out an automated reply that read, "While we cannot get back to you personally, we do appreciate your input."

(493) That response didn’t provide much satisfaction or a feeling of connectivity.

(494) Researchers Judy Strauss and Donna Hill, in one of the first major studies covering consumer complaints sent by e-mail, found that less than half (47 percent) of the firms studied created higher customer satisfaction with their in-kind e-mail responses.

(495) They found that simple things make a difference.

(496) This included a fast response, an e-mail that addressed the specific problem, and an e-mail that was signed with a real person’s name.

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(497) According to evolutionary biologist Elisabet Sahtouris, cooperation is the only way toward sustainability.

(498) Mature ecosystems such as prairies and rainforests evolve when there is more cooperation than when there is hostile competition.

(499) The highly complex ecosystem of the rainforest is a particularly vivid example of a mature system that has survived through millions of years because species learned to cooperate with each other.

(500) In the rainforest, every species is fully employed, all work cooperatively while recycling all of their resources, and all products and services are distributed in such a way that every species remains healthy.

(501) That is sustainability.

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(502) The world "scientist" in its present meaning did not become a part of language until the modern era.

(503) In ancient and medieval times philosophy was everything, and the philosopher was the caretaker of human wisdom.

(504) He knew of moral law, religion, government, natural history, alchemy, mathematics, healing, and all knowledge.

(505) Indeed, the diligent scholar at one time had bee able to master the entire sum of academic learning.

(506) This is in striking contrast with the world of today, in which a man may devote a lifetime to a single type of germ or bacteria and still consider his subject vast and complex enough for a full generation of profound study.

(507) Having few details to bother about in his pursuit of knowledge, the ancient could think in broad and encompassing terms.

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(508) In America, we find a long history of mourning practices for nonhuman animals.

(509) Indeed, the human-animal relationship is nearly blended into American history and continues to grow and change as society continues to evolve.

(510) During the precolonial period, Native Americans formed complex relationships with a variety of animals like bison, deer, and other woodland creatures.

(511) Many hunting tribes showed great respect for animals, and even though they needed to hunt them for food and other uses, they felt that they must be killed in a proper, ritualized manner.

(512) Some Native Americans believed that animal deaths are temporary and that the animal would be reincarnated and return to our world as the same species.

(513) If the hunter did not kill the animal properly, the animal could return as a ghost and haunt the hunter and possibly infect him with a disease.

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(514) In the United States, there has been a trend toward the dissolution of the traditional nuclear family.

(515) With people marrying later and divorcing more often, the "typical" family of father, mother, and children living in one dwelling has become far less common than in the past.

(516) More recently, a similar trend in Western Europe has resulted in an increase in the number of households even in countries where the overall population is decreasing.

(517) This outcome has in turn increased demand for many consumer durables, such as washing machines and ovens, whose sales correlate with the number of households rather than with population.

(518) Also, an increasing number of women are working outside the home, a situation that boosts demand for frozen dinners and child-care centers.

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(519) If all our knowledge stopped at the level of the senses, we would be no better off than the subhuman members of the animal kingdom.

(520) Different animals have different levels of proficiency on the sense level.

(521) In many cases it’s much better than anything human beings can do.

(522) Eagles see much better, dogs can detect odors that completely escape our power of smell, and some animals fly through the air using radar.

(523) But we can do something that our pets can’t do, to wit, form concepts, and then put concepts together in reasoning processes.

(524) By reflecting upon this ability we come to realize that we must have a mind distinct from our body, and that, regardless of how much pseudo-science there is in the world, it’s a grave error to confuse the mind with the body.

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(525) The social reform movement and the cause for wilderness preservation can both be understood as Romantic efforts to counter the negative consequences of the Industrial Revolution.

(526) Artists and writers came to appreciate nature as an aesthetic object in the 19th century.

(527) They celebrated in their work the awe-inspiring phenomena and natural scenery that they believed were capable of transforming one’s soul.

(528) Transcendentalist writers like Henry David Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Walt Whitman saw in untamed nature the hand of God.

(529) The Hudson River School painters were the first to treat the landscape as a legitimate genre in itself, devoid of any classical imagery.

(530) They were instrumental in developing a sense of pride and value in the unique American landscape.

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(531) An interesting aspect of human psychology is that we tend to like things more and find them more appealing if everything about those things is not obvious the first time we experience them.

(532) This is certainly true in music.

(533) For example, we might hear a song on the radio for the first time that catches our interest and decide we like it.

(534) Then the next time we hear it, we hear a lyric we didn’t catch the first time, or we might notice what the piano or drums are doing in the background.

(535) A special harmony emerges that we missed before.

(536) We hear more and more and understand more and more with each listening.

(537) Sometimes, the longer it takes for a work of art to reveal all of its subtleties to us, the more fond of that thing — whether it’s music, art, dance, or architecture — we become.

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(538) Vision has until recently been perceived as being the most powerful of our five senses; however, research indicates that this may no longer be true.

(539) Whatever the case, there’s no escaping the fact that distinctive design often goes hand in hand with distinctive brands, and successful brands are by their very nature visually identifiable.

(540) Pharmaceutical companies make their tablets and capsules in all shapes, sizes, and colors, with each one intended to differentiate the product, impart a particular emotional "feel" to the drug and instill customer loyalty.

(541) The automobile industry is another category where shape plays a vital role.

(542) In many models, shape has become the defining feature.

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(543) Worker bees don’t "normally" lay eggs.

(544) That’s because the queen’s pheromones suppress the reproductive systems of the workers.

(545) However, if the queen dies and there are no larvae that can be trained to replace her, that can change.

(546) Unless a beekeeper intervenes with a new queen, the hive is doomed.

(547) In that case, a dying queenless colony will try to spread its genes before it goes to an end, using an unexpected strategy: some of the workers will start laying eggs.

(548) However, since they haven’t mated, their unfertilized eggs will yield only male bees.

(549) Maybe some of them will get lucky and find a willing queen, passing the hive’s genes along in its dying days.

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(550) In the real estate industry, location is all-important in determining the market value of properties.

(551) A good house in a slum district will not fetch a high price, no matter how good it is.

(552) But how is it that some locations come to be better than others?

(553) Usually, it starts out with a natural advantage.

(554) One area may be conveniently placed near to major businesses, or it may be close to the sea or a river, or it may be slightly hilly, allowing good views.

(555) These natural advantages are enough that people will seek them out and pay slightly more for them than they would for other properties.

(556) When some properties attract elevated prices, they raise the prices of other properties nearby.

(557) In this way, the average prices in one are will drift to become higher than in neighbouring areas.

(558) People naturally assume that the area with higher prices must be better to live in.

(559) So the process escalates.

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(560) Like all sectors in mature industries, the construction sector is characterized by a relatively few leading thinkers who innovate and monitor trends and a larger group of technical experts who receive and disseminate innovation and new ideas.

(561) This dissemination group consists of architects, consultants, designers, and engineers.

(562) In the construction sector this dissemination group is very small, relatively conservative, and divided up into groups.

(563) However, it gets a great deal of media publicity for innovation and forward thinking, particularly architects.

(564) Yet for most construction work, such high levels of technical sophistication are not necessary and are not supported because it is costly.

(565) Most buildings are built for functional purposes and not to advance or explore the limits of technology.

(566) A practical building with a facade that is interesting or artful is more than sufficient for most purposes.

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(567) "Why teach history?"

(568) Not, I propose, because it’s there.

(569) Rather, we should teach history because it is a resource that can shed light on the lives we live today.

(570) We can learn from history because earlier times and thinkers were confronted with problems, ideas and circumstances which have affinities to those that confront us today.

(571) We can learn from them both when past ages are committed to concepts and views similar to our own, and when they have views that are notable for their differences.

(572) Only a fool would ignore his past experience when confronted with a new situation.

(573) It would be equally foolish to ignore our collective history.

(574) This is why history should occupy a central place not only in the liberal arts curriculum, but in primary, secondary and post secondary education.

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(575) The goal of legal socialization is to instill in people a felt obligation or responsibility to follow laws and accept legal authority.

(576) The goal of moral socialization is to instill in people a duty to follow societal standards of proper behavior independent of rules and codes.

(577) Given that in normal everyday life those behaviors that society considers immoral are frequently prohibited by law, the two usually work toward the same goal.

(578) However, that is not always the case.

(579) Criminalizing a behavior does not make it immoral, nor is all immoral behavior necessarily criminalized.

(580) Most people can think of an instance where they believe a behavior is immoral, but would not support criminalizing it or using the full force of the law to stop people from doing it.

(581) At the same time, even if people do abstractly support legal regulation of immoral behavior, they vary in how and the extent to which they want the legal system to intervene.

(582) Such views are strongly shaped by the wat in which people understand the position and function of the law withing society.

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(583) For many years the British-French rivalry has extended from rugby matches politics and trading insults to trading mortality statistics.

(584) Since records in France started to be accurately collected, they have reported considerably fewer deaths from hear disease and a longer lifespan than the British.

(585) The French are proud of this, but many UK colleagues tell me that much of the difference is due to a reluctance to record deaths properly, with the same ‘Anglo-Saxon rigour’.

(586) Others disagree, asserting that misclassification could only explain at most 20 percent of the difference, and point to a consistent north-south difference, which suggests that most of the variation between UK and France is due to the healthier habits of the southerners.

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(587) Once harvested, potatoes, even under ideal conditions, keep for only a few months before they sprout, and they are vulnerable to mould and decay.

(588) Native South Americans, however, developed a method of preserving them so that they could be stored for years to provide a safeguard against famine.

(589) The cold, dry climate of the altiplano the high Andean plateau made this possible.

(590) After harvest, the potatoes were covered to prevent dew from settling on them and left out overnight in freezing temperatures.

(591) The following day, the potatoes were exposed to the sun and farm families —men, women and children alike— trod on the frozen potatoes to express their liquid, a process repeated several times during the following days.

(592) The resulting freeze-dried potato, called chun͠o, was stored in sealed, permanently frozen underground warehouses where it would keep for years before deteriorating.

(593) Chun͠o was ground into flour and baked into bread, or rehydrated and used for thickening soups and stews, such as chupe, which was made with available meat and vegetables.

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(594) Have you ever played with the sand art toy where you pour colored sand into empty plastic frames or bottles one layer at a time to make pretty designs and patterns?

(595) Natural builders use a similar technique, but on a much larger scale, when they build rammed earth walls.

(596) A single wall of this type is often used as an accent piece in a naturally built house.

(597) Rammed earth walls are often made of layers of red, orange, yellow, brown and cream-colored earth.

(598) To make a wall like this, first a frame, or formwork, is built.

(599) Next, a damp mixture of sand, gravel and clay is poured into the form.

(600) To make it more attractive, the different layers might be colored with natural pigments.

(601) Once the earth is in the form, it is packed down to compress it and make it stick together as a solid wall.

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(602) Play is often discounted as something for children, because it does not deal with important survival processes, because it is useless.

(603) But this is a profound misunderstanding.

(604) Play is important because it is useless; because it allows us to act not because of necessity of convenience, but in order to freely express our being.

(605) The problem, however, starts again when play becomes a profession — with all the external rewards and responsibilities that this entails.

(606) Musicians playing for leading symphony orchestras, or athletes playing for multi-million contracts with elite teams, no longer feel that they play to express their being.

(607) Instead, they start feeling that their skill is being used by others for their own ends.

(608) When that happens, instead of allowing for the free flow of consciousness, even play becomes part of the iron cage.

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(609) One facet of the nominal fallacy, the error of believing that the label carries explanatory information, is the danger of using common words and giving them a scientific meaning.

(610) This has the often disastrous effect of leading an unwary public down a path of misunderstanding.

(611) Words like "theory", "law", "force" do not mean in common discourse what they mean to a scientist.

(612) "Success" in Darwinian evolution is not the same "success" as taught by Dale Carnegie.

(613) "Force" to a physicist has a meaning quite different from that used in political discourse.

(614) The worst of these, though, may be "theory" and "law", which are almost polar opposites — theory being a strong idea in science while vague in common discourse, and law being a much more muscular social than scientific concept.

(615) These differences lead to sometimes serious misunderstandings between scientists and the public that supports their work.

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(616) There is an optimal level of emotion that is necessary for increased learning.

(617) Too much or too little reduces the efficiency of the cortex.

(618) This is why movies, books, and music that trigger emotions are easily remembered.

(619) The best lessons in life or in a classroom make you laugh, think, or cry.

(620) One of my high school teachers removed all the furniture from the classroom and taped small square dimensions on the floor that represented the amount of space a slave was afforded on the ships transporting them from Africa to America.

(621) During that lesson, students were seated tightly packed in their allotted squares for the duration of the period.

(622) We struggled to make it through the entire period and wondered how slaves could be in similar positions for months.

(623) My high school history teacher created an emotional experience that I remember vividly to this day.

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(624) Standards are prevalent in our modern world because they reduce the costs of interactions among the firms and people that subscribe to them.

(625) Hence, it is not unexpected to see standards coevolve with markets.

(626) Many people are surprised to learn that only a few centuries ago simple measures of weight and volume, such as the pound and the pint, were not standard.

(627) Even though the same word was used in different towns, the weight of a pound varied from town to town — sometimes by as much as a factor of four.

(628) But as cities began to trade with one another and governments began to impose their rule over larger areas, the use of standards grew.

(629) The coevolution of standards are markets is easy to understand, since anyone buying a bushel of corn from a vendor in another town would want that bushel to mean the same in both towns.

(630) So the possibility of trade created an incentive for standardization, and helped the expansion of the governments that were keen on the use of standards.

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(631) There is an interesting side to the evolutionary process that is illuminated by astronomy.

(632) The living organisms we now see all have their structure based upon the element carbon.

(633) Most biochemists believe no other basis is possible for life.

(634) But where does carbon come from?

(635) Carbon originates in the centre of stars where at temperatures of millions of degrees it is ‘cooked’ from simple protons and neutrons.

(636) When the stars reach the end of their lives they explode and disperse carbon into space and on to the surface of planets and meteorites.

(637) However, the time needed to make carbon and other heavier elements, like nitrogen and oxygen, by this stellar alchemy is very long; nearly a billion years.

(638) Only after this immense period of time will the building blocks of life be available in the universe, and only then can biochemistry take over.

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(639) Even very subtle manipulation of object-orientation in an ad design can impact purchase behavior.

(640) Advertisers can increase purchase intentions by facilitating mental simulation through their visual depictions of the product.

(641) They can do this simply by orienting a product (e.g., a cake with a fork) toward the right side.

(642) While this may not suit the smaller percentage of left-handers, the larger percentage of right-handers will have better mental product-interaction.

(643) These results also hold for shelf display design in retail environments.

(644) For example, a very slight change in display design of mugs in th window of a coffee shop could affect purchases with consumers imagining picking up that coffee mug and drinking from it.

(645) Including an instrument (e.g., a spoon for eating an advertised soup) that facilitates mental simulation should also increase purchase intentions.

(646) These consequences of visual depiction impact not just advertising design, but product packaging design and display design as well.

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(647) The sun is the ultimate source of all energy on earth, whether it’s used by grass in the fields, tress in the forest, or your car on the road.

(648) Though poets might prefer a more evocative comparison, astrophysicists liken the sun to a nuclear fusion reactor.

(649) Astronomers observe that the sun’s diameter is more than one hundred times larger than the earth’s, and it is unimaginably hot — nearly 15 million degrees Celsius at its center.

(650) Within that heat, the sun packs enormous pressure; the core is forty-three times denser than a diamond.

(651) Under these extreme conditions four protons slamming together make one helium atom through nuclear fusion.

(652) When that happens, about 0.7 percent of the mass of the protons is turned into energy (E=mc²), and about 0.000000045 percent of that energy eventually comes flying in our direction in the form of sunlight.

(653) That doesn’t sound like a lot of energy, but it’s enough to power all life on earth, and more.

(654) In fact, the energy in sunlight arriving on earth contains about twelve thousand times more energy than humanity uses in a year.

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(655) While our brains make up only 2% of our weight, they consume 20% of our energy.

(656) They are hungry for oxygen and glucose.

(657) This means they are dependent on good blood flow and good regulation of blood sugar.

(658) This is where exercise helps.

(659) Poor regulation of blood sugar, for example, is associated with smaller hippocampi — the brain regions responsible for laying down long-term memories.

(660) Regular exercise will increase the amount of blood flowing through your brain, and improve the delivery of blood sugar.

(661) This will help new neurons — brain cells — to grow.

(662) Until recently, scientists didn’t think adults could grow new neurons; you just had to make do with what you were born with.

(663) But we can — and exercise helps this, as well as strengthening connections between existing neurons, improving long-term memories.

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(664) Elderspeak is characterized by several components.

(665) Which ones are beneficial for older adults and which ones are not helpful?

(666) Kemper and Harden had older adults watch a videotape in which a speaker described a route that was also traced on a map.

(667) The older adults reported that the instructions were easier to follow when the speaker reduced the grammatical complexity and used semantic elaboration that is, repeated and expanded upon what was said.

(668) Simpler grammar and semantic elaboration also helped older adults improve their accuracy when they had to reproduce the same route on a map of their own.

(669) In contrast, shortening the length of the speaker’s utterances into two- and five-word sentences did not improve the older adults’ comprehension of the instructions, nor did it improve their performance when they traced a map of their own.

(670) Also, the older listener did not find that an extremely slow rate of speaking with many pauses or exaggerated prosody was helpful.

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(671) In one experiment, a student was required to wear an embarrassing T-shirt (one) sporting a large image of Barry Manilow — a popular singer but of low prestige among college students before entering a room in which a group of their peers were assembled.

(672) The scientists noted in their paper that ‘all participants nonetheless put on the shirt, although none looked particularly thrilled about doing so’.

(673) The wearer of the T-shirt was later asked to estimate the number of fellow students in the crowded room who definitely discerned the face on the shirt, and this was compared with the actual number who had noticed.

(674) In fact, the students were so consumed with their own embarrassment over wearing the clothes that they were unable to accurately gauge how conspicuous it was to others.

(675) The T-shirt wearers overestimated how many others spotted the embarrassing shirt on average by a factor of two.

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(676) Dr. Davidson and his colleagues have shown that there is asymmetry in the prefrontal cortex reflecting our affective style.

(677) When there is more activity in the right side of the prefrontal cortex, it correlates with negative emotions such as worry, sadness, and anger.

(678) If the left side is more active, we tend to be in a positive emotional state, with a sense of well-being, enthusiasm, even joy.

(679) Developing a greater ability to recover, then, should show up as a shift in the relative activity between the two sides of the prefrontal cortex: the left side ought to become more active as the right side calms down.

(680) In fact, that happened with a group that practiced mindfulness meditation for eight weeks.

(681) They had greater activity in the left side, reported a stronger sense of well-being, and even showed a positive change in immune system function, as measured by influenza antibody titers.

(682) Those who had the most activity in the left prefrontal cortex had the strongest immune system response, suggesting a connection between overall well-being and the health of the immune system.

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(683) Focus groups are commonly used in marketing but in some countries there are very real problems with them.

(684) Since it is difficult to recruit random people to be in focus groups, research agencies have developed large pools of consumers willing to take part in focus groups at short notice.

(685) However, the problem is that many of these consumers are too willing.

(686) Research has revealed that many consumers enjoy the pay, free food, and experience of being an expert and focus on pleasing the moderator in order to get invited back regularly.

(687) Unfortunately, the way to please the very human moderator seems to be to work out what they want to hear, rather than providing them with genuine insights about the brand.

(688) This makes much of the data gained from focus-group panels worthless.

(689) Agencies are award of this problem and ensure a churn rate within groups to keep them fresh, but consumers get around this by using multiple names in order to remain in the pool.

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(690) Once you have defined what success looks like for you and have begun to design it, next comes the work.

(691) There’s no substitute for hard work; we all have to roll up our sleeves and take the stairs to get to that floor we’re going after.

(692) The Roman philosopher Seneca once said, "Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity."

(693) The preparation is the work, and the opportunity will find us when we are truly ready to work and make it ours.

(694) While some get caught up in wishful thinking, visualizations, and acting as if they already have it, the one thing that glues the whole process together is putting in the elbow grease.

(695) A gardener can't just wish for a beautiful garden and one suddenly appears; she has to choose the seed, pick the place, clear the ground, dig the holes, plant the seed, water it, add mulch, and repeat these steps over and over again if she wants to experience that beautiful healthy garden in the flesh.

(696) Similarly, if you want to live a full, adventurous, abundant, joy-filled, and loving life, it’s going to take work.

(697) Trust that there will be setbacks and temporary bumps along the journey, but they’re nature’s way of strengthening us to be ready for what it is we’re working toward.

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(698) Our tendency to overlook habit can be explained by one aspect of habit itself: the way in which familiarity and repetition dull our senses.

(699) Marcel Proust describes habit as a ‘heavy curtain’ which ‘conceals from us almost the whole universe, and prevents us from knowing ourselves.’ Not only this: habit ‘cuts off from things which we have witnessed a number of times the root of profound impression and of thought which gives them their real meaning.’ Proust realized that an artist has to draw back, or tear open, this curtain of habit, so that the most familiar features of our world become visible, meaningful, and cause for wonder.

(700) But this is also the philosopher’s task.

(701) Although it is often said — quoting Plato or Aristotle — that philosophy begins with wonder, the wondering state of mind is only reached by first penetrating the heavy curtain of habit.

(702) So habit is a uniquely philosophical issue, and it is also an important and profound feature of ordinary life.

(703) A few European philosophers have gone so far as to claim, like many teachers in the Buddhist tradition, that habit provides ‘an answer to the problem of the self’, that our continuing identity through time and change is produced by the tenacity of habit.

(704) If this is true — and perhaps even if it is not quite true — then habit’s ambiguity and uncertainty belong to the mystery of human selfhood.

(705) The question of habit may be inseparable from our hardest, deepest, most insistent question: who are we?

(706) who am I?

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(707) Children love to please their parents.

(708) They constantly seek attention, affirmation, and acceptance.

(709) The little boy who is not satisfied with merely riding his bicycle for his mom shows off by riding past the front yard with both hands in the air, "Look, Mom, no hands."

(710) One more achievement, one more accomplishment, and still another opportunity to impress a significant other.

(711) The burden to please or impress others can be overwhelming.

(712) It can cause us to mortgage our lives to the limit and compromise our self-worth in the process.

(713) People-pleasing is the opposite of the self-sabotaging behavior coming from the thought that others should make you happy.

(714) If you believe that your job in life is to make others happy or at least to impress them, you suffer from the attitudes and behaviors of always trying to please others.

(715) If at first you do not accomplish this, you try longer and harder.

(716) Then if you get unsatisfactory responses, you become frustrated and even depressed.

(717) You shoulder the negative emotions of others, as if you are able to flip the inner switch that is under their control.

(718) The inability to control the attitudes the attitudes and behaviors of others is enough to drive a people-pleaser insane.

(719) The need to make people happy appears selfless, but it destines a person to a life filled with anxiety and disappointment.

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(720) Because plants are such marvelously adaptable creatures, they can maximize their ability to survive and thrive in almost any condition.

(721) Since they must make their own food, which requires light during photosynthesis, they must have some sort of mechanism to collect and trap the light they need; i.e., they need solar collectors.

(722) When man-made solar collectors are positioned on the roofs of buildings, they are positioned such that they face the direction from which they can collect the most light possible.

(723) Usually they are positioned facing south so that they can collect light all day long as the sun moves from east to west across the south sky.

(724) The positions are usually fixed.

(725) Elaborate systems may be electronically controlled to move with the sun facing south east in morning hours and slowly moving to face south west as the day progresses.

(726) Grana in plant cells move much like the electronically controlled solar panels, orienting themselves to maximize light collection in shady areas and to minimize light collection in bright sunny areas.

(727) Leaves of trees which are growing on the outermost branches where light is abundant, have a morphology designed to lessen the intensity and have grana in vertical stacks.

(728) On the other hand, interior leaves which receive only filtered light may have grana which are in horizontal stacks.

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(729) Once participant of a workshop told a particularly insightful story about his twin six year-old boys.

(730) As any parent knows, riding the school bus without Mon or Dad is scary enough for a first grader.

(731) But finding the way from the classroom to the bus at 3:30 by themselves is even more intimidating.

(732) There are so many buses!

(733) And they all look the same.

(734) His six-year-olds spent most of the school year getting comfortable with their exact route and pickup point every day.

(735) Then One day they were told their pickup spot was going to change.

(736) In the days leading up to the big switch, it became evident that one of the twins was very concerned, while the other seemed unaffected.

(737) Apparently, the new pickup spot was just outside one boy’s classroom.

(738) He could see it from the window.

(739) But for the other boy, in a different classroom, the pickup spot was even farther away, and in a different direction.

(740) The night before the big day, shortly after bedtime, Dad noticed one child sleeping soundly, while the other was restless.

(741) He got his nervous little boy out of bed and asked him what was wrong.

(742) "I don’t know what I’m going to do, Daddy."

(743) So Dad dressed the little boy up in his school clothes already laid out for the next day, and they went on an imaginary journey.

(744) "Pretend you’re in class, and the teacher says it’s time to go.

(745) Walk out that door and show me which way you’re going to turn."

(746) The little one did as Dad asked.

(747) "Now, let’s practice walking down the hall and across the parking lot to the pickup spot."

(748) Two good attempts convinced both father and child that all was well.

(749) "Now, who else in your class rides the same bus with you?"

(750) "Johnny B.

(751) does."

(752) "Okay, then you pretend I’m Johnny B.

(753) You practice asking me if it’s okay if you follow me to the bus."

(754) After two or three attempts, the boy found a comfortable way to ask.

(755) Now he had a plan B.

(756) After a few more words of reassurance, Dad tucked his confident young man in bed, and he fell right to sleep.

(757) What Dad realized was that people, even children, aren’t really afraid of change.

(758) They’re afraid of not being prepared for the change.

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(759) As part of a peace delegation, Elliot was invited to tour the former Soviet Union in 1983 at the height of the Cold War.

(760) Travel to Russia was tense at that time and included frequent searches by Soviet police and political posturing by officials.

(761) But the Russian people were friendly and gracious.

(762) Elliot was invited to a Russian home and served an elaborate dinner, even though he knew the family’s financial resources were scarce.

(763) The photos that he took that evening of three lively generations living together in one small apartment were precious to him.

(764) The next day Elliot decided to rest at his hotel instead of joining his delegation on a field trip.

(765) Later that afternoon, he took a walk through the neighborhood with his camera.

(766) After he stopped to photograph a little boy on a red tricycle, the child disappeared into a long line of people.

(767) Immediately the crowd began to complain vigorously about the photo Elliot had just snapped of the little boy.

(768) The fuss caused Elliot to remember that he had been expressly told never to photograph people in lines, and he had already witnessed two other delegates’ films exposed to light after such an incident.

(769) In the blink of an eye, Elliot found himself face to face with a large policeman who asked him in broken English to give him his camera.

(770) Smiling politely and apologizing, Elliot pushed the camera and its precious film deep into the backpack he held tightly in his arms and pretended he didn’t understand what he policeman was asking him.

(771) This exchange continued for a few moments until the policeman signaled for Elliot to accompany him to the police station, which turned out to be several miles away.

(772) There, he was passed from one group to another, each of apparently higher rank than the last.

(773) Finally, there was a phone call to someone who sounded like an official.

(774) He could make out the words "American, camera," but not much else.

(775) At the end of the call, the man shrugged, smiled embarrassedly, and indicated that Elliot was free to go.

(776) When Elliot described what had happened to the other members of his delegation, they asked him why he didn’t immediately hand over the film.

(777) His answer was, "If he had threatened me, I would have.

(778) If the demands sounded aggressive or anyone laid a hand on me, I would have given in.

(779) But that didn’t happen, so I held my ground."

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(780) While the lion’s share of the world’s attention at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul went to track and field, an amazing story took place in the obscure sport of sailing.

(781) Canadian Larry Lemieux overcame tough 35-knot winds and was in position to claim a medal in the Finn-class competition.

(782) However, when he saw a capsized boat on a nearby course with injured Singapore sailors in trouble, he abandoned his race to help them.

(783) Although his actions cost him a medal, it powerfully illustrated to the world that athletic victory alone isn’t everything.

(784) Shaw Her Siew and Joseph Chan’s boat had capsized about 19 miles off the coast of Busan.

(785) Most competitors would have tried to pick up the gold medal, but as Lemieux told The Edmonton Journal, his instincts directed him elsewhere "The first rule of sailing is, you see someone is trouble, you help him."

(786) Lemieux said.

(787) "If I went to them and they didn’t really need help, c’est la vie.

(788) If I didn’t go, it would be something I would regret for the rest of my life."

(789) He didn’t want to chance living with that guilt.

(790) However, once he made the decision, rescuing the stranded sailors still wasn’t easy.

(791) There were 12-foot waves crashing all around and the current was against the wind.

(792) Lemieux had to sail downwind to reach Chan and took on a lot of water in the process.

(793) Skillfully, Lemieux kept his own boat from capsizing, pulled Chan out of the water and then headed back to help Siew.

(794) Afterwards, he kept his small boat steady until a Korean Navy boat arrived and then returned to the race and finished 21st out of a field of 32.

(795) As he told the Journal, he had no regrets.

(796) "Chan would have been lost at sea had he not been found.

(797) Because the waves were so high you couldn’t see the big, orange course markers when you were between troughs.

(798) So looking for someone’s head would have been like looking for a needle in a haystack...

(799) I could have won gold.

(800) But, in the same circumstances, I would do what I did again."

수특171012
(801) As a kid I had a steady diet of programs like Sesame Street and Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood.

(802) I always thought it was amazing that Mr. Rogers had an entire magical land of make-believe with characters, stories and a trolley that ran through his home.

(803) He was my hero, second only to my father, who was a policeman in my heart.

(804) One day my father strapped me into the car seat of his big Cadillac as we travelled to the Harrisburg International Airport to pick up my Uncle George.

(805) Once my father spotted him, they proceeded to the baggage claim to grab his luggage.

(806) I held my father’s hand, happy to be accompanying him on a mission, until suddenly I broke away from him.

(807) My father hadn’t noticed because he was busy removing bags from the conveyor belt.

(808) It had only been a moment, but a moment was all it took to send my father into a tailspin.

(809) He began to search frantically for me calling my name, but there was no response.

(810) It was then that my father turned around, and he spotted me with a man at the baggage claim kiosk maybe 30 feet away from him.

(811) He sprang into action before my uncle had a change to stop him and ran to the man shaking my hand.

(812) With one hand on his police-issued weapon, he asked the man to step away from me slowly.

(813) The man complied, and very calmly explained himself to my father at the same time.

(814) He told my father that I ran up to him, and that is wasn’t uncommon for children to do so, simply because they felt safe in his presence.

(815) Fueled by adrenaline, concern, and anger, my father was infuriated at this man until I said to him, "Daddy, why are you mad at Mr.

(816) Rogers?"

(817) My father’s normally chocolate complexion turned red with embarrassment.

(818) He apologized profusely to Mr. Rogers, and then both had a good laugh.

(819) Immediately, my uncle, my father and Mr. Rogers began to explain to me why it was so important that I’d never run away from the adult who was in charge of taking care of me at the time.

(820) From that day forward I never departed from my caretakers.

수특1801
(821) Dorothea Lange’s oeuvre constitutes one of the most moving and committed contributions to the social documentary photography in the 20th century.

(822) After studying at Columbia University in New York, she started out as an independent portrait photographer in San Francisco.

(823) Shocked by the number of homeless people in search of work during the Great Depression, she decided to take pictures of people in the street to draw attention to their plight.

(824) In 1935, she joined the Farm Security Administration (FSA) and reported on living conditions in the rural area of the USA.

(825) In a direct manner, she documented the bitter poverty of migrant workers and their families.

(826) One of the most famous photographs of the FSA project is Migrant Mother, the portrait of a Californian migrant worker with her three children.

(827) This highly concentrated image has made Dorothea Lange an icon of socially committed photography.

수특1802
(828) While practicing the martial art wing-chun, Joe Hyams was accidentally hit by a workout partner.

(829) This made him angry.

(830) His teacher, Jim Lau, noticed and spoke to him about his anger, saying that unleashing anger against another person inspires anger in return from the other person.

(831) The following weekend, Mr. Hyams went to New York, arriving early in the morning and hoping to get some rest before a business meeting.

(832) Unfortunately, his hotel room was not ready and would not be ready for another four hours, so he demanded to see the manager, then angrily confronted her.

(833) Later, after having calmed down, he apologized, and the manager said, "You really took me by surprise.

(834) I intended to do what I could for you, but when you came on so strong I forgot my good intentions and decided not to go out of my way to help you."

수특1803
(835) It was only in 1919 when Dr. Oscar Minkowski and Dr. Joseph Merring got the first clue to the cause of diabetes.

(836) While trying to find out the possible causes of diabetes they came to a conclusion that the pancreas plays some role in causing diabetes.

(837) To confirm their finding they decided to remove the pancreas of a dog to study the after-effects on the dog.

(838) After removing the pancreas of the dog they noticed that the dog was urinating excessively.

(839) When Dr. Minkowski noticed a bunch of flies gathered on the urine he suspected the dog was diabetic and to confirm his suspicion he tested the dog’s urine for sugar.

(840) It confirmed his suspicion of the dog being diabetic as he found sugar in its urine.

(841) This finding finally linked diabetes to the pancreas.

수특1804
(842) After winning many contests, a boastful champion archer challenged an old master who was renowned for his skills.

(843) The young man flawlessly hit a distant bull’s eye, and then split that arrow with his second shot.

(844) "There," he said to the old man, "see if you can match that!"

(845) The master motioned the young archer to follow him up a mountain.

(846) When they reached a deep chasm spanned by a rather flimsy and shaky log, the old master stepped onto the middle of the dangerous bridge, picked a far away target, drew his bow, and fired a clean, direct hit.

(847) "Now, you," he said, as he stepped back onto the safe ground.

(848) The young man was frozen with fear.

(849) "You have much skill with your bow," the master said, "but you have little skill with the mind that releases the shot."

수특1901
(850) Nothing addresses our need to fit in with others as profoundly as traditions.

(851) Traditions satisfy our deep emotional needs for belonging and create bonds not easily swayed.

(852) Developed over time in a country, community, or family, traditions are the foundation of a culture.

(853) While a ritual is time alone with the soul, traditions are the bonding glue of a group.

(854) When we participate in a tradition, we are not acting alone but in harmony with others in a common cause, belief, or event.

(855) The traditional singing of the "Star-Spangled Banner" at the opening of a sporting event bonds the crowd with a common sense of pride and unites them together for the game.

(856) For more than a hundred year, the passing of the Olympic torch throughout countries has set aside religious differences and race, and opened up nations’ borders for a common tradition: the Olympics.

(857) Caught up in the security of a mutual custom, traditions have their own codes of ethics that transcend differences and unite a people, if only for a moment.

수특1902
(858) Abduction is a process of reasoning used to decide which explanation of given phenomena we should select, and so, naturally, it is also called ‘argument to the best explanation’.

(859) Often we are presented with certain experiences and are called upon to offer some sort of explanation for them.

(860) But the problem we frequently face is that a given body of data may not determine or force us to accept only one explanation.

(861) Unsettling as it seems, some philosophers have even argued that for any possible body of evidence there will always be a variety of explanations consistent with it.

(862) This is just the claim that Duhem and Quine have advanced.

(863) Whether or not their claim is true, however, in cases where we do face a set of alternative explanations, our task as good reasoners must be to decide which one of those explanations best fits the evidence.

(864) That’s where abduction comes in.

수특1903
(865) The links between food consumption and lifestyles defined in relation to social hierarchies developed in various ways in centuries later than the sixteenth-century.

(866) The motif of quality became clearer.

(867) Consumers now took for granted that the domain of social privilege expressed itself in the right-or duty-to obtain food products of ever higher quality.

(868) However, there were still correspondences between typologies of foods and beverages and the typologies of the consumers themselves.

(869) For example, in eighteenth-century Europe, coffee was considered the dominant bourgeois drink, whereas chocolate was aristocratic.

(870) What was defined here was a clearly ideological antithesis: the former awoke and stimulated the mind to work and to be productive; whereas the latter was a drink for the inactive and lazy.

(871) In the following century, however, coffee had already become a popular beverage in France, as had tea in Holland and England.

수특1904
(872) The rhythm of the Nile was the rhythm of Egyptian life.

(873) The annual rising of its waters set the calendar of sowing and reaping with its three season: inundation, growth, and harvest.

(874) The flooding of the Nile from the end of June till late October brought down rich silt, in which crops were planted and grew from late October to late February, to be harvested from late February till the end of June.

(875) The rising of the Nile, as regular and as essential to life as the rising of the sun, marked the Nile year.

(876) The primitive Egyptian calendar, naturally enough, was a "nilometer"- a simple vertical scale on which the flood level was yearly marked.

(877) Even a few year’s reckoning of the Nile year showed that it did not keep in step with the phases of the moon.

(878) But very early the Egyptians found that twelve months of thirty days each could provide a useful calendar of the seasons if another five days were added at the end, to make a year of 365 days.

(879) This was the "civil" year, or the "Nile year," that the Egyptians began to use as early as 4241 B.C.

수특2001
(880) There are some renewable energy technologies that are only controversially considered alternative, and they include nuclear power and hydropower.

(881) Both nuclear power and hydropower are emission-free, and so alleviate the most common negative consequence of fossil-fuel-based energy production, air pollution.

(882) However, they suffer from other environmental problems that make them unattractive to some advocates of alternative energy solutions.

(883) Nuclear power produces highly radioactive wastes that must be stored and safely disposed of for long periods of time, and hydroelectric power traditionally comes from large dams that block free-flowing rivers and disturb natural riverine ecosystems.

(884) Newer forms of smaller, run-of-river hydroelectric plants avoid the negative consequences of large dams and reservoirs, but their potential physical implementation is limited and so they will never serve as the predominant solution to worldwide energy needs.

(885) Nuclear power and hydropower therefore as with most alternative energy sources, solve some problems but not others.

수특2002
(886) Repurposed clothing tells an even more complex tale than that of secondhand garments.

(887) Until recently, clothes that were extensively altered from their original form were frequently overlooked in museum collections, as it was believed that their alterations rendered them inauthentic.

(888) Today, however, analyses of such objects by scholars like Alexandra Palmer, fashion curator at The Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, as well as the embrace of repurposing techniques by high-end fashion labels, have imbued altered objects with newfound significance.

(889) Such clothing is now used to provide insight on the high value placed on textiles in the past, as well as to how that value has diminished over time.

(890) Examining remade garments also highlights a resourcefulness and skill that is all but lost in the contemporary fashion industry.

(891) In many ways, these garments acted as early models of sustainability.

수특2003
(892) Kids and adults around the world are coming up with creative ways to use less fuel.

(893) For example, in the slums of Manila, Philippines, people live in tiny shacks made from sheets of metal.

(894) Until recently, the shacks were completely dark inside.

(895) Anyone who was too old or sick to go outside had to spend every day in darkness.

(896) But one day, IIIac Diaz, who is part of an organization called My Shelter Foundation, looked at an empty pop bottle and had an idea.

(897) Soon, all around the slum, people were cutting small bottle-sized holes into the roofs, inserting a pop bottle with a few teaspoons of bleach inside to keep dangerous molds from growing and gluing the bottle into the roof.

(898) Suddenly, light poured down into places where people had never had light before.

수특2004
(899) Within the arena of household consumption, research predominantly focuses on direct rebound effects among consumers particularly for energy appliances in the home and fuel efficiency in vehicles.

(900) For example, often large energy savings are predicted when consumers replace traditional incandescent light bulbs with more efficient compact fluorescent bulbs.

(901) However these savings rarely reach their predicted targets as research indicates that many consumers, recognising that the light costs less to operate, appear less thorough about switching it off, resulting in more hours of use, i.e.

(902) higher energy consumption.

(903) Similarly, studies have indicated that energy savings from efficiency improvements, for example, a more efficient space heating unit or increased levels of insulation, are often then spent on increased heating standards.

(904) Here, the consumer may gain by operating a warmer home for the same or lower cost than they had previously.

수특2101
(905) As pretty as the orchids they pollinate, orchid bees come in a brightly colored array of brilliant and metallic blues, greens, and purples.

(906) These bees are not social like honeybees – they are typically solitary in nesting, with no division of labor and little communal activity.

(907) The males leave the nest shortly after birth and never return, spending their lives collecting flower fragrances that they store in special grooves on their hind legs and that may be released to attract females.

(908) Females construct nests from mud, resins, and other materials and gather both nectar and pollen from a variety of plants.

(909) The two hundred species of orchid bees are native to Central and South America and play an important role in the pollination of many orchids.

(910) Only a single species can be found in the United States.

(911) This bee, Euglossa vidrissimia, is a recent arrival from either Mexico or Central America and was likely introduced to the United States accidentally.

수특2102
(912) A liquid is like a gas in that its molecules move around or ‘flow’ that’s why both are called ‘fluids’, while solids aren’t.

(913) But the molecules in a liquid are much closer to each other than the molecules in a gas.

(914) If you put a gas into a sealed tank, it fills every nook and cranny of the tank up to the top.

(915) The volume of gas rapidly expands to fill the whole tank.

(916) A liquid also fills every nook and cranny, but only up to a certain level.

(917) A given amount of liquid, unlike the same amount of gas, keeps a fixed volume, and gravity pulls it downwards, so it fills only as much as it needs of the tank, from the bottom upwards.

(918) That’s because the molecules of a liquid stay close to each other.

(919) But, unlike those of a solid, they do slide around over each other, which is why a liquid behaves as a fluid.

수특2103
(920) Before formalized science, some very smart people believed in some really weird things.

(921) At about the same time Johann Sebastian Bach was composing symphonies, many scientists asserted that "phlogiston" resided within everything you could burn, and once you set it on fire, the phlogiston escaped into the air.

(922) If you had some burning wood in a pot and placed a lid over it, the flame would go out because the air could hold only so much phlogiston before it was saturated.

(923) Left in the open, a piece of wood eventually turned to ash and was, as they put it, fully dephlogisticated.

(924) This idea lasted for about a hundred years before it was debunked by diligent scientific attacks.

(925) Eventually, scientists realized there was no such thing as phlogiston, and the real magic element was oxygen.

(926) Flames consumed oxygen, and lids starved flames.

수특2104
(927) Over the millennia, owls evolved tubular eyes, which face forward and are immovable, and are the reason owls developed the ability to turn their heads 270 degrees.

(928) Owl eyes have more black-and-white detecting rods than color cones, allowing them to see in the dark.

(929) Their large round yellow eyes, with dark pupils wide enough to let in small amounts of light in darkness, are one of the first things we notice about them.

(930) In the human world, large eyes with wide pupils hold a certain attraction both for the viewer and the viewed.

(931) Studies show that a person’s pupils dilate in the presence of someone they are attracted to.

(932) Advertisers dilate the eye of models in photographs to make their products more attractive by default.

(933) Nature, it seems, has prepared us biologically to be attracted to owls by giving them such big eyes.

수특2201
(934) When traveling into the wilderness, the type of gear you carry can either help or hinder your efforts.

(935) Specific gear will depend on many factors, which include the environment, weight, and cost.

(936) Whenever possible, try to bring gear that has multiple uses.

(937) A durable space blanket is a good example: It can be used as an added layer of clothing, a signal orange side in winter; silver side in summer, a water collection device, and shelter.

(938) A military poncho, thick-ply garbage bags and parachute lines are a few other examples of multi-use items.

(939) When bringing gear that operates on batteries, make sure to protect it from cold, soaking moisture, salt corrosion, and sand by wrapping it with a good insulating material and placing it in a waterproof bag.

수특2202
(940) The French government utilised skiing as a part of its strategies for regional development in the post-Second World War economic reconstruction.

(941) Purpose-built ski resorts, or ‘ski factories’ as some tourism and recreation researchers labelled them because of their emphasis on the mass accommodation of skiers and construction from glass, concrete and steel, were built in the late 1950s to aid regional development.

(942) The combination of demand from a growing mass leisure class and regional development opportunities has driven similar transformations in many of the world’s mountain landscapes for the purpose of recreation and tourism.

(943) This development demonstrates how previously unused nature may become a resource offering economic opportunities.

(944) This process emphasises that nature only becomes a resource when a human value is placed upon it, typically through the market, thus acquiring an instrumental value that previously did not exist.

수특2203
(945) Participating in sports is quite different from watching sports.

(946) Yet in sport studies, these two activities are often lumped together statistically and anecdotally.

(947) Combining them only adds to the confusion of the value of each, leads to suspect conclusions, and interferes with the assessment of the overall influence of sport.

(948) For example, many people would rate tackle football as the most popular sport in the United States.

(949) Based on spectator interest, this is a reasonable conclusion.

(950) But if we look at participation, football is popular only through high school and only with boys.

(951) Beyond age 18, tackle football is not a reasonable option due to the number of players required, lack of equipment, and risk of injury.

(952) Thus it is more accurate to say that football is the most popular spectator sport in the United States but rates far down the list in participation.

수특2204
(953) The 2008 winners of the annual awards for sustainable tourism all demonstrate that best practice in tourism is far-reaching, and extends beyond what was once understood to constitute tourism – mainly just planes, hotels, and beaches.

(954) As an example, the winner of the poverty reduction award was an initiative in which both local farmers and tourists benefit.

(955) The hoteliers in this award-winning nation have traditionally imported much of their food while ignoring local farmers whose produce was going to waste.

(956) Now, 1,000 farmers, most of whom are women, have been helped to supply local hotels.

(957) At the same time, the country’s travel foundation, one of the funding organizations, and the initiative have launched their own farmyard – to demonstrate best practice and to become a tourist attraction on its own merits.

(958) Taking tourists to the farmyard, for example, is one way in which they can see how their contribution to sustainability is working.

수특2301
(959) With the changes to open collaborative workstations and planning from cubicles, issues of privacy, noise, and loss of work focus have impacted the planning process in recent years.

(960) Many employees have complained that the very open workstation plans and integral collaborative spaces make concentration difficult.

(961) This is not to say that companies all want to go back to cubicles and private offices.

(962) Companies feel that the space plans that emphasize collaborative areas help with teamwork and the generation of ideas and solutions.

(963) The company also saves money because the space requirements of the more open work areas take less square footage than a cubicle plan with aisles.

(964) However, many designers and manufacturers find that a blend of collaborative spaces and areas of privacy – although not necessarily private cubicles or offices – has its advantages for many companies.

수특2302
(965) Websites are steadily becoming more important in the photographer’s self-promotion repertory.

(966) If you have a good collection of digital photographs – whether they have been scanned from film or are from a digital camera – you should consider creating a website to showcase samples of your work, provide information about the type of work you do, and display your contact information.

(967) The website does not have to be elaborate or contain every photograph you’ve ever taken.

(968) In fact, it is best if you edit your work very carefully and choose only the best images to display on your website.

(969) The benefit of having a website is that it makes it so easy for photo buyers to see your work.

(970) You can send e-mails to targeted photo buyers and include a link to your website.

(971) Many photo buyers report that this is how they prefer to be contacted.

(972) Of course, your URL should also be included on any print materials, such as postcards, brochures, business cards, and stationery.

(973) Some photographers even include their URL in their credit line.

수특2303
(974) A studio artist works like a novelist.

(975) He or she may pay a great deal of attention to the details of everyday visible reality, but what he or she adds to those observations is the something else, the shaping form supplied by his or her genius.

(976) The details figure in, but they are not the main point.

(977) Walker Evans wrote in an undated note to himself that anyone who goes to Botticelli to learn about the dress and manners of the fifteenth century is a pedant and a fool.

(978) Few scholars of the future who look at Jan Groover’s breakthrough still-life arrangements of kitchen utensils will spend much time considering the development of the colander in the 1970s.

(979) The main point is not a compilation of facts about the objects seen, but the genius of their combination into an original composition.

수특2304
(980) Filmmakers, with the help of production designers, art directors, location managers, and countless other members of cast and crew, insert architecture into their films.

(981) On a practical level, architecture sets a scene, conveying information about plot and character while contributing to the overall feel of a movie.

(982) In more discreet ways, filmmakers can use their cameras to make statements about the built – or unbuilt – environment, or use that environment to comment metaphorically on any of a variety of subjects, from the lives of the characters in their films to the nature of contemporary society.

(983) Architects, for their part, create not only the structures that appear in films but the structures in which films appear – theaters – and the very infrastructure that supports the film industry.

수특2401
(984) Why must we keep insisting that education is primarily academic in nature?

(985) Why is there a hierarchical structure of education that places academia at the top and the art at the bottom?

(986) Learning takes many forms.

(987) Children do not all learn in the same way.

(988) You cannot seat them all behind desks in a classroom, dictate information to them and expect them to absorb all of it like a sponge.

(989) Some will do well learning in this way.

(990) A great deal will not.

(991) The latter of these children prefer to learn with their bodies, with their hearts and with their imaginations.

(992) They are the dancers, the runners, the singers, the actors, and the writers.

(993) They are absolutely wonderful people who give so much joy and happiness to others, yet we do not value them as we should.

(994) Instead, we reprimand them for not fitting in with the other mob.

수특2402
(995) As society continues to rapidly change due to the evolution of a global economy and advances in technology, schools continue to function in the same way as they did 100 years ago.

(996) Students, teachers, and leaders are changing as a result of the proliferation of technology in the real world.

(997) Our information society needs people who can effectively manage and use ever-increasing amounts of information to solve complex problems and to make decisions in the face of uncertainty.

(998) This presents a bit of a paradox as the concept of schools as the traditional factory model of education is incompatible with the evolving demands of the information age.

(999) Despite decades of national, state, and local promotion of educational uses of technology, classroom practice in most schools has changed little from that of the mid-20th century.

(1000) This challenge is compounded by issues related to aging infrastructure, inequity in funding, and a global focus on standardization.

수특2403
(1001) A common misconception among students of education is that if they pass the required courses, everything will work when they enter the classroom.

(1002) However, the students you will work with are unique in time and in the environment in which you actually encounter them.

(1003) Your teacher education program can prepare you for what things will be "like", but it is only a representation of the reality you will experience.

(1004) You can be prepared, but ultimately you will have to observe, assess and adjust on your own.

(1005) Although some people do seem to have a knack for teaching, what they really have is a talent for communicating.

(1006) Who can criticize a nice knack like that?

(1007) Yet, teaching in a school requires more than just being a good communicator.

(1008) It requires being able to teach some very specific information and skills under some rather specific conditions of time, place, available materials.

수특2404
(1009) In a movie of long ago, Sleeper, the protagonist wakes up from a several-hundred-year sleep understandably malnourished and disoriented.

(1010) His doctors are overheard planning a high-potency diet of sugar-laden goods for him, shaking their heads at the "primitive" beliefs that the medical establishment once held in the twenty-first century that vegetables were good for you.

(1011) Now, they say, everyone knows that they cause cancer.

(1012) While intended to be funny, that scene captures the dilemma you face when evaluating information and research to guide your behavior.

(1013) It is not enough to hear experts tell you things unless you evaluate them for yourself.

(1014) On one hand, you should exhibit healthy skepticism toward ideas that conflict with what you think you already know, or what has been grounded in your experience, Yet, on the other hand, you should force yourself to remain open to new ideas that may actually be more accurate and useful.

수특2501
(1015) Communication is not merely a matter of producing effects on other communicators; it is one of actually engaging with them.

(1016) Communicating is a kind of sharing.

(1017) When two people communicate rather than "talk at each other", they come to have something in common.

(1018) They must start with something in common, too, even if this is only the language they share.

(1019) Communication does not demand complete agreement or acceptance, but it does demand understanding.

(1020) When put into language, my thoughts, ideas, notions, and beliefs are no longer mine alone assuming they ever were.

(1021) They have been put into a form in which they can be shared.

(1022) The primary aim of language use is understanding; all of the other effects my linguistic actions may have on other people getting my listeners to agree with me, to obey my orders, to trust me, or whatever only come about because what I have tried to communicate has been understood.

수특2502
(1023) Human memory limits which cultual variants can be remembered and transmitted successfully.

(1024) People are unlikely to retain information that is easily forgotten or misremembered, particularly in cultures relying on an oral tradition.

(1025) David Rubin, a professor at Duke University, provided a brilliant account of how the cognitive structure of memory affects the content of oral traditions such as epic ballads or counting-out rhymes.

(1026) As one example of his approach, he used work on imagery in cognitive psychology to argue that epic ballads such as the Iliad or Odyssey tend to focus on concrete, easily visualized actions because people find it easier to remember events that are concrete and easy to visualize.

(1027) Homer is filled with concrete action, not because the Greeks had trouble with abstraction but because the constraint of human memory makes concrete images more likely to survive generation after generation of oral transmission.

수특2503
(1028) Even the peasant family defines its own identity at the table.

(1029) "To live on one bread and once wine," that is, to share food, is in medieval language an almost technical way of signifying that one belongs to the same family.

(1030) Even today in different dialectal expressions, the house is identified with the food that allows the domestic community to live there together: "Let’s go home" (andiamo in casa) in the traditional vocabulary of the Romagna region meant, "Let’s go into the kitchen."

(1031) On all social levels sharing a table is the first sign of membership in a group.

(1032) That might be the family but also a broader community – each brotherhood, guild, or association reasserts its own collective identity at the table.

(1033) Every monastic community demonstrates its intimacy in the refectory where all are supposed to share the meal from which are temporarily excluded only the excommunicated – those who are impure because they have some guilt.

수특2504
(1034) The Arabic language doesn’t have a single word for compromise, which some have said is the reason that Arabs seem to be unable to reach a compromise.

(1035) Yet, the Arabic language does provide several ways to articulate the concept of compromise, the most common being an expression that translates in English to "we reached a middle ground."

(1036) This example illustrates codability, which refers to the ease with which a language can express a thought.

(1037) When a language has a convenient word for a concept, that concept is said to have high codability.

(1038) Thus the existence of the word compromise gives that idea high codability in English.

(1039) When a concept requires more than a single word for tis expression, it possesses lower codability.

(1040) It is accurate, then, to say that the idea of compromise has lower codability in Arabic than in English.

(1041) However, having a phrase rather than a single word to express an idea does not mean that the idea is nonexistent in a given culture, only that it is less easily put into the language code.

수특2601
(1042) Virtual representation of cultural heritage means using technologies, such as digital photography, 3D information acquisition, multimedia, and virtual reality, to create a virtual situation that can allow experience to a cultural heritage, which can provide the protection and spread of the cultural heritage.

(1043) For material cultural heritage, such as relics, groups of buildings and ruins, we can use virtual representation technology to restore the appearance of cultural heritage by the models in real life and display it comprehensively.

(1044) For intangible cultural heritage, we look to find the best way based on its features to reconstruct and integrate forms of visual or experience by making intangible into tangible.

(1045) In addition, we can combine material cultural heritage with intangible cultural heritage and make the preservation and transmission of cultural heritage more three-dimensional and deeper.

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(1046) As cars are becoming less dependent on people, the means and circumstances in which the product is used by consumers are also likely to undergo significant changes, with higher rates of participation in car sharing and short-term leasing programs.

(1047) In the not-too-distant future, a driverless car could come to you when you need it, and when you are done with it, it could then drive away without any need for a parking space.

(1048) Increases in car sharing and short-term leasing are also likely to be associated with a corresponding decrease in the importance of exterior car design.

(1049) Rather than serving as a medium for personalization and self-identity, car exteriors might increasingly come to represent a channel for advertising and other promotional activities, including brand ambassador programs, such as those offered by Free Car Media.

(1050) As a result, the symbolic meanings derived from cars and their relationship to consumer self-identity and status are likely to change in turn.

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(1051) My own reading and thinking habits have shifted dramatically since I first logged on to the Web fifteen years ago or so.

(1052) I now do the bulk of my reading and researching online.

(1053) And my brain has changed as a result.

(1054) Even as I’ve become more adept at navigating the rapids of the Net, I have experienced a steady decay in my ability to sustain my attention.

(1055) As I explained in the Atlantic in 2008, "What the Net seems to be doing is chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation.

(1056) My mind now expects to take in information the way the Net distributes it: in a swiftly moving stream of particles."

(1057) Knowing that the depth of our thought is tied directly to the intensity of our attentiveness, it's hard not to conclude that as we adapt to the intellectual environment of the Net our thinking becomes shallower.

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(1058) Cognitive computing is supported by machine learning and deep learning technology, which allows computers to autonomously learn from data.

(1059) This technology means computers can change and improve their algorithms by themselves, without being explicitly programmed by humans.

(1060) How does it work?

(1061) Put simply, if we give the computer a picture of a cat and a picture of a ball, and show it which one is the cat, we can then ask it to decide if subsequent pictures contain cats.

(1062) The computer compares other images to its training data set (i.e.

(1063) the original cat image) and comes up with an answer.

(1064) Today’s machine learning algorithms can do this unsupervised, meaning they do not need their decisions to be pre-programmed.

(1065) The same principle applies to even more complex tasks, albeit with a much larger training set.

(1066) Google’s voice recognition algorithms, for instance, work from a massive training set, but it’s still not nearly big enough to predict every possible word, phrase or question.

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(1067) For leader, eternally in the spotlight, the most important ingredient for gaining followers’ confidence is to live up to expectations, particularly the expectations they have created themselves.

(1068) Leaders need to do what they promise and practice what they preach.

(1069) Followers are very sensitive to leaders who seem to go back on their word and/or don’t take their own medicine.

(1070) In many languages, the saying is that confidence "comes by foot and leaves by horse," which goes to show that the speed at which confidence can crumble has been known to humanity for a long time.

(1071) Therefore, leaders need to safeguard the faith that people have in them by acting in accordance with the expectations they have raised themselves – they need to "walk the talk" instead of only being the "sage on stage" who has all the wise words but exhibits few of the wise deeds.

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(1072) There are physiological processes that take place when we are faced with something that scares us.

(1073) When we’re frightened, the brain releases two groups of chemicals, endocannabinoids and opioids.

(1074) As they surge through our systems, these chemicals keep us from feeling pain and give us a rush of energy and clarity that can help us when we need it most.

(1075) You’ve heard of average-size mothers finding the strength to pull heavy objects off their children before they’re crushed.

(1076) That’s adrenaline, one of the hormones triggered by fear.

(1077) Many survivors of natural disasters and plane crashes talk about how in the heat of the moment, they just did what they had to do, without awareness of their injuries or any feeling of loss of control.

(1078) In these cases, fear actually enables people to take extreme measures in order to survive.

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(1079) Several studies find situational cues can radically change people’s mental set about what is normatively appropriate in a social dilemma.

(1080) For example, different groups of students in one study played a dilemma game according to identical rules, with only the name of the game varying.

(1081) Students were much more generous and cooperative when the game was called the "Community Game" than when the same game was labeled the "Wall Street Game."

(1082) In an even more subtle manipulation of social norms, half the students in one experiment were primed for interdependence (by completing sentences containing words such as "group," "friendships," or "together") while the other half were primed for independence (by completing sentences containing words such as "independent," "individual," or "self-contained").

(1083) The students who were primed for interdependence were later more cooperative and trusting in a public-goods dilemma.

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(1084) Consider social media.

(1085) Let’s say it’s Friday night and you plan to go to the cinema, but you are not sure what to see.

(1086) You ask your online friends for their advice.

(1087) Ten people comment, and seven of them suggest The Theory of Everything.

(1088) Did seven people like The Theory of Everything so must that the movie instantly came to mind when they commented on your post?

(1089) Maybe.

(1090) Here is another possibility: one friend recommended the movie on your page and the others were then biased in that direction.

(1091) Once a friend or two recommended the film, other friends who did not like the movie as much refrained from saying so, or even avoided recommending a different film so as not to offend the others or stand out as a black sheep.

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(1092) One of the most fundamental characteristics of money is that it acts as an easily transportable store of value.

(1093) The fruits of our labor can be held in a crystallized form – instead of exchanging work directly for goods, we exchange it for cash, which can then be spent at our convenience.

(1094) Money therefore holds value the same way a battery holds energy, and makes it movable both in time and space (unlike some other stores of value, such as land).

(1095) A paycheck in one’s pocket can be spent whenever and wherever one wants – providing, of course, that someone is willing to accept it.

(1096) To be of use, money must be not just portable but also easily exchangeable.

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(1097) In recent years, several theorists have considered knowledge as the main source of competitive advantage.

(1098) These theorists argue that post-industrial society - and indeed the entire economy – is increasingly based on knowledge production.

(1099) Therefore, the expression "Knowledge Society" is an apt description of the contemporary world.

(1100) The emergence of the knowledge society can be conceptualized on a relative or on an absolute basis in relation to industrial society.

(1101) From the relative perspective, the knowledge society is an evolutionary development, where the production of knowledge becomes relatively more important than the production of tangible goods in the economy.

(1102) From the absolute perspective, the knowledge society represents a more radical change, because it enables new forms of knowledge socialization and new possibilities to store the output of learning across time and space.

(1103) In the absolute approach, knowledge society is contrasted with industrial society as post-industrial society, with capitalism as post-capitalist society, and with modern society as postmodern society.

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(1104) Suppose a donut store has three workers working in limited, often confined kitchen space.

(1105) To increase productivity, the store may want to employ more workers.

(1106) For a period of time, the workers will help productivity.

(1107) Over time with each new worker added, production will begin to increase at smaller intervals.

(1108) Soon, the workers will start getting in one another’s way, and this will result in negative growth for the store.

(1109) The workers will have to wait in line to use the machinery, walkway spaces will become crammed with people and raw materials, and the store would turn into one giant mess.

(1110) Consequently, the total product of the store will start diminishing; the marginal product of additional workers will decline because of the amount of labor relative to machinery.

(1111) In time, if the store continues to hire more employees, the total product will go to zero due to the lack of store space.

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(1112) One impact of the growth of the older population is the increased visibility of aging, which results in more awareness among the general population about older people, and about the diversity and uniqueness among older individuals.

(1113) As older people become more numerous and visible, stereotypical attitudes and discriminatory practices that disadvantage older people are more likely to be challenged.

(1114) For example, in comparing magazine advertisements in the year 2014 to those from 1980, we see a marked increase in both the number of ads that feature older people and in the average age of many models.

(1115) While most people in ads are still young, our images of aging are changing along with heightened awareness of the aging of society.

(1116) There may be no better example of this trend than the skyrocketing popularity of TV personality Betty White, age 92 at the time of this writing.

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(1117) Food is, indeed, rather like language, but one can be more free with food.

(1118) It is not so tightly structured as the elements of language are.

(1119) Consider the simplest case: the similarity of combining phonemes into a word and ingredients into a dish.

(1120) "Tree" has three phonemes: /t/, /r/, and /i/ (/i/ is used to write the "ee" sound in standard sound transcriptions).

(1121) A minimal sort of Texas chili might have three ingredients: beans, chili, and meat.

(1122) With the word, if you mispronounce it (dree), drag out one sound (treeee), write it, yell it, or otherwise mangle it, it is still "the same word" to an English speaker.

(1123) With the food, tripling the chili, or using a different type of bean, changes the dish materially and provides a quite different experience.

(1124) To that extent, food is less tightly structured.

(1125) One does not automatically reduce a range of different experiences to "the same thing."

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(1126) The role of nutrients has often been interpreted outside the context of the foods, dietary patterns, and broader social contexts in which they are found.

(1127) Nutrition experts have, for example, made definitive statements about the role of single nutrients, such as the role of fat or fiber, in isolation from the foods in which we find them.

(1128) This single-nutrient reductionism often ignores or simplifies the interactions among nutrients within foods and within the body.

(1129) It has also involved the premature translation of an observed statistical association between single nutrients and diseases into a deterministic or causal relationship, according to which single nutrients are claimed to directly cause, or at least increase the risk of, particular disease.

(1130) Nutrition scientists have also tended to exaggerate any beneficial or harmful health effects of single nutrients.

(1131) For example, the harmful effects of total fat, saturated fat, and dietary cholesterol – and the benefits of polyunsaturated fats, omega-3 fats, any vitamin D- have all, arguably, been exaggerated, if not in some cases seriously misrepresented, over the years.

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(1132) Soldiers’ wartime exposure to commercially canned foods, though occasional, generated the beginnings of consumer trust.

(1133) This trust flowed back up the chain of production, providing the first faint signs of wider demand that canners needed in order to innovate and expand.

(1134) Tastes were often slow to change when ordinary consumers were given a choice between new products and their go-to standards.

(1135) But because army men in the American Civil War had little choice when it came to their food supply, they gave new foods a chance and widened their palates to partially accommodate canned foods.

(1136) After the war, they brought these new preferences home with them.

(1137) The nature of trust that these battlefield encounters fostered was not yet rooted din scientific certainty, a better understanding of the risks, or knowledge of where the food had come from.

(1138) Rather, it sprang from exposure and familiarity that made a new kind of food seem worth sampling and its convenience and accessibility worth appreciating.

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(1139) We need to find out why people are not naturally motivated to eat sensibly and take exercise, and why the motivation to consumer alcohol or to smoke persists in spite of their harmful effects on the body.

(1140) The probable reason is that good or bad effects are not felt immediately but only several years or even decades later.

(1141) With regard to nutrition there is some feedback from research, but it takes a very long time for the results of research to spread through society.

(1142) The explanation is that the mechanisms of biochemical adaptation oppose clinical manifestations of nutritional imbalances (deficits or excesses of nutrients) and pronounced disturbances or disease arise only after the adaptation reserves have become exhausted.

(1143) A similar phenomenon is observed with chronic consumption of alcohol and heavy smoking over a long period.

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(1144) For many communities, the tree pruning cycle runs over the course of many years.

(1145) Out city staff is focused on large tree removals and mature trees that need specialized equipment to reach and prune.

(1146) Smaller trees, however, can be pruned from the ground level by citizen volunteers.

(1147) To become a volunteer, you will first learn information about pruning, safety, and how to make proper pruning cuts.

(1148) The pruning training takes roughly 3~4 hours of class time, then you head out to the field to practice your pruning skills with a group.

(1149) Any amount of pruning time you can offer lends a great deal of help to the community to ensure a healthier urban forest.

(1150) If you are interested and want to join the mailing list for updates on upcoming trainings and events, go to www.mntreesource.org.

(1151) Go to the ‘Communities’ tab and click on ‘Maple Grove’ to access the sign-up form

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(1152) One day, my father and I were working in the orchard, when the sky turned midnight pitch black at noontime.

(1153) My father advised that we take the fruit and return to the house.

(1154) Just as we got home, the wind began to blow so hard that we couldn't see anything but debris blowing around outside the house.

(1155) We heard a cracking noise and decided to take shelter in the cellar.

(1156) Shortly after we arrived in the cellar, it grew deathly quiet and the rain came down in sheets.

(1157) We discovered after the storm, carrying everything in the shed out into the fields, including my father’s tools.

(1158) Before we could gather them up again, people came in droves, even our neighbors, and stole the tools.

(1159) There were so many thieves that we couldn’t stop them or prove that the tools were ours

수특T103
(1160) As a parent, can you get through to your kids?

(1161) Visualize the job of the professional communicator who is trying to get through to millions at the same time.

(1162) Is it any wonder that children’s commercials appear so simpleminded?

(1163) The communicator, without a sharp focus on which group he or she is addressing, risks going over the heads of the younger ones or appearing dumb to the older ones.

(1164) In commercials, where brevity is essential, omissions of certain details appear deliberately dishonest and the inclusion of too many details is both awkward and confusing to the younger part of the group.

(1165) I am convinced that any critic of children’s commercials should try to write one.

(1166) They would develop a greater understanding of the problem.

(1167) It is a difficult and perplexing art at best

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(1168) Success obviously adds to our enjoyment of games and work.

(1169) However, contrary to the rhetoric of coaches and inspirational leaders, this does not mean that we have to "win" all the time.

(1170) A few years ago, there was an advertisement on television featuring basketball player Michael Jordan.

(1171) In the ad, Jordan explained that from elementary school through his career in the NBA, he had played in 4,900 games.

(1172) Thirty-nine times he had been in a position to win the game with the last shot — and missed.

(1173) Was basketball fun for him even though he missed those shots and his team lost those games?

(1174) I have no doubt that it is more fun to win the game than to lose.

(1175) However, I believe the biggest source of joy to Jordan and other athletes — as well as to people in the workplace — is the opportunity to use their abilities when it really counts.

(1176) From the perspective of the individual working person, the key to a great workplace is feeling wanted and important

수특T105
(1177) In a New York Times interview with Gary Smith, the CEO of telecommunications company Ciena, he emphasizes the value of "soft skills": "Relationships really matter, and you need to get that right, both for your career as an individual and as a future leader.

(1178) I think a lot of people pay attention to the technical stuff and the hard stuff.

(1179) But it’s the softer side that will get you every time if you’re not paying attention to it.

(1180) It’s probably the biggest determinant of whether you’re going to be successful."

(1181) We most often use the term "soft skills" in relationship to emotional intelligence, or EQ.

(1182) These skills are the social graces and interpersonal skills that are less easily defined or quantified than hard skills, but which often factor as key differentiators

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(1183) Biologists report that many birds and sea mammals have the ability to sleep with only one hemisphere of the brain at a time.

(1184) Whales, dolphins, and seals cannot afford to shut down consciousness altogether because they are conscious breathers; when it is time to rest, they float on the surface of the water like logs or paddle in circles, keeping one half of their brains awake while the other half sleeps.

(1185) Then they roll over or switch directions to give the other side a rest.

(1186) Migratory birds employ a variety of half-asleep, half-awake states in order to cover great distances quickly.

(1187) Even more sedentary birds, like mallard ducks, can sleep one hemisphere at a time.

(1188) Since they typically sleep in rows, the ducks at the ends of the lines keep one eye open to watch for predators.

(1189) Periodically, these guards turn around and switch places so the other half of their brains and bodies can sleep

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(1190) In the 1940s, when he was a student at the California Institute of Technology, John McCarthy attended a lecture by Hungarian-American mathematician John von Neumann about "self-replicating automata," or machines that could make copies of themselves.

(1191) (No such machines existed.

(1192) Von Neumann’s idea was just a theory.)

(1193) After the lecture, McCarthy reasoned that a machine that could reproduce itself might be able to attain some form of intelligence.

(1194) The idea stuck in his mind.

(1195) In 1964 McCarthy joined the faculty of Stanford University in California and founded the school’s AI (Artificial Intelligence) lab.

(1196) At that time, he was optimistic that scientists could create an AI system within ten years.

(1197) In later life, McCarthy had a more realistic view.

(1198) Writing for the Journal of the Association for Computing Machinery in 2003, he set the odds of achieving artificial intelligence at "0.5 probability in the next 49 years, but a 0.25 probability that 49 years from now, the problems will be just as confusing as they are today."

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(1199) Integrators uncover opportunities by combining contrasting ideas.

(1200) Merging opposites can yield breakthrough discoveries.

(1201) Although no one formula exists, novelty through integration is a phenomenon studied by creativity researchers.

(1202) Thomas Ward, a psychology professor at the University of Alabama, analyzed the processes that uncover new ideas and found that atypical combinations yield the greatest number of emergent properties.

(1203) In 2002, Ward conducted research in which college students interpreted various types of adjective-noun combinations and were told to "think of a single meaning that best describes the pair."

(1204) His most notable finding was that unusual combinations, such as "undressed enemy" or "entertaining delay," and pairs of words with opposing meanings, such as "healthy illness" or "painful joy" prompted the most creative responses

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(1205) Notation was more than a practical method for preserving an expanding repertoire of music.

(1206) It changed the nature of the art itself.

(1207) To write something down means that people far away in space and time can recreate it.

(1208) At the same time, there are downsides.

(1209) Written notes freeze the music rather than allowing it to develop in the hands of individuals, and it discourages improvisation.

(1210) Partly because of notation, modern classical performance lacks the depth of nuance that is part of aural tradition.

(1211) Before notation arrived, in all history music was largely carried on as an aural tradition.

(1212) Most world music is still basically aural, including sophisticated musical traditions such as Indian and Balinese.

(1213) Most jazz musicians can read music but often don't bother, and their art is much involved with improvisation.

(1214) Many modern pop musicians, one example being Paul McCartney, can’t read music at all

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(1215) Anna Margolin was eighteen and a half when she went to America for the first time, in 1906.

(1216) Her Aunt Lena welcomed her as her own child.

(1217) She got her own room in the spacious house on Rodney Street, in Williamsburg, and was dressed and cared for as a daughter.

(1218) A tutor was soon hired who came to the house every evening to teach her English.

(1219) In the house were her aunt’s own two children, one of whom later became a prominent doctor.

(1220) They were both, it seems, younger than she and very respectful of her.

(1221) For several weeks, Anna Margolin felt that her aunt’s house was a paradise.

(1222) Her aunt and uncle would leave the house soon after breakfast to go to their business.

(1223) The children were away at school, and she was left in the house by herself.

(1224) She had nothing to say to the maid, and besides, the maid was busy with their work.

(1225) The few books that Anna Margolin found in her aunt’s house she quickly read.

(1226) She began to grow bored

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(1227) The brain’s memory store has revealed itself to be far more flexible than anyone ever imagined.

(1228) John Ratey cites the example of a brilliant young American violinist called Martha Curtis.

(1229) As she grew up, Martha suffered such distributing epileptic seizures that doctors decided they had to remove the part of her brain responsible for her seizures.

(1230) The problem was that the part involved was that identified with musical skill.

(1231) Surgeons cut away a little at first, fearing Martha would lose her musical gift.

(1232) Eventually they had to remove the whole area in order to stop the seizures.

(1233) Remarkably, the surgery, though stopping her fits, had no effect on her musicianship at all — she played as beautifully as ever.

(1234) It turned out that when she had learned the violin as a child, her brain had simply rewired itself and sent the memories of her skill to another, undamaged region of the brain

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(1235) There is a real investment made by many of us today in the idea that artistic practice was liberated when judgments of both taste and politics ceased to be the criterion for (good) art.

(1236) But there has been a price, and it is artists who pay it — although the opposite might at first appear to be the case.

(1237) The contemporary art world values artists, not art.

(1238) No art objects are necessary.

(1239) No social or political usefulness is required.

(1240) Artistic practices have been deregulated.

(1241) They are strategies chosen by artists themselves as an expression of their individual and uncensored freedom.

(1242) Artists are iconic embodiments, almost advertisements, for the slogan (if not the reality) of "freedom of speech."

(1243) I say not the reality, because to a significant degree it is the museum, the curatorial decision, and the biennials that legitimate the artists, on which they (un-freely) depend

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(1244) In the twenty-first century, biotechnology could be used in many different ways.

(1245) On the one hand, we could use it to design cows, pigs, and chickens who grow faster and produce more meat, without any thought about the suffering we inflict on these animals.

(1246) On the other hand, we could use biotechnology to create clean meat — real meat that is grown from animal cells, without any need of raising and slaughtering entire creatures.

(1247) If we follow that path, biotechnology may well be transformed from the nemesis of farm animals into their salvation.

(1248) It could produce the meat so many humans crave without taking such an enormous toll on the planet, since growing meat is much more efficient than raising animals to later turn into that same meet

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(1249) Whereas characters’ names are rarely changed in the translation of adult fiction, translators writing for children often adapt them, for example by using equivalents in the target language such as Hans/John/Jean, William/Guillermo/Guillaume, Alice/Alicia.

(1250) This issue causes a lot of disagreement, however, since names are a powerful signal of social and cultural context.

(1251) If left untranslated, names constantly remind young readers that they are reading a story set in another country, whereas the use of an equivalent name or an alternative in the target language may lead to an incongruous relationship between names and setting.

(1252) Nonetheless, editors and translators fear that children might struggle with foreign names, thus giving rise to a dilemma that Anthea Bell cites in her ‘Translator’s notebook’: "The idea behind all this is to avoid putting young readers off by presenting them with an impenetrable-looking set of foreign names the moment they open a book.

(1253) It’s the kind of problem that constantly challenges a translator of children’s literature."

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(1254) In developing countries, maintaining the actual food production capacity for the current generation is likely to be more of an issue.

(1255) In such contexts, the experiences of older industrialized countries in trying to protect their agricultural land resource base are instructive.

(1256) This experience tells us that reserving areas for agricultural production, however strict, provides no guarantee of continued agricultural production.

(1257) This depends more on the continued possibility for farmers and their families to continue to earn a decent income and support with other measures such as a tax reduction schemes, tools to help farmers market their produce more effectively, and the provision of sound advice on production practices near urban zones

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(1258) In the case of perfume and odours emitted from non-food sources, people believed they were intuitively able to differentiate between ‘naturally-occurring’ and ‘synthetic’ odours by the nature of the source.

(1259) "Synthetic" is defined in the Oxford English Dictionary as ‘a substance made by chemical synthesis, especially to imitate a natural product’.

(1260) Perfumes, for example, were generally described as synthetic, whereas leather was considered to have its own natural odour.

(1261) However, the distinction between naturally-occurring odours and those of synthetic origin is not as straightforward as it might seem; the odour of leather, for example, comes about as a result of tanning, which is itself a chemically-dependent process.

(1262) Also, synthetic odours of leather are frequently used in product manufacturing processes in order to provide an illusion of leather and an association with quality and newness, as is the case when these odours are sprayed into some new cars.

(1263) Furthermore, some odours of perfume are produced by combinations or extractions of naturally occurring products.

(1264) The line between natural and unnatural, genuine and synthetic is therefore highly blurred with respect to the perception of smell, with distinctions varying between people

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(1265) I had broken my leg skiing last winter — first time down the hill — and had received some money from a school insurance policy designed to reward unfortunate, clumsy children.

(1266) I purchased a cassette recorder with the proceeds.

(1267) My dad suggested that I sit on the back lawn, record the wren’s song, play it back, and watch what happened.

(1268) So, I went out into the bright spring sunlight and taped a few minutes of the wren laying furious claim to his territory with song.

(1269) Then I let him hear his own voice.

(1270) That little bird, one-third the size of a sparrow, began to dive-bomb me and my cassette recorder, attacking back and forth, inches from the speaker.

(1271) We saw a lot of that sort of behavior, even in the absence of the tape recorder.

(1272) If a larger bird ever dared to sit and rest in any of the tress near our birdhouse there was a good chance he would get knocked off his perch by a diving wren

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(1273) Some people have defined wildlife damage management as the science and management of overabundant species, but this definition is too narrow.

(1274) All wildlife species act in ways that harm human interests.

(1275) Thus, all species cause wildlife damage, not just overabundant ones.

(1276) One interesting example of this involves endangered peregrine falcons in California, which prey on another endangered species, the California least tern.

(1277) Certainly, we would not consider peregrine falcons as being overabundant, but we wish that they would not feed on an endangered species.

(1278) In this case, one of the negative values associated with a peregrine falcon population is that its predation reduces the population of another endangered species.

(1279) The goal of wildlife damage management in this case would be to stop the falcons from eating the terns without harming the falcons

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(1280) Computers are extremely poor at making inferences and deducing relationships.

(1281) Computer programmers, Jeff Hawkins argues, take the wrong approach in trying to make machines do these things.

(1282) They write programs that carry out top-down analysis, trying to match objects against predefined taxonomies.

(1283) The brain, on the other hand, makes inferences and deduces relationships very quickly and efficiently.

(1284) It does this by comparing an unknown object to the nearest match to it that it can find in its neural circuitry.

(1285) For example, an unfamiliar breed of dog is quickly recognized as a dog because the brain’s neural representation of dogness is the nearest match to its shape.

(1286) The brain can quickly find matches and near-matches because its neurons are massively interconnected

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(1287) It may seem odd to suggest that numbers are a human invention.

(1288) After all, some might say, regardless of whether humans ever existed, there would still be predictable numbers in nature, be it eight (octopus legs), four (seasons), twenty-nine (days in a lunar cycle), and so on.

(1289) Strictly speaking, however, these are simply regularly occurring quantities.

(1290) Quantities and correspondences between quantities might be said to exist apart from the human mental experience.

(1291) Octopus legs would occur in regular groups even if we were unable to perceive that regularity.

(1292) Numbers, though, are the words and other symbolic representations we use to differentiate quantities.

(1293) Much as color terms create clearer mental boundaries between colors along adjacent portions of the visible light spectrum, numbers create conceptual boundaries between quantities.

(1294) Those boundaries may reflect a real division between quantities in the physical world, but these divisions are generally inaccessible to the human mind without numbers

수특T12425
(1295) The mind has a remarkable facility for categorizing new experiences into learned patterns largely shared withing a culture.

(1296) This process transforms the new into the familiar and allows us to make sense of the new sounds and images we encounter every day.

(1297) So, no matter how musically open-minded we try to be, our experiences can lead us to expect music to exhibit certain common elements in certain contexts.

(1298) For example, a person growing up in the United States is inclined to expect harmony as a standard musical trait.

(1299) Harmony, several notes occurring at the same time to form a chord, is found in virtually everything we hear on the radio and in music videos, film scores, classical music concerts, and church choirs.

(1300) But this musical element, at least in the familiar chords of the West, is a European invention.

(1301) Thus, we may find music without harmony strangely thin and find ourselves missing what’s not there instead of listening to what is there — to other dimensions of sound and to nuances of melodic variation and pitch, for instance.

(1302) Furthermore, sound is not the only dimension that shapes our musical expectations.

(1303) We also understand musical experiences through their place in our social lives, through their context.

(1304) Much of the music making that we hear in Western culture comes from professionals who are paid to entertain.

(1305) At a partly, few nonprofessionals would feel comfortable singing a song for others.

(1306) But in many areas of traditional Africa, where not singing is like not talking, everybody signs as a natural social function

수특T12628
(1307) There was once a tribe of people who lived in a cave high on a hillside.

(1308) There they hunted for food, gathered the fruits that the earth yielded, cared for their children, listened to the wisdom of the elders, struggled, loved, and laughed together.

(1309) They thought they were the only people on earth.

(1310) They had no fears.

(1311) They had no enemies.

(1312) It happened that one day some people from a different tribe came through the valley.

(1313) They too were looking for a cave to make into a home.

(1314) All they desired was a place to hunt and gather food.

(1315) Their whole ambition was to live and love and laugh together, raise their children and honour the elders.

(1316) The world, after all, was a very big place.

(1317) When the first group of cave-dwellers saw these unexpected arrivals, they began to wonder: who are these people?

(1318) Can we trust them?

(1319) And then, just in case these newcomers should prove to be hostile, they began to build a pile of stones with which to defend themselves.

(1320) The new arrivals, in their turn, looked across the valley and there on the opposite hillside they saw the growing pile of stones.

(1321) The people here seemed to be very warlike.

(1322) Were they intending to attack them with those stones?

(1323) How should they defend themselves if they did?

(1324) So they too began to build up a pile of stones.

(1325) And the people of the first tribe began to mutter to each other, "See, didn’t we know it?

(1326) These newcomers are hostile.

(1327) They are piling up stones to attack us.

(1328) We should build our pile of stones even higher."

(1329) And so it went on, each group adding more and more stones to their pile, their mutual distrust growing greater every day.

(1330) Until eventually the piles of stones were so high that neither tribe could see the faces of their neighbours any longer.

(1331) All they could see was an enemy

수특T201
(1332) Dear Dr. Jackson: Two colleagues and I have completed a survey of 500 staff nurses in long-term care throughout the United States.

(1333) We asked about their knowledge and information needs regarding long-term care federal rules and regulations.

(1334) A manuscript titled "Nurses’ Knowledge and Information Needs Regarding Long-Term Care Federal Regulations" is in process.

(1335) The manuscript details the results of a survey sent to staff nurses in long-term care settings throughout the United States.

(1336) The survey met rigorous review standards before use and had a return response rate of 44%.

(1337) Interesting findings are noted.

(1338) Overall, it was found that staff nurses are very knowledgeable regarding long-term care rules and regulations.

(1339) Would you be interested in reviewing this manuscript?

(1340) This manuscript is not under review by any other journal and is being submitted exclusively to you.

(1341) Thank you for your time and support in this endeavor.

(1342) I look forward to your response.

(1343) Sincerely yours, Christopher Freeman

수특T202
(1344) After all the glider pilots land, they stand on a platform to receive their awards.

(1345) There are many photographers taking pictures.

(1346) Rick and Gloria stand very proud.

(1347) Butch is also very proud of his students.

(1348) Butch has also brought a camera and is taking pictures of all the pilots.

(1349) Butch’s friend brings everybody big hotdogs selling on the field.

(1350) "Gosh, I’m hungry," says Gloria.

(1351) Rick also eats real fast.

(1352) The first pilot that came in first place is awarded one thousand dollars and a beautiful big trophy.

(1353) He makes a speech and says how proud he is to receive it.

(1354) Gloria receives five hundred dollars and a tall, beautiful trophy.

(1355) She also makes a speech and tells everyone how proud she is to have participated in the contest.

(1356) She continues to say that she had no idea she would come in second place and that she feels very excited on how everything turned out.

(1357) Everybody claps for Gloria

수특T203
(1358) Start by realising that you must look after yourself first, otherwise you’ll be of no use to others —there’s a reason why airlines tell you to fit your own oxygen mask first in case of an emergency —if you’re not okay, you can’t hope to be of service and assistance to others.

(1359) It’s not selfish, it’s essential to look after yourself first.

(1360) You might start to do that by learning to say ‘no’ to unreasonable requests and demands on your time —and to do it guilt-free.

(1361) That might take a little practice, especially if you’re someone who’s used to saying ‘yes’ to everything that’s asked of you.

(1362) Next time you’re feeling overburdened by other people’s demands, don’t feel resentful of them for asking —you’re the one who said ‘yes’ and put yourself in the situation —and you’re the one who can change it by learning to say a guilt-free ‘no’

수특T204
(1363) For a long period in human evolution, our ancestors lived as hunter-gatherers.

(1364) Moving across plains and mountains to hunt game and gather nuts and berries was necessary to our survival.

(1365) This means that our minds and bodies evolved in the setting of an active lifestyle.

(1366) Physical activity seems to be programmed into our genes.

(1367) But the amount of activity that young kids, adults, and senior citizens get today is usually well below what we are genetically predisposed to do.

(1368) The consequences of a sedentary existence are evidenced by ill health in body and mind.

(1369) Children who are more physically fit perform better on academic tests.

(1370) Elderly people who are active have a lower risk and incidence of memory loss and loss of other important cognitive functions.

(1371) Providing kids with opportunities to be active and to exercise helps sharpen their mental as well as their physical muscles.

(1372) And a regular exercise regimen for adults helps prevent mental decline

수특T205
(1373) The deal of a "job for life" in return for compliance has all but disappeared.

(1374) For employers and employees alike, the challenge has become employability, with its paradoxical consequences: to attract and keep the best in the war for talent, employers offer future employees the opportunity to enhance their employability (competence, reputation, experience, etc.)

(1375) and to be better equipped to find a job elsewhere.

(1376) Extrinsic motivation factors, such as salary, health cover or security, are no longer the only parameters involved: intrinsic motivation factors, such as belonging, recognition, personal development and self-actualization, are moving up the priority list for the brightest and best.

(1377) As new generations such as Generations Y and Z permeate the workforce, and take up positions of responsibility, they will reinforce the need for companies to consider the requirement for a sense of meaning in work, the need for trust and creativity, and the opportunity to become a creator in a context of collective responsibility.

(1378) Failing this, they will simply go elsewhere, create their own start-ups, or go freelance

수특T206
(1379) When older bees begin collecting nectar and pollen from outside the hive, their brains change, and not really for the better.

(1380) For example, after they memorize the surroundings of the hive, they lose the ability to learn new things.

(1381) Normally, they stay that way until they die.

(1382) However, sometimes "normal" gets disrupted; for example, if a hive has to grow a new queen, there can be a month-long gap before any new bees hatch.

(1383) Normally, that would mean the larvae from the new queen wouldn’t have young nursery workers available to take care of them, and they’d die.

(1384) In that case, some of the field bees return to the nursery worker job.

(1385) Here’s where it gets interesting: researchers from Arizona Stare University discovered that going back to larvae-rearing makes their old brains work again like young brains, restoring their mental agility and ability to learn

수특T210
(1386) Mary Louise Booth was born on April 19, 1831, in Millville (present-day Yaphank), Long Island, New York.

(1387) Her parents were William Chatfield Booth, a descendant of John Booth, who in 1652 took title to Shelter Island, off Long Island, and Nancy (Monsell) Booth, granddaughter of a French Revolutionary emigrant.

(1388) Mary Louise was largely self-taught but was considered to be very intelligent; she was said to have read Plutarch at fice and Racine at seven.

(1389) Around 1845-46, she taught in the Third District School in Williamsburgh, where her father was principal.

(1390) At age eighteen and wrote at night.

(1391) She published without pay until she became a paid reporter for the New York Times, writing on education and women’s topics.

(1392) She became friends with Susan B. Anthony and joined the women’s rights movement, serving as secretary at the conventions in Saratoga, New York, in 1855 and New York City in 1860

수특T211
(1393) Many containers of our canned soups, beans and soft drinks have been found to contain a controversial chemical called bisphenol A (BPA).

(1394) This chemical can leak out of the can linings into your food.

(1395) The plastics industry says BPA is harmless, but a growing number of scientists are concluding, through animal tests, that exposure to BPA raises the risk of certain cancers.

(1396) Does the plastics industry have your health in their best interests?

(1397) Most likely, not, so be careful and pay attention to the warning.

(1398) Plastic water and baby bottles, food and beverage can linings and dental sealants are the most commonly encountered uses of this chemical.

(1399) BPA has been found to leak from bottles.

(1400) It moves from can liners into foods, soda, and even from epoxy resin-lined barrels into wine

수특T212
(1401) When a dog is trained to detect drugs, explosives, contraband, or other items, the trainer doesn’t actually teach the dog how to smell; the dog already knows how to discriminate one scent from another.

(1402) Rather, the dog is trained to become emotionally aroused by one smell versus another.

(1403) In the step-by-step training process, the trainer attaches an "emotional charge" to a particular scent so that the dog is drawn to it above all others.

(1404) And then the dog is trained to search out the desired item on cue, so that the trainer can control or release the behavior.

(1405) This emotional arousal is also why playing tug with a dog is a more powerful emotional reward in a training regime than just giving a dog a food treat, since the trainer invests more emotion into a game of tug.

(1406) From a dog’s point of view, the tug toy is compelling because the trainer is "upset" by the toy

수특T213
(1407) Zac ran up to his dad, Mike, as soon as Mike walked through the door.

(1408) "How was your day, Dad?"

(1409) he blurted out.

(1410) Zac was a great kid but not the type who was always looking to butter up an adult.

(1411) Mike looked at Zac with curiosity, surprised by his friendly and polite behavior.

(1412) He wondered if everything was okay or if he was about to find out from his wife, Rachel, that Zac was in trouble.

(1413) As he was about to push that thought to the side, Rachel walked into the room and filled him in on Zac’s cowardly deeds of the day.

(1414) Zac and Mike both stood there listening to Rachel retell the trampoline story.

(1415) Mike was more lenient about rought play, so he didn’t get quite as upset as Rachel had.

(1416) Mike watched Zac out of the corner of his eye and could tell he was surprised at the detail Rachel was providing.

(1417) At one point, he could see Zac shaking his head back and forth as if to silently say, "I didn’t do that or that or even that."

수특T214
(1418) In a letter written in 1675 to Henry Oldenburg, the secretary of the Royal Society, Newton confessed that his eyes were "not very critical in distinguishing colors."

(1419) Once he saw eleven in the rainbow.

(1420) Usually he saw only five —red, yellow, green, blue, and violet — until he looked again or, rather, until he stopped looking.

(1421) There were seven musical notes in the diatonic scale.

(1422) The world was created in seven days.

(1423) And the rainbow was a sign of cosmic harmony, so it had to have seven colors — and Newton therefore added (saw?)

(1424) orange between red and yellow, and indigo between blue and violet.

(1425) Although Shakespeare in King John had said it was a "wasteful and ridiculous excess" to "add another hue Unto the rainbow," for Newton it was necessary to add two to those he had seen.

(1426) Our seven-colored rainbow was born, though more as a child of faith than as one of science

수특T215
(1427) Much of what we do each day is automatic and guided by habit, requiring little conscious awareness, and that’s not a bad thing.

(1428) As Duhigg explains, our habits are necessary mental energy savers.

(1429) We need to relieve our conscious minds so we can solve new problems as they come up.

(1430) Once we’ve solved the puzzle of how to ballroom dance, for example, we can do it by habit, and so be mentally freed to focus on a conversation while dancing instead.

(1431) But try to talk when first learning to dance the tango, and it’s a disaster — we need our conscious attention to focus on the steps.

(1432) Imagine how little we’d accomplish if we had to focus consciously on every behavior — e.g., on where to place our feet for each step we take

수특T216
(1433) In trying to show the adolescent how to express his feelings of disapproval in an appropriate fashion, I often use the following example.

(1434) Let’s say I ask your opinion of my shirt.

(1435) Suppose you really do not like it and think it looks terrible.

(1436) Now, you could respond to me in several different ways.

(1437) You could tell me, "That shirt looks like garbage.

(1438) I wouldn’t even use it to wash my car."

(1439) Or you could say, "You must have been drunk when you bought that shirt.

(1440) Nobody in his right mind would buy something like that."

(1441) Or you could just say, "I don’t care for that shirt."

(1442) The same thing has been expressed in three different ways.

(1443) In the first two ways, I am going to read what you’re saying as an attack, and will probably attack back and not understand what you are saying.

(1444) In the third expression of your feelings, I heard exactly what you said and now I have a better chance to respond appropriately

수특T217
(1445) Desmond Morris, a British zoologist, notes in his book Catwatching that "the domestic cat is a contradiction!"

(1446) Morris describes what he calls the animal’s "double life."

(1447) He feels that domestication has changed the cat very little, that "both in anatomy and behavior it is still remarkably like the African wild cat from which it was gradually developed."

(1448) Biologist John Bradshaw points out that the cat "is neither a man-made species like the dog, nor simply an animal made captive for utilitarian purposes, like the elephant."

(1449) He later asserts that "in behavioural terms, domestication has probably had less effect on the cat than on any other domestic mammal."

(1450) Mildred Kirk agrees, offering the term "house cat" in favor of "domestic cat," as the latter does not accurately describe the feline’s nature.

(1451) So people who encounter the cat in daily life may observe that the animal is both domestic and wild, or perhaps somewhere in between

수특T218
(1452) Even before we enter the store, display windows, signage, and entrances all express the image of the store and begin to get a person thinking like a consumer.

(1453) In Windows: The Art of Retail Display, Mary Portas suggests that "if eyes are the window to the soul, so shop windows reveal the soul of the store."

(1454) In trying to "turn a pedestrian into a customer," the windows make a visual statement about the store and the character of its customers.

(1455) The windows are a preview of the attractions inside, so they’re designed to catch the eye and, eventually, the rest of the customer.

(1456) They capitalize on what’s current and trendy in American culture, and they appeal to our desires, both deep and shallow

수특T219
(1457) When we’re depressed, play can seem like a foreign concept.

(1458) Sometimes when I ask my depressed clients what they envision when I say the word play, they look at me with a blank stare.

(1459) So I decided to conduct an experiment about play with a number of people I worked with, as well as some family and friends.

(1460) It was simple: I asked them all what play meant to them.

(1461) I found that many subjects I spoke with had a hard time conceiving what play is for grown-ups, because it’s different from child’s play, which was the only kind of play they knew.

(1462) This finding relates to a common thought of play.

(1463) In a culture that prizes productivity, adult play seems to be defined as a negative, unproductive, self-indulgent activity — or even something X-rated.

(1464) I believe that we need to update our definition of play

수특T220
(1465) Fear has a dominant role in the primitive hunting age, the agricultural age, the feudal age, the industrial age, the cyber age, the age of space, the age of atomic weapons, the age of virus, the fear age, and the fearless age.

(1466) In the primitive age, people had simple weapons, but later, they invented guns made of metals.

(1467) They invented such powerful weapons for protection from dangerous wild animals and other enemies.

(1468) It was difficult to protect themselves from storms, thunderbolts, rain, hail, snow, and winter during that period.

(1469) However, they didn’t have houses in the primitive age; they began to build houses to protect themselves from such disasters.

(1470) Moreover, they constructed bridges and roads.

(1471) They established industries.

(1472) It was a way towards production growth.

(1473) They did all this for liberation from fear.

(1474) Pleasure, secured freedom, and other amenities, thus, are selections by human beings

수특T221
(1475) Once formed, oil and natural gas do not necessarily stay trapped in the source rocks of their origin.

(1476) Instead, they can migrate in response to pressure differentials in the surrounding rock.

(1477) To do so, the source rock must have tiny pores that create pathways for the oil and gas to travel.

(1478) If the source rock is too fine-grained, then the petroleum material remains captured within the source rock.

(1479) Often the rock above the petroleum source rock is saturated with water; in this case, the gas and oil, both being lighter than water, ascend.

(1480) As a consequence, the typical migration route is upward or sideways, and it continues until the oil and gas encounter a barrier in the form of impermeable rock —rock that is too dense to contain the pores and pathways necessary for further migration.

(1481) Because the gas is lighter than oil, it accumulates above the oil and just beneath the impermeable rock that constitutes a seal and prevents further travel

수특T222
(1482) In 1890, Kodak introduced a cheap consumer camera that everyone could afford.

(1483) This put the portrait studios out of business; the newly unemployed photographers needed a way to distinguish between what they did and this new popular photography.

(1484) The movement of pictorialism was the response, with photographers attempting to imitate the artistic processes of painting; rather than reproducible photos, they worked directly on the negatives and other materials of the process.

(1485) They presented their works in art galleries, next to paintings.

(1486) The elements of an art world began to form: collegial groups called "photo clubs," a journal called Camera Work, and shows and openings.

(1487) However, art photography remained marginalized; there were no markets, buyers, or collectors, and museums were not interested in adding photos to their collections.

(1488) Pictorialism eventually died out with the outbreak of World War Ⅰ.

(1489) An art form can’t survive without a market, places for display, and collectors

수특T223
(1490) We know a great deal about the Sumerians’ maths, because, unlike the Egyptians, they didn’t use papyrus to record it papyrus slowly rots away as the moisture in the air gets to it, so other than a few existing examples, most of the documents the Egyptians produced have perished.

(1491) To record both their language and their mathematics, the Sumerians made marks in a piece of clay using a wedge-shaped stick called a stylus, which then hardened in the sun.

(1492) Fortunately, thousands of examples of their writing and mathematics have survived for us to study today, including shopping lists, business accounts, schoolwork, times tables and even mathematical research.

(1493) Before the Iraq war, when tourism was still possible, you could buy ancient tablets inscribed with calculations and lists.

(1494) All tablets, regardless of their size, could be bought for roughly the same price (about $5), so the sellers would break large samples into smaller pieces.

(1495) The overall loss for historians is hard to calculate, but tragically sad

수특T224-25
(1496) For migrant yearlings, the habitat-selection process is somewhat different, and in this regard comparison with the process in residents is instructive.

(1497) Resident-bird habitat selection is seemingly a straightforward process in which a young dispersing individual, pushed away from its birthplace by its parents and their neighbors, moves until it finds a place where it can compete successfully to satisfy its needs.

(1498) Initially, these needs include only food and shelter.

(1499) However, eventually, the young must locate, identify, and settle in a habitat that satisfies not only survivorship but reproductive needs as well.

(1500) In some cases, the habitat that provides the best opportunity for survival may not be the same habitat as the one that provides for highest reproductive capacity because of requirements specific to the reproductive period (e.g., availability of safe nesting sites).

(1501) Thus, individuals of many resident species, confronted with the fitness benefits of control over a productive breeding site, may be forced to balance costs in the form of lower nonbreeding survivorship by remaining in the specific habitat where highest breeding success occurs.

(1502) Migrants, however, are free to choose the optimal habitat for survival during the nonbreeding season and for reproduction during the breeding season.

(1503) Thus, habitat selection during these different periods can be quite different for migrants as opposed to residents, even among closely related species

수특T226-28
(1504) In St. Mary’s Church at Lubeck in Germany, there were some ancient wall paintings which had deteriorated over the centuries.

(1505) In 1948, Professor Dietrich Fey was given the task of sensitively restoring them to their former glory.

(1506) Unfortunately, he seriously botched the job and ended up destroying them.

(1507) The walls were left bare!

(1508) Embarrassing though this was, it would probably have been best for the professor if he’d admitted his terrible mistake and moved on.

(1509) Instead he had the brilliantly misguided idea of hiring an artist to paint some new pictures.

(1510) Incredibly, he didn’t even ask the artist – Lothar Malskat – to try to make them look like the original frescoes.

(1511) He let him paint what he liked so long as the pictures looked in keeping and suitably old!

(1512) Using illustrations in an art-history book as a guide, Malskat painted away behind a screen for years(while everyone thought painstaking restoration was under way).

(1513) In 1951, Professor Fey unveiled the fruits of ‘his work’.

(1514) Art critics and historians alike were falling over themselves to praise these ancient paintings given new life thanks to his undeniable expertise ... but there were a few puzzling factors, the biggest being a turkey.

(1515) One of Malskat’s much-admired pictures was of such a bird, but turkeys hadn't been introduced to Europe – from the New World – until hundreds of years after these pictures were supposedly painted!

(1516) Meawhile, Professor Fey and Herr Malskat fell out over something or other, and Malskat broke his silence, announcing that he had painted the fresco.

(1517) Amazingly, people seemed reluctant to believe him at first ... until he produced photographs of the blank walls after Fey’s accident!

(1518) Only then did the so-called experts notice that the paints used were modern, as was the plaster under them!

(1519) Not only that – and no chuckling, please – the faces of the saints included one of German film star Marlene Dietrich!!!

(1520) Both Fey and Malskat ended up in prison and the walls in St. Mary’s Church, Lubeck, were stripped bare

수특T301
(1521) Dear Neighbor, The Forest Preserves of Winnebago County will be conducting spring prescribed burning from now through the end of April.

(1522) Fall prescribed burning will be conducted from the beginning of October through the end of November.

(1523) A prescribed burn is a management technique used by trained and experienced professionals to control unwanted vegetation.

(1524) Burning is a very economical and efficient management tool in maintaining and preserving our natural plant communities.

(1525) We have met all guidelines and training required by the State of Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and possess the required permits.

(1526) Through the use of prescribed burning we can restore, preserve, and better manage our beautiful forests and prairies.

(1527) If you need more information about the burn, please visit our website.

(1528) You can find everything you need to know including notifications of when and where we are burning each day.

(1529) Thank you for your cooperation.

(1530) Michael Groves Natural Resource Manager

수특T302
(1531) Aaron had searched every inch of the small cell and saw no possibility of escape.

(1532) The vent down near the floor was about twelve inches across.

(1533) If he managed to pry off the screen, he still couldn’t fit in there.

(1534) Even if he was standing on the bed, he couldn’t reach the ceiling to feel for any loose panels.

(1535) There was a weird mental panel on the wall near the door.

(1536) It looked like some kind of drawer, but he couldn’t get it open.

(1537) Having seen The Shawshank Redemption about five times, Aaron even checked behind the inspirational posters to see if someone had started digging a tunnel.

(1538) But he was out of luck

수특T303
(1539) We are social beings, and connection to something greater than ourselves, even if we’re simply thinking about it, gives us resilience and makes us feel safe, protected, and at peace.

(1540) Psychologist Dennis Proffitt at the University of Virginia and his colleagues conducted an experiment to see what effect social connection would have on perception.

(1541) They had some participants stand alone and estimate the slant of a hill, while others stood next to a friend or visualized a friend next to them.

(1542) What he found was that when people were accompanied by a friend (or even just visualized being with a friend), they perceived the hill as being less steep.

(1543) Inclining our minds in a prosocial direction creates connection and helps us to perceive our mountains as molehills —or at least small mountains instead of big mountains

수특T304
(1544) According to the U.S. National Chicken Council, it takes just 2 pounds of feed to produce 1 pound of chicken, but this is a live-weight figure.

(1545) After slaughter, when blood, feathers, and internal organs have been removed, a 5-pound chicken won’t produce much more than 3 pounds of meat.

(1546) That puts the grain-to-meat conversion ratio back up over 3 to 1, including bones and water.

(1547) So the National Chicken Council’s own figures prove that, even with the most efficient form of intensive meat production, if we really want to feed ourselves efficiently, we’ll do much better to eat the grain ourselves than to feed it to the chickens.

(1548) If it is protein, rather than simply calories, we are after, we’ll do better still growing soybeans.

(1549) Although in the past some nutritionists claimed that animal protein is higher in "quality" — that is, in the balance of amino acids — than plant protein, we now know that there are no significant differences in the quality of protein between soybeans and meat

수특T305
(1550) All of us have areas in which we readily learn.

(1551) A few of us even seem to excel in limited areas with very little apparent learning — thus, the "natural" athlete, the musical "genius," the "gifted" artist.

(1552) All of us also have areas in which our abilities will never be more than average and a few areas in which we cannot seem to learn anything.

(1553) Children, adolescents, and adults with learning disabilities have areas of strengths and average ability, too.

(1554) These individuals, however, have larger areas, or different areas, of learning weakness than most people.

(1555) Each person with a learning disability displays a different pattern of strenghts and weakness.

(1556) You must learn as much as you can about the whole pattern that your child displays — the disabilities, of course, but also the abilities.

(1557) What your child can do, and may indeed do well, is just as important as what she or he cannot do, because it is these strengths upon which you must build

수특T306
(1558) Most parents want to send their children to the best possible schools.

(1559) Some workers might thus decide to accept a riskier job at a higher wage because that would enable them to meet the monthly payments on a house in a better school district.

(1560) But other workers are in the same boat, and school quality is an inherently relative concept.

(1561) So if other workers also traded safety for higher wages, the ultimate outcome would be merely to bid up the prices of houses in better school districts.

(1562) Everyone would end up with less safety, yet no one would achieve the goal that made that trade seem acceptable in the first place.

(1563) As in a military arms race, when all parties build more arms, none is any more secure than before

수특T310
(1564) Michael Faraday, the father of Electromagnetic Induction, was born in 1791 at Newington, England.

(1565) He was the son of a blacksmith and worked as an apprentice in bookbinding during his early years.

(1566) He developed an interest in science after he attended some lectures given by Sir Humphry Davy in 1812.

(1567) He sent his study notes to Davy with a request for a job.

(1568) In 1813, he began to work as Davy’s assistant at the Royal Institution.

(1569) One year later, he accompanied Davy on a European tour.

(1570) This turned out to be a highly rewarding experience for the modestly educated young scientist.

(1571) After his return to the Royal Institution, Faraday had to work hard, since he was the main source of income for the Institution, which was then facing financial problems.

(1572) During this period, Faraday worked in the field of glass and steel.

(1573) He performed many chemical analyses and investigated the chlorides of carbon for Davy.

(1574) His work resulted in the discovery of benzene in 1825

수특T311
(1575) Yes, a certain amount of centrally generated coal-fired power is necessary for Africa or South Asia in the immediate future.

(1576) Green alternatives are not yet scalable.

(1577) But if all 1.6 billion people without electricity today were to connect to a power grid based on coal or natural gas or oil, the climate and pollution implications could be devastating.

(1578) When you think how much climate change we have already triggered with just three-quarters of the world using fossil-fuel-based electricity, imagine if we added another quarter.

(1579) This is why we desperately need abundant, clean, reliable, cheap electricity — fast.

(1580) The more we can bring down the price of solar, wind, or even nuclear energy, and safely get these technologies into the hands of the world’s poor, the more we can alleviate on problem (energy poverty) and prevent another (climate change and air pollution)

수특T312
(1581) An excellent example of the importance of making accurate predictions has to do with the Marshall Plan.

(1582) After World War Ⅱ, some staffers in the U.S. State Department had come up with a novel plan designed to avoid the depression that followed most wars.

(1583) Quite simply, the plan was for the U.S. to give financial support to the European countries so they could get back on their feet economically.

(1584) They wanted to call it the Truman Plan.

(1585) When they suggested this to the President, he rejected the idea of using his name.

(1586) He sensed that many members of Congress were hostile and would vote down a good idea because his name was associated with it.

(1587) He recommended a different name: The Marshall Plan.

(1588) If the original label had been used and Congress had defeated the measure, the world could very well have been worse off today

수특T313
(1589) Now Sheila is trying to care for her mother.

(1590) Her mother still lives in her own home, but Sheila needs to check in on her every evening.

(1591) Sheila’s own children are now grown, and her husband helps her with her mother’s care as well.

(1592) Sheila is finding that her mother really looks forward to Sheila’s evening visits and wants to hear all about her day.

(1593) When Sheila says it is time for her to get home, Sheila’s mother begins complaining about her aches and pains and how she has been kind of down that day and she just doesn’t have much to do and never has any company.

(1594) Sheila has learned to actively listen to what her mother is saying.

(1595) She knows that she needs to empathize with her mother.

(1596) She works hard not to deny her mother’s feelings — instead, she asks questions to help her better understand what her mother is saying to her.

(1597) She has figured out that her mother doesn’t want her to leave

수특T314
(1598) Money is frequently described as a symbol, but it is more accurate to say that money objects such as coins incorporate a specific type of symbol.

(1599) The stamp on a coin typically consists of two parts that merge the ideas of power and number.

(1600) The obverse or "heads" — which often features, for example, a portrait of the head of state — represents the mint’s authority, and the reverse or "tails" expresses the numerical value of the coin in chosen units.

(1601) However, coins in Lydia were originally stamped on only one side, and for metaphorical convenience we can associate the stamp with heads and the physical matter with tails.

(1602) Money functions as a link between these two things — the heads and the tails, the abstract idea and the embodied reality — which have very different properties

수특T315
(1603) We’re sometimes unable to recognise people we’ve met, let alone recall their name.

(1604) Most people take this as a sign that they have a bad memory.

(1605) But this is probably not the case.

(1606) Names can be a particularly hard thing to remember.

(1607) For one thing, they are abstract and unconnected to the person; while Mr. Baker used to be a baker, today his name is not related to his profession.

(1608) For another, we usually hear names only once when a person is introduced to us, and often we don’t even hear the name properly, but smile and shake hands anyway.

(1609) Something commonplace, like a name, which is only encountered once, is unlikely to be stored as a strong memory.

(1610) Finally, the worst possible scenario is being introduced to a large group of people at once.

(1611) Any more than seven people at the same time and your short-term memory will be overloaded.

(1612) Then there’s almost no chance you’ll remember them

수특T316
(1613) Mobilizing popular support for policy change becomes much easier if a powerful image comes to symbolize the issue for the public.

(1614) A brief history of the Cuyahoga River fire in Cleveland illustrates this process.

(1615) When a short stretch of the Cuyahoga River caught on fir during June 1969, it was only the most recent fire on the river.

(1616) It had caught on fire at least ten times during the preceding fifty years.

(1617) Two weeks after the 1969 fire, Time magazine ran a picture of "the river on fire" on the front cover of its weekly edition, and the "river on fire" came to symbolize the terrible environmental conditions prevailing on the nation’s waterways.

(1618) Given that we use water to douse flames, only an extremely polluted waterway could actually burn.

(1619) The powerful symbolism encouraged a wide range of politicians to join Carl Stokes, then mayor of Cleveland, and his brother, Louis Stokes, a congressman from Cleveland, in working for the passage of the Clean Water Act by the federal government in 1972

수특T317
(1620) It’s instructive to compare and contrast two greeting rituals: the handshake, currently the predominant greeting ritual in Western countries, and the hand-kiss, which was popular among European aristocrats in the 18th and 19th centuries (but which has since fallen out of fashion).

(1621) Both are gestures of trust and friendship, but they differ in their political implications.

(1622) Shaking hands is symmetric and fundamentally represents equality; it’s a ritual between supposed equals.

(1623) Hand-kissing, however, is inherently asymmetric, setting the kisser apart from, and subordinate to, the recipient of the kiss.

(1624) The kisser must press his lips on another person’s (potentially germ-ridden) hands, while simultaneously lowering his head and possibly kneeling.

(1625) This gesture is submissive, and when it’s performed freely, it’s an implicit promise of loyalty.

(1626) Even when the ritual is somewhat forced, it can send a powerful political message.

(1627) Kings and popes, for example, would often "invite" their subjects to line up for public kiss-the-ring ceremonies, putting everyone’s loyalty and submission on conspicuous display and thereby creating common knowledge of the leader’s dominance

수특T318
(1628) One of the most effective ways to calm down from stress is intimate contact with people you trust and feel comfortable around.

(1629) When you are in the presence of soft voices, smiles, and familiar faces, your heart rate and breathing slow down, and your sympathetic nervous system cools off.

(1630) According to a neuroscientist who has measured these changes, what the body craves most when you are upset is a familiar, predictable, and safe environment, in which you are surrounded by those you care for.

(1631) This has been supported by other studies that examined the adjustment of first-year students, finding that stress is significantly diminished for those who have developed social support from friends.

(1632) Interestingly, this does not apply to family during this critical year because one development task of beginning college students is to separate from older relatives

수특T319
(1633) The evaluation of certain ways of saying something is closely associated with the social status of the people who speak that way.

(1634) This valuing is not just an individual’s decision about the utterance: It is also the society’s evaluation of different groups, including their ways of speaking.

(1635) As children are socialized, they learn these attitudes —sometimes unconsciously, sometimes through expressed regulations and rules— just as they learn eating behavior.

(1636) They learn to eat peas with a fork instead of with a spoon or their fingers.

(1637) The nutritional content of peas is the same regardless of how they eat them, and all three ways succeed in getting the peas into their mouths; but society socializes us into viewing one way as proper or correct and the other ways as unacceptable.

(1638) In a similar way, the communicative effectiveness of I done it or I did it is identical, but we have been socialized into considering only one alternative as correct or proper and the other as incorrect or bad

수특T320
(1639) Throughout the nineteenth century, many Americans grew a substantial portion of their own food on farms or in gardens.

(1640) Small general stores catered to those who lived in small communities or who desired luxuries unavailable locally.

(1641) Food was sold mainly as a generic product measured out from unmarked barrels, sacks, and jars.

(1642) This changed as food production was industrialized.

(1643) Following the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition, food processors and manufacturers prospered as agricultural surpluses flooded the market and technology lowered the cost of production.

(1644) The result was the rise of large food manufacturers, who needed to persuade consumers of the superiority of branded products over generic groceries.

(1645) To accomplish this, food companies began advertising their products regionally and nationally through newspapers and magazines, and locally via circulars, billboards, and in-store promotions.

(1646) Food advertising became a major source of American opinion and action regarding what, when, and how to eat

수특T321
(1647) Language, being a strong tribal identity by nature, renders music also very tribal.

(1648) One might argue that peoples’ language changes from culture to culture, and often, from one country to another.

(1649) As peoples’ languages change, invariably their music also changes with it.

(1650) This is why both music and language become a much stronger tribal identity compared to dancing or other arts.

(1651) Thus, well-performed dancing from any culture is equally as pleasing to most audiences regardless of culture.

(1652) However, people grow more keen on the sort of music they most naturally enjoy.

(1653) Those who develop a more sophisticated understanding of music and enjoy a much wider variety of music might be an exception to this rule.

(1654) Having said that, however, of all arts, most people are more intensely affected by their music than any other

수특T322
(1655) Why was it that the part of the world that had the least to do with cotton — Europe — created and came to dominate the empire of cotton?

(1656) Any reasonable observer in, say, 1700, would have expected the world’s cotton production to remain centered in India, or perhaps in China.

(1657) And indeed, until 1780 these countries produced vastly more raw cotton and cotton textiles than Europe and North America.

(1658) But then things changed.

(1659) European capitalists and states, with startling swiftness, moved to the center of the cotton industry.

(1660) They used their new position to ignite an Industrial Revolution.

(1661) China and India, along with many other parts of the world, became ever more subservient to the Europe-centered empire of cotton.

(1662) These Europeans then used their dynamic cotton industry as a platform to create other industries; indeed, cotton became the launching pad for the broader Industrial Revolution

수특T323
(1663) Our senses grasp an infinitesimally small portion of reality, we assume.

(1664) Further, our brain organizes the available sensory information or environmental stimuli in order to make sense out of millions of bits and pieces of data.

(1665) In other words, we perceive what we think we need to perceive and miss the rest of what is occurring.

(1666) What we do observe becomes the material for our interpretation and judgment, both of which are affected by our emotional state.

(1667) We ignore what we don’t want or enjoy, unless ignoring is impossible because of the strength of the stimulus.

(1668) If a beggar’s pleading becomes so distracting and disturbing that we cannot ignore him, we may give him some money just to be free of him.

(1669) Otherwise, if not seeing a beggar satisfies our desires, we ignore him, as though we didn’t see him.

(1670) Later, we easily forget him.

(1671) as though he never existed

수특T324-25
(1672) The most obvious distraction while driving is looking away from the driving scene.

(1673) Gazing at objects whose line of sight is far away from relevant locations has a potential risk that increases depending on the time a driver spends looking away from the traffic scene.

(1674) The critical time spent looking away depends greatly on the traffic situation: half a second while following a car at a close distance on a winding road may be more critical than 2 seconds while driving on a straight, wide, and empty motorway.

(1675) Nevertheless, distraction times over 2 seconds are considered unacceptable as general criteria for driving.

(1676) Of course, you can be distracted even while keeping your eyes on the road.

(1677) As a driver must prioritize where to search for relevant information, a bad choice of where to look is inefficient; successful visual scanning depends on expertise, expectations, and so forth.

(1678) In addition, even while keeping your eyes on the road, cognitive activity can be a source of distraction, that is, current thoughts unrelated to driving or associated with the driving context and irrelevant at that precise moment.

(1679) In the case of high cognitive load, this type of distraction may cause dramatic impairment, including preventing the further processing of a relevant visual input coming from a spatially well-oriented ocular fixation due to lack of attention.

(1680) Missing the brake lights of the car in front or just being unable to react by braking while being involved in a complex thought are examples of looking without really seeing

수특T326-28
(1681) At the time of the fire, Gilles had thirty-one horses occupying his stalls.

(1682) When he saw the flames licking the stable roof, Gilles raced to the barn to try to free his horses.

(1683) It took Giles at least five minutes just to coax the first horse out, and he quickly realized he was facing tragedy.

(1684) "Horses have a specific reaction to fire; they want to stay in the stall," he says.

(1685) "They’re afraid to move."

(1686) He feared he’d lose all the rest.

(1687) His dog Popeye was with him.

(1688) In fact, the dog was always watchful of his owner and of the horses, especially the young, nervous ones.

(1689) This night was no exception.

(1690) Gilles says, "I could tell Popeye knew how bad things were and wanted to do something.

(1691) So I opened the next stall and told him, ‘Yes, you can help me!

(1692) Go!’" Popeye didn’t hesitate.

(1693) He ran into the stall and began biting the legs of a horse, which got it moving.

(1694) Gilles quickly opened the next door, and Popeye repeated the effort, rushing in, biting legs, and chasing the horse out.

(1695) In this way, in just about five minutes – the time it had taken Gilles to rescue a single animal – Popeye got seventeen horses out of the stable and onto safe ground.

(1696) Fortunately, the last horse made it out before the roof collapsed, with Popeye biting its hooves.

(1697) "Popeye did what he had to do to save the animals," Gilles marvels.

(1698) "He burned his paws a little but that didn’t stop him."

(1699) Three of the horses had bolted as they left the barn.

(1700) Later, Popeye went out and rounded them up – after the firemen had no luck getting them to turn back.

(1701) "The horses knew Popeye.

(1702) They trusted him.

(1703) It was as if my dog knew the job wasn’t done.

(1704) He had to complete the rescue," Gilles says.

(1705) Not long after the fire, with TV cameras rolling, Popeye was given an award for his bravery by the Quebec Association for Veterinarians.

(1706) The huge dog lay calmly on stage as Gilles recounted his amazing behavior.

(1707) And in 2014, Gilles managed to rebuild his stable and get his business up and running again.

(1708) Though thirteen horses died in the blaze, the seventeen animals Popeye saved (plus the one that Gilles rescued) were enough to keep him going.



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1803h3 안녕! | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | wayne.tistory.com | 01033383436 | 제작일 181224 18:59:26



1803H3-18
① Your students could miss class for a number of reasons.

② Whether it's for an extended holiday, flu season, or an injury, EdAll is your insurance for any situation.

③ On EdAll, students can check out assignments and lessons you post at any time.

④ They can stay on track with what you're teaching and jump right back in when they return.

⑤ No more preparing special materials for absent students!

⑥ Simply visit www.edall.edu and sign up for a free account to take full advantage of all it has to offer, and get your students onto EdAll so they can stay involved.


1803H3-19
① There was a flash of movement in the window.

② Richard slowly began to step backwards.

③ Quickly he opened the closet and went inside closing the door behind him.

④ Heavy footsteps began to advance towards the room.

⑤ Richard's throat was dry, and his mind was racing out of control.

⑥ Staring out into the room, Richard felt his heart pounding harder than it had ever pounded before.

⑦ There now standing in the room, the same room Richard was in, was a man so hideous; it took his breath away.

⑧ Suddenly the man began sniffing around the room.

⑨ Richard knew he was about to be discovered.

⑩ His heart began to pound faster.


1803H3-20
① What is your goal in writing a particular paper or giving a talk or doing a poster?

② You should be able to state this goal in one sentence.

③ For example, one of Bob's first papers as a psychology student was written to show that individual differences in children's intelligence could not be explained by genetic factors alone.

④ Sure, he reviewed the literature on inheritance of intelligence.

⑤ And of course he reviewed the literature on environmental effects on intelligence.

⑥ But he had no thesis.

⑦ Good papers do not merely review literature and then say something like "there are many different points of view, all of which have something useful to say."

⑧ When you communicate via a paper, talk, or poster, be clear about what you want to show, and show it.


1803H3-21
① Plant and animal species are so diverse that the old saying "beauty is in the eye of the beholder" could be the perfect slogan for nature's bounty.

② It's easy for most people to see the breathtaking beauty found in the brightly colored wings of butterflies, a field of blooming wildflowers, or a forest of hardwood trees in their autumn glory.

③ But what about snails and their trails of slime, rats with yellow teeth, or spiders that look like fierce aliens?

④ These species are beautiful in their own right — just not in a traditional sense.

⑤ Recognition of their unique beauty may require setting aside any preconceptions — or misconceptions — people may have about fungi, insects, or reptiles.

⑥ People seem to be hardwired to see warm and fuzzy mammals as cute, while often lacking this innate and immediate attraction to the coldblooded, eight-legged, or egg-laying members of the animal kingdom.

⑦ Yet beauty is in no short supply among these animals.


1803H3-22
① During the last two decades many developing countries have joined the global tourism market as part of globalization processes and the fall of the Iron Curtain.

② These countries had suffered from negative public and media image which made it challenging for them to compete over tourists with countries with strong and familiar brands.

③ In this global era, a problematic image is a major obstacle in attracting tourists, high-quality residents and investors.

④ However, in the case of destinations suffering from prolonged image crises, it seems almost unrealistic to expect any target audience to visit a destination and "put aside" these long-lasting negative images and stereotypes, just because of an advertising campaign or other promotional effort.

⑤ Tackling prolonged negative place images is crucial for developing tourism in Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, Eastern Europe and Asia.

⑥ Although these destinations differ greatly, in the eyes of many potential tourists they all suffer from weak place images, negative stereotypes and problematic perceptions.


1803H3-23
① With the general accessibility of photocopiers in student libraries, students tend to copy the relevant material for later use.

② In such cases the students are not always selective about what they copy.

③ Often useless material is gathered that may seem important at the time but does not seem so in their study room on the night before an exam or essay due date.

④ In addition, when most people photocopy material from books, they feel as if they have actually accomplished something.

⑤ After all, a few photocopied pages in their notebook now represent information that used to be in a big, thick book.

⑥ The reality of the situation is that nothing significant has been accomplished yet.

⑦ The student only has the information in a transportable form.

⑧ He or she has not learned anything from the material.

⑨ The information content of the photocopied sheets is just as foreign as if it had been left on the library shelf.


1803H3-24
① The above graph shows how the United States managed solid waste compared to five European nations in 2011.

② The United States had lower percentages of "Recycling or composting" and "Energy from waste," and a higher percentage of "Landfilled" than the five European nations.

③ Burying solid waste in landfills was the most commonly used solid waste management technique in the United States, accounting for 69 percent of total solid waste disposal.

④ On the other hand, "Landfilled" took up zero (or statistically insignificant) percent in Germany, the Netherlands and Austria, and just 1 percent in Belgium and Sweden respectively.

⑤ Among the five European nations, Austria recorded the lowest percentage of "Energy from waste," which wasn't more than five times that of the United States.

⑥ The United States recycled or composted about a quarter of its total solid waste, but Sweden recycled or composted half of its total solid waste.


1803H3-25
① Jacqueline Cochran was raised by foster parents in a poor town in Florida.

② When she was about eight years old, the family moved to Columbus, Georgia, where she worked 12 hours a day in a factory.

③ Her formal education lasted only two years; she learned to read and write on her own.

④ In 1932 she met her future husband, Floyd Odlum, who encouraged her to learn to fly.

⑤ Cochran loved flying and participated in many air races.

⑥ Before World War II, she volunteered her services to the Royal Air Force.

⑦ She recruited qualified women pilots in the United States and took them to England where they joined the air force.

⑧ After the war, Cochran set more than 200 flight records in her career.

⑨ In 1953, she became the first woman pilot to break the sound barrier.

⑩ Additionally, she was the first female to pilot a jet across the Atlantic.


1803H3-28
① The repairman is called in when the smooth operation of our world has been disrupted, and at such moments our dependence on things normally taken for granted (for example, a toilet that flushes) is brought to vivid awareness.

② For this very reason, the repairman's presence may make the narcissist uncomfortable.

③ The problem isn't so much that he is dirty or the job is messy.

④ Rather, he seems to pose a challenge to our self-understanding that is somehow fundamental.

⑤ We're not as free and independent as we thought.

⑥ Street-level work that disrupts the infrastructure (the sewer system below or the electrical grid above) brings our shared dependence into view.

⑦ People may inhabit very different worlds even in the same city, according to their wealth or poverty.

⑧ Yet we all live in the same physical reality, ultimately, and owe a common debt to the world.


1803H3-29
① The old maxim "I'll sleep when I'm dead" is unfortunate.

② Adopt this mindset, and you will be dead sooner and the quality of that life will be worse.

③ The elastic band of sleep deprivation can stretch only so far before it snaps.

④ Sadly, human beings are in fact the only species that will deliberately deprive themselves of sleep without legitimate gain.

⑤ Every component of wellness, and countless seams of societal fabric, are being eroded by our costly state of sleep neglect:human and financial alike.

⑥ So much so that the World Health Organization (WHO) has now declared a sleep loss epidemic throughout industrialized nations.

⑦ It is no coincidence that countries where sleep time has declined most dramatically over the past century, such as the US, the UK, Japan, and South Korea, and several in Western Europe, are also those suffering the greatest increase in rates of physical diseases and mental disorders.


1803H3-30
① Jack closed his eyes and took a deep breath.

② Then Dr. Davis showed up and plugged in his saw.

③ Jack didn't know if he was curious or just scared, but he had to watch as the blade spun toward his arm.

④ The high-pitched scream filled the small room and bounced off the cement block walls.

⑤ He flinched to cover his ears, but Dr. Davis said, "Jack, hold still now.

⑥ This'll only take a minute."

⑦ Plaster dust sprayed up like a rooster tail as the saw sank into his cast.

⑧ He ignored the dust flying and stared without blinking while Dr. Davis moved the blade up and down his arm, cutting deeper and deeper until the tension of the cast released.

⑨ Slowly and skillfully, Dr. Davis moved the blade close to Jack's pale skin as he cut the last bits of fiber that still held.

⑩ Finally, the cast popped apart.

⑪ Jack's flattened arm hairs tried to stand on end as air rushed around them for the first time in weeks.


1803H3-31
① It is important to note that the primary goal of the professional athlete as well as many adults — winning — is far less important to children.

② In one of our own studies, we found that teams' won-lost records had nothing to do with how much young athletes liked their coaches or with their desire to play for the same coaches again.

③ Interestingly, however, success of the team was related to how much the children thought their parents liked their coaches.

④ The children also felt that the won-lost record influenced how much their coaches liked them.

⑤ It appears that, even at very young ages, children begin to tune in to the adult emphasis on winning, even though they do not yet share it themselves.

⑥ What children do share is a desire to have fun!


1803H3-32
① Sculpture in a public place is the emotional and aesthetic focal point of the elements in the surrounding environment.

② Any environment is unique with the diversity of its component elements, the connections between them and their appearance as a complete structure.

③ This preliminary structural analysis and acquaintance with the site chosen for the sculpture is compulsory before working on its design; it is a requirement for successful integration in the specific space.

④ The proper understanding of the spatial characteristics of the elements, making up the whole multitude, as well as of the structural links between the constituent elements of this specific microcosm are preconditions for satisfactory design and an adequate sculptural solution.

⑤ Contrary to the mechanical adding of one more element to the multitude, it is better to "weave" something more into the context of the existing structure.


1803H3-33
① Typically an individual cannot accurately assess the gains and costs likely to occur in social interactions.

② Even the intrinsic satisfactions associated with the individual's own behaviors may turn sour if the other person somehow does the wrong thing.

③ For example, a person may derive intrinsic satisfaction from helping others;.

④ So if the recipient reciprocates favor for favor, both intrinsic and extrinsic satisfaction derive from the profitable interaction.

⑤ However, the recipient may ignore or even resent the good-intended gesture as patronizing and may verbally abuse the favor doer, thereby increasing the costs, perhaps spoiling the intrinsic satisfaction (gain) of the behavior, and hence leaving the favor doer with a net loss for the interaction.

⑥ The consequences of interaction can be difficult to foresee because they depend as much on the behavior of others as on oneself.


1803H3-34
① Audiences appreciate aha moments so much that they also enjoy simply expecting them, even if the moment never comes.

② Somebody can enjoy a long book or television show that offers no answer for hours and hours if the genre itself promises a resolution.

③ When the popular, mystic television show Lost ended, many fans erupted in indignation that the show-runners failed to resolve the series' many puzzles.

④ This deprived careful viewers of the final aha moment that they thought they'd been promised.

⑤ Some people surely felt like they'd wasted weeks, even months, of their lives waiting for answers.

⑥ But their final disappointment didn't retroactively change the sincere thrill they'd felt throughout the series.

⑦ Lost was a monster hit for many years because audiences enjoyed the experience of anticipating answers, even though the writers were just stockpiling riddles without resolutions.

⑧ Many people will put themselves through quite a bit of anguish if they expect fluent resolution at the end.


1803H3-35
① Reading is a technology for perspective-taking.

② When someone else's thoughts are in your head, you are observing the world from that person's vantage point.

③ Not only are you taking in sights and sounds that you could not experience firsthand, but you have stepped inside that person's mind and are temporarily sharing his or her attitudes and reactions.

④ Empathy in the sense of adopting someone's viewpoint is not the same as empathy in the sense of feeling compassion toward the person, but the first can lead to the second by a natural route.

⑤ Stepping into someone else's vantage point reminds you that the other fellow has a first-person, present-tense, ongoing stream of consciousness that is very much like your own but not the same as your own.

⑥ It's not a big leap to suppose that the habit of reading other people's words could put one in the habit of entering other people's minds, including their pleasures and pains.


1803H3-36
① Land is always a scarce resource in urban development;.

② High building density, by providing more built-up space on individual sites, can maximize the utilization of the scarce urban land.

③ High building density, therefore, helps to reduce the pressure to develop open spaces and releases more land for communal facilities and services to improve the quality of urban living.

④ However, some people argue that the opposite is also true.

⑤ In order to achieve high building density, massive high-rise buildings are inevitable, and these massive structures, crammed into small sites, can conversely result in very little open space and a congested city-scape.

⑥ This may happen when high-density development is carried out without planning.

⑦ Therefore, in order to avoid the negative impacts of high density, thorough planning and appropriate density control are essential.


1803H3-37
① Music is a specialized branch of learning, at least as it applies to the musician.

② While we might expect that members of society who take part in singing only as members of a larger group may learn their music through imitation, musicianship, seen as a special skill, usually requires more directed learning.

③ It may be added that in any society an individual learns only a small portion of his cultural habits by free trial-and-error, for in this way he would learn only those habits which were most rewarding to him and to him alone.

④ Such indiscriminate and selfish learning cannot be allowed by society; the individual must learn behavior which is specified in the culture as being correct or best.

⑤ Such behavior is, of course, the result of the learning process as carried on by previous generations.

⑥ Behaviors which are successful have persisted in the form of customs, while those which are unsuccessful have suffered extinction.

⑦ This accumulation of adaptive habits is passed on to the child; he does not simply learn through imitation how to get along in the world; rather, he is enculturated.


1803H3-38
① Recovering from a series of early failures, Edison regained his reputation as a great inventor, and electric wiring in the home gained wide acceptance.

② It wasn't that people necessarily became less fearful of electricity, but rather, as they became more familiar with it, they began to believe that the risks could be managed with some safety precautions.

③ People began to accept the trade-off of the risk of accidental death from electricity for better and cheaper lighting and work-saving electrical appliances.

④ They simultaneously experienced a lower risk of candle and gaslight fires.

⑤ They even ignored a dying gaslight industry's warning to its few remaining customers that electric light projected a toxic ray that would turn their skin green and increase their death rate.

⑥ This made-up claim was seen by the public as the scare tactic that it was, and they were unmoved.

⑦ Gas lighting in homes soon disappeared, and the death rate from house fires decreased accordingly.


1803H3-39
① In today's digital environment, appearing in the mainstream news is still an important way citizens can communicate with a broader community about events and issues.

② Journalists can provide credibility, status, and a guaranteed large audience that many citizens do not feel they can get any other way.

③ However, to access those benefits, subjects must yield control to journalists over how their stories are told to the public.

④ That is a big risk, since news stories have a great deal of credibility with their audiences: whether subjects themselves feel the news coverage is accurate or not, they will have to deal with the consequences of many people believing it.

⑤ If news coverage portrays them as socially deviant or otherwise morally unfit, the resulting stigma can be profound and enduring.

⑥ And yet for many potential subjects, cooperating with journalists is still a bargain worth striking.

⑦ The benefits of addressing, or simply displaying oneself to, a large news audience can be so great that many subjects conclude they are worth the risks of being misrepresented.


1803H3-40
① Major long-term threats to deep-sea fishes, as with all life on the planet, derive from trends of global climate change.

② Although deep-sea fishes are generally cold-water species, warming of the oceans itself may not be a direct threat.

③ Many of the deep-sea fishes originated during the early Cretaceous when the deep sea was warm, and the Mediterranean Sea, which is warm down to a depth of over 5,000m, is populated by deep-sea fishes.

④ On the other hand, substantial changes may be expected in ocean ecosystems over the next 100 years driven by an increase in dissolved carbon dioxide (CO2) and consequent ocean acidification resulting from burning of fossil fuels.

⑤ Although the effects on deep-sea fishes are likely to be indirect through loss of coral habitats and changes in prey availability, larval stages of deep-sea fishes in the surface layers of the ocean may be directly affected by acidity.


1803H3-4142
① Alex Pentland's Human Dynamics Laboratory at MIT investigated a huge Bank of America call center where the emphasis was on productivity; reducing the average call handle time at that one call center by just 5 percent would save the company $1 million a year.

② The bank grouped employees into teams of about twenty, but they didn't interact much, in part because their work was entirely solitary, sitting in a cubicle with a phone and a computer.

③ They were unlikely to run into each other very often anyway because the bank staggered break times in order to keep staffing levels steady.

④ Here was a team that barely justified the term.

⑤ Yet the members did interact a bit, and when Pentland asked them to wear the sociometric badges for six weeks, he found that the best predictor of team productivity was how much the members interacted in the little time they had, and what he calls "engagement," the degree to which all team members were involved in the interaction.

⑥ So Pentland proposed that managers try an experiment:Give a whole twenty-person team their coffee break at the same time.

⑦ In a call center of over 3,000 employees, it was easy to shift others' breaks to maintain service.

⑧ The result was that group members interacted more, though it still wasn't much; more of them were involved in the interaction; and productivity rocketed.

⑨ The effects were so clear that the bank switched to team-based breaks at all its call centers, estimating the move would save $15 million a year.


1803H3-4345
① One day, Grandma Wilson was out working in her yard when a neighbor walked by and stopped to admire the beautiful irises growing artfully along the edge of her vegetable garden.

② Grandma called them "flags" and took special pleasure in them because they bloomed faithfully year after year.

③ The neighbor enjoyed the bright cheerfulness of the flags, too.

④ She stopped at the edge of the yard that day as if on impulse.

⑤ Would you be willing to sell me those flags? she asked.

⑥ I surely do admire them.

⑦ Grandma hesitated.

⑧ I'll give you a dime for them, her neighbor continued.

⑨ Grandma hesitated just a moment longer.

⑩ She hated to part with her flowers, but a dime was a dime and she needed the money.

⑪ You can't transplant them now, Grandma explained.

⑫ Not until after they quit blooming.

⑬ I know, the woman replied.

⑭ Then she held out the dime.

⑮ Oh, you can pay me when you come to get them, Grandma said.

⑯ No, said the neighbor, "I'd better pay you now.

⑰ "So Grandma took the dime and thanked her, trying to still the regret rising in her heart.

⑱ A few weeks passed and the blooms on the irises were fading.

⑲ Grandma expected her neighbor to come any day and claim her purchase.

⑳ She decided that the next time the woman walked by she would remind her to dig up her bulbs.

㉑ One day, Grandma spotted her neighbor coming up the street.

㉒ She was walking with one of her daughters, and they were absorbed in conversation.

㉓ As they approached, Grandma heard the woman tell her daughter, "See these flowers?

㉔ They're mine.

㉕ "What do you mean, they're yours? the daughter asked.

㉖ I bought them, the woman said.

㉗ 'Then why are they still in her yard?' the daughter asked.

㉘ Oh, I couldn't take them away, her mother answered.

㉙ She doesn't walk by our house.

㉚ But I come by here every day.

㉛ This way, we both can enjoy them.

㉜ I don't have the time for working in a flower bed, but she takes mighty good care of them.

㉝ She smiled at Grandma.

㉞ I just wanted to own something that beautiful.

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1806h3 안녕! | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | wayne.tistory.com | 01033383436 | 제작일 181224 18:58:56



1806H3-18
① Next Monday, Nature's Beauty Gardens will have the pleasure of hosting very important guests for the annual "Toddler Trek" event.

② We hope that this will be fun, educational, and most importantly safe for the toddlers.

③ Parents and children are going to spend time enjoying outdoor activities and having a picnic lunch.

④ It is therefore very important to check the garden for potential dangers.

⑤ Managers of each department must make sure that all dangerous equipment and machinery are safely stored.

⑥ Also, for the safety of our guests at this event, garden chemicals will not be used anywhere in Nature's Beauty Gardens.

⑦ Thank you for your cooperation in this safety check and for helping to make this year's "Toddler Trek" event the best one yet.


1806H3-19
① "Regularity is the key to mastery, Jean.

② Everything other than that is a waste of time," stressed Ms・ Baker, Jean's piano teacher, with a troubled look.

③ However, Jean complained quite often about practicing and slipped out of her sessions occasionally.

④ Concerned about Jean idling around, Ms・ Baker decided to change her teaching method.

⑤ "You can make your own schedule, Jean.

⑥ However, I want you to help me as an assistant," said Ms・ Baker.

⑦ After that, Jean practiced hard to be a good example to the beginners and her skills improved incredibly day after day.

⑧ The change in Jean was miraculous.

⑨ A smile came over Ms・ Baker's face as she listened to Jean play.

⑩ Ms・ Baker was convinced by Jean's improvement that her new teaching method was a success.


1806H3-20
① We say to ourselves: "There is plenty of time.

② I'll manage somehow or other when the time comes for action.

③ "We are rather proud of our ability to meet emergencies.

④ So we do not plan and take precautions to prevent emergencies from arising.

⑤ It is too easy to drift through school and college, taking the traditional, conventional studies that others take, following the lines of least resistance, electing "snap courses," and going with the crowd.

⑥ It is too easy to take the attitude: "First I will get my education and develop myself, and then I will know better what I am fitted to do for a life work.

⑦ "And so we drift, driven by the winds of circumstance, tossed about by the waves of tradition and custom.

⑧ Eventually, most men find they must be satisfied with "any port in a storm.

⑨ "Sailors who select a port because they are driven to it have scarcely one chance in a thousand of dropping anchor in the right one.


1806H3-21
① Internet entrepreneurs are creating job-search products and bringing them online regularly.

② Within the past few years, new Internet-based businesses have come online that help people find internships, complete online classes tailored to individual employer job applications, or find volunteer work that will lead to full-time employment.

③ Job mastery will mean keeping up with the rapidly evolving tools available on the Internet.

④ It should be noted, though, that no development in the Internet job age has reduced the importance of the most basic job search skill: self-knowledge.

⑤ Even in the Internet age, the job search starts with identifying individual job skills, sector interests, and preferred workplace environment and interests.

⑥ Richard Bolles' best selling job search book, first published in 1970, had as its central theme the self-inventory of skills and workplace preferences.

⑦ This self-inventory continues to be the starting point for any job search today no matter what the Internet technology involved.


1806H3-22
① The term "biological control" has been used, at times, in a broad context to cover a full spectrum of biological organisms and biologically based products.

② This has been spectacularly successful in many instances, with a number of pest problems permanently resolved by importation and successful establishment of natural enemies.

③ These importation successes have been limited largely to certain types of ecosystems and/or pest situations such as introduced pests in perennial ecosystems.

④ On the other hand, this approach has met with limited success for major pests of row crops or other ephemeral systems.

⑤ In these situations, the problem is often not the lack of effective natural enemies but management practices and a lack of concerted research on factors that determine the success or failure of importation attempts in the specific agro-ecosystem setting.

⑥ Thus, importation programs, to date, are largely a matter of trial and error based on experience of the individual specialists involved.


1806H3-23
① According to the individualist form of rhetoric about science, still much used for certain purposes, discoveries are made in laboratories.

② They are the product of inspired patience, of skilled hands and an inquiring but unbiased mind.

③ Moreover, they speak for themselves, or at least they speak too powerfully and too insistently for prejudiced humans to silence them.

④ It would be wrong to suppose that such beliefs are not sincerely held, yet almost nobody thinks they can provide a basis for action in public contexts.

⑤ Any scientist who announces a so-called discovery at a press conference without first permitting expert reviewers to examine his or her claims is automatically castigated as a publicity seeker.

⑥ The norms of scientific communication presuppose that nature does not speak unambiguously, and that knowledge isn't knowledge unless it has been authorized by disciplinary specialists.

⑦ A scientific truth has little standing until it becomes a collective product.

⑧ What happens in somebody's laboratory is only one stage in its construction.


1806H3-24
① The table above displays the life expectancy at birth in 2030 for five selected countries.

② In each of the five selected countries, it is predicted that the life expectancy of women will be higher than that of men.

③ In the case of women, life expectancy in the Republic of Korea is expected to be the highest among the five countries, followed by that in Austria.

④ As for men, the Republic of Korea and Sweden will rank the first and the second highest, respectively, in life expectancy in the five countries.

⑤ Both Slovakian women and men will have the lowest life expectancy by gender among the five countries, with 82.92 and 76.98 years, respectively.

⑥ Among the five countries, the largest difference in life expectancy between women and men is 6.75 years, predicted to be found in the Republic of Korea, and the smallest difference is 3.46 years, in Sweden.


1806H3-25
① Richard Burton was a highly regarded Welsh actor of stage and screen.

② He was born in 1925 in South Wales, the twelfth child of a poor miner.

③ Burton was the first member of his family to go to secondary school.

④ Then, he attended Oxford University and later joined the British air force during wartime.

⑤ After leaving the military in 1947, he made his film debut in 1949, in The Last Days of Dolwyn.

⑥ Richard Burton went on to become a praised actor of stage and screen, who was nominated for an Academy Award seven times, but never won an Oscar.

⑦ It is well-known that he had a powerful voice overwhelming the camera, the microphone, and all the intimacy of film acting.

⑧ His final film was an adaptation of George Orwell's famous novel, 1984.


1806H3-28
① Humans are so averse to feeling that they're being cheated that they often respond in ways that seemingly make little sense.

② Behavioral economists ― the economists who actually study what people do as opposed to the kind who simply assume the human mind works like a calculator ― have shown again and again that people reject unfair offers even if it costs them money to do so.

③ The typical experiment uses a task called the ultimatum game.

④ It's pretty straightforward.

⑤ One person in a pair is given some money ― say $10.

⑥ She then has the opportunity to offer some amount of it to her partner.

⑦ The partner only has two options.

⑧ He can take what's offered or refuse to take anything.

⑨ There's no room for negotiation; that's why it's called the ultimatum game.

⑩ What typically happens?

⑪ Many people offer an equal split to the partner, leaving both individuals happy and willing to trust each other in the future.


1806H3-29
① Here's an interesting thought.

② If glaciers started re-forming, they have a great deal more water now to draw on ― Hudson Bay, the Great Lakes, the hundreds of thousands of lakes of Canada, none of which existed to fuel the last ice sheet ― so they would grow very much quicker.

③ And if they did start to advance again, what exactly would we do?

④ Blast them with TNT or maybe nuclear missiles?

⑤ Well, doubtless we would, but consider this.

⑥ In 1964, the largest earthquake ever recorded in North America rocked Alaska with 200,000 megatons of concentrated might, the equivalent of 2,000 nuclear bombs.

⑦ Almost 3,000 miles away in Texas, water sloshed out of swimming pools.

⑧ A street in Anchorage fell twenty feet.

⑨ The quake devastated 24,000 square miles of wilderness, much of it glaciated.

⑩ And what effect did all this might have on Alaska's glaciers?

⑪ None.


1806H3-30
① John was once in the office of a manager, Michael, when the phone rang.

② Immediately, Michael bellowed, "That disgusting phone never stops ringing.

③ "He then proceeded to pick it up and engage in a fifteen-minute conversation while John waited.

④ When he finally hung up, he looked exhausted and frustrated.

⑤ He apologized as the phone rang once again.

⑥ He later confessed that he was having a great deal of trouble completing his tasks because of the volume of calls he was responding to.

⑦ At some point John asked him, "Have you ever considered having a certain period of time when you simply don't answer the phone?

⑧ "Michael said, "As a matter of fact, no," looking at him with a puzzled look.

⑨ It turned out that this simple suggestion helped Michael not only to relax, but to get more work done as well.

⑩ Like many people, he didn't need hours of uninterrupted time, but he did need some!


1806H3-31
① Although prices in most retail outlets are set by the retailer, this does not mean that these prices do not adjust to market forces over time.

② On any particular day we find that all products have a specific price ticket on them.

③ However, this price may be different from day to day or week to week.

④ The price that the farmer gets from the wholesaler is much more flexible from day to day than the price that the retailer charges consumers.

⑤ If, for example, bad weather leads to a poor potato crop, then the price that supermarkets have to pay to their wholesalers for potatoes will go up and this will be reflected in the prices they mark on potatoes in their stores.

⑥ Thus, these prices do reflect the interaction of demand and supply in the wider marketplace for potatoes.

⑦ Although they do not change in the supermarket from hour to hour to reflect local variations in demand and supply, they do change over time to reflect the underlying conditions of the overall production of and demand for the goods in question.


1806H3-32
① An individual characteristic that moderates the relationship with behavior is self-efficacy, or a judgment of one's capability to accomplish a certain level of performance.

② People who have a high sense of self-efficacy tend to pursue challenging goals that may be outside the reach of the average person.

③ People with a strong sense of self-efficacy, therefore, may be more willing to step outside the culturally prescribed behaviors to attempt tasks or goals for which success is viewed as improbable by the majority of social actors in a setting.

④ For these individuals, culture will have little or no impact on behavior.

⑤ For example, Australians tend to endorse the "Tall Poppy Syndrome.

⑥ "This saying suggests that any "poppy" that outgrows the others in a field will get "cut down;" in other words, any overachiever will eventually fail.

⑦ Interviews and observations suggest that it is the high self-efficacy Australians who step outside this culturally prescribed behavior to actually achieve beyond average.


1806H3-33
① Theorists of the novel commonly define the genre as a biographical form that came to prominence in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries to establish the individual character as a replacement for traditional sources of cultural authority.

② The novel, Georg Lukács argues, "seeks, by giving form, to uncover and construct the concealed totality of life" in the interiorized life story of its heroes.

③ The typical plot of the novel is the protagonist's quest for authority within, therefore, when that authority can no longer be discovered outside.

④ By this accounting, there are no objective goals in novels, only the subjective goal of seeking the law that is necessarily created by the individual.

⑤ The distinctions between crime and heroism, therefore, or between madness and wisdom, become purely subjective ones in a novel, judged by the quality or complexity of the individual's consciousness.


1806H3-34
① Rules can be thought of as formal types of game cues.

② They tell us the structure of the test, that is, what should be accomplished and how we should accomplish it.

③ In this sense, rules create a problem that is artificial yet intelligible.

④ Only within the rules of the game of, say, basketball or baseball do the activities of jump shooting and fielding ground balls make sense and take on value.

⑤ It is precisely the artificiality created by the rules, the distinctive problem to be solved, that gives sport its special meaning.

⑥ That is why getting a basketball through a hoop while not using a ladder or pitching a baseball across home plate while standing a certain distance away becomes an important human project.

⑦ It appears that respecting the rules not only preserves sport but also makes room for the creation of excellence and the emergence of meaning.

⑧ Engaging in acts that would be considered inconsequential in ordinary life also liberates us a bit, making it possible to explore our capabilities in a protected environment.


1806H3-35
① While being an introvert comes with its challenges, it definitely has its advantages as well.

② For example, an introvert is far less likely to make a mistake in a social situation, such as inadvertently insulting another person whose opinion is not agreeable.

③ An introvert would enjoy reflecting on their thoughts, and thus would be far less likely to suffer from boredom without outside stimulation.

④ The only risk that you will face as an introvert is that people who do not know you may think that you are aloof or that you think you are better than them.

⑤ If you learn how to open up just a little bit with your opinions and thoughts, you will be able to thrive in both worlds.

⑥ You can then stay true to your personality without appearing to be antisocial.


1806H3-36
① A carbon sink is a natural feature that absorbs or stores more carbon than it releases.

② The value of carbon sinks is that they can help create equilibrium in the atmosphere by removing excess CO2.

③ One example of a carbon sink is a large forest.

④ Its mass of plants and other organic material absorb and store tons of carbon.

⑤ However, the planet's major carbon sink is its oceans.

⑥ Since the Industrial Revolution began in the eighteenth century, CO2 released during industrial processes has greatly increased the proportion of carbon in the atmosphere.

⑦ Carbon sinks have been able to absorb about half of this excess CO2, and the world's oceans have done the major part of that job.

⑧ They absorb about one-fourth of humans' industrial carbon emissions, doing half the work of all Earth's carbon sinks combined.


1806H3-37
① Promoting attractive images of one's country is not new, but the conditions for trying to create soft power have changed dramatically in recent years.

② For one thing, nearly half the countries in the world are now democracies.

③ In such circumstances, diplomacy aimed at public opinion can become as important to outcomes as traditional classified diplomatic communications among leaders.

④ Information creates power, and today a much larger part of the world's population has access to that power.

⑤ Technological advances have led to a dramatic reduction in the cost of processing and transmitting information.

⑥ The result is an explosion of information, and that has produced a "paradox of plenty.

⑦ "Plentiful information leads to scarcity of attention.

⑧ When people are overwhelmed with the volume of information confronting them, they have difficulty knowing what to focus on.

⑨ Attention, rather than information, becomes the scarce resource, and those who can distinguish valuable information from background clutter gain power.


1806H3-38
① Tourism takes place simultaneously in the realm of the imagination and that of the physical world.

② In contrast to literature or film, it leads to 'real', tangible worlds, while nevertheless remaining tied to the sphere of fantasies, dreams, wishes ― and myth.

③ It thereby allows the ritual enactment of mythological ideas.

④ There is a considerable difference as to whether people watch a film about the Himalayas on television and become excited by the 'untouched nature' of the majestic mountain peaks, or whether they get up and go on a trek to Nepal.

⑤ Even in the latter case, they remain, at least partly, in an imaginary world.

⑥ They experience moments that they have already seen at home in books, brochures and films.

⑦ Their notions of untouched nature and friendly, innocent indigenous people will probably be confirmed.

⑧ But now this confirmation is anchored in a physical experience.

⑨ The myth is thus transmitted in a much more powerful way than by television, movies or books.


1806H3-39
① Humans can tell lies with their faces.

② Although some are specifically trained to detect lies from facial expressions, the average person is often misled into believing false and manipulated facial emotions.

③ One reason for this is that we are "two-faced.

④ "By this I mean that we have two different neural systems that manipulate our facial muscles.

⑤ One neural system is under voluntary control and the other works under involuntary control.

⑥ There are reported cases of individuals who have damaged the neural system that controls voluntary expressions.

⑦ They still have facial expressions, but are incapable of producing deceitful ones.

⑧ The emotion that you see is the emotion they are feeling, since they have lost the needed voluntary control to produce false facial expressions.

⑨ There are also clinical cases that show the flip side of this coin.

⑩ These people have injured the system that controls their involuntary expressions, so that the only changes in their demeanor you will see are actually willed expressions.


1806H3-40
① In some subject areas, topics build on one another in a hierarchical fashion, so that a learner must almost certainly master one topic before moving to the next.

② For example, an elementary school student should probably master principles of addition before moving to multiplication, because multiplication is an extension of addition.

③ Similarly, a medical student must have expertise in human anatomy before studying surgical techniques: It's difficult to perform an appendectomy if you can't find the appendix.

④ Vertical transfer refers to such situations: A learner acquires new knowledge or skills by building on more basic information and procedures.

⑤ In other cases, knowledge of one topic may affect learning a second topic even though the first isn't a necessary condition for the second.

⑥ Knowledge of French isn't essential for learning Spanish, yet knowing French can help with Spanish because many words are similar in the two languages.

⑦ When knowledge of the first topic is helpful but not essential to learning the second one, lateral transfer is occurring.


1806H3-4142
① By the turn of the twentieth century, the permanent repertoire of musical classics dominated almost every field of concert music, from piano, song, or chamber music recitals to operas and orchestral concerts.

② The change from a century before was enormous.

③ In the eighteenth century, performers and listeners demanded new music all the time, and "ancient music" included anything written more than twenty years earlier.

④ But musicians and audiences in the early 1900s expected that most concert music they performed or heard would be at least a generation old, and they judged new music by the standards of the classics already enshrined in the repertoire.

⑤ In essence, concert halls and opera houses had become museums for displaying the musical artworks of the past two hundred years.

⑥ The repertoire varied according to the performing medium and from region to region, but the core was largely the same throughout most of Europe and the Americas, including operas and operatic excerpts from Mozart through Verdi, Wagner, and Bizet; orchestral and chamber music from Haydn through the late Romantics; and keyboard music by J・ S・ Bach, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and prominent nineteenth-century composers.

⑦ Living composers increasingly found themselves in competition with the music of the past.

⑧ This is the great theme of modern music in the classical tradition, especially in the first half of the century: in competing with past composers for the attention of performers and listeners who loved the classical masterworks, living composers sought to secure a place for themselves by offering something new and distinctive while continuing the tradition.

⑨ They combined individuality and innovation with emulation of the past, seeking to write music that would be considered original and worthy of performance alongside the masterworks of earlier times.


1806H3-4345
① Princess, a solid Boxer, had been given to Rita when she was ten weeks old, and Rita immediately bonded with her, petting her, feeding her, teaching her basic commands, and letting her sleep on Rita's bed.

② The two were always together and within arm's reach.

③ The only time they were apart was when Rita was learning to swim.

④ Princess had a fear of water that was so extreme that she couldn't even touch the water.

⑤ Princess' fears stemmed from her puppyhood when she almost drowned twice.

⑥ These early traumas made water the only thing that Princess truly feared.

⑦ When she came close to a body of water, she would try to pull back and seemed emotionally distressed.

⑧ Would she ever be able to overcome this fear?

⑨ She had a chance one late afternoon when Rita's mother took them to a shopping mall.

⑩ It was located along the edge of a lake and featured a wooden boardwalk which was built along the shore.

⑪ While her mother headed to a store, Rita and Princess began to play on the boardwalk.

⑫ Suddenly, a boy riding a bicycle slipped on the damp wooden surface, hitting Rita at an angle, which propelled her through an open section of the guard rail.

⑬ She let out a scream of pain and fear as she fell into the water.

⑭ She then continued to cry for help and struggle to get out.

⑮ Upon hearing Rita's cry, her mother rushed to the railing, shouting for help, from the entrance of the store a hundred feet or so away.

⑯ Princess was looking at the water and trembling in fear.

⑰ She stood there staring at the water ― the one thing that had nearly taken her life.

⑱ Her love for Rita overpowered her fear and she leapt out through the same open space in the railing and plunged into the water.

⑲ Once in the water, Princess quickly found Rita and slowly dragged her to the shore to her grateful mother.

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1809h3 안녕! | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | wayne.tistory.com | 01033383436 | 제작일 181224 18:58:22



1809H3-18
① Thank you for your question about how to donate children's books for our book drive.

② The event will take place for one week from September 10th to 16th.

③ Books can be dropped off 24 hours a day during this period.

④ There are two locations designated for donations: Adams Children's Library and Aileen Community Center.

⑤ At each location, there are blue donation boxes at the main entrance.

⑥ If you are unable to visit these locations, books can be mailed directly to our organization.

⑦ Your donations will help support children in our community who may not be able to afford books.

⑧ We hope this information makes your donation easier.

⑨ We appreciate your support.


1809H3-19
① 'How much farther to the finish line?

② Can I make it?

③ 'Emma felt pain in her legs and was breathing heavily.

④ She couldn't remember ever being so exhausted.

⑤ Feeling frustrated, she began to think about giving up on the race.

⑥ She knew she would regret it later, but it seemed like there was nothing she could do.

⑦ Then, she remembered a strategy she had learned.

⑧ By having strong imagery control, she could help herself achieve her goal.

⑨ Over and over, Emma imagined herself running smoothly and breathing easily.

⑩ It was working!

⑪ She started to feel better.

⑫ About thirty minutes later, she found herself crossing the finish line with a big smile on her face.

⑬ Surrounded by cheering friends, she enjoyed her victory full of joy.


1809H3-20
① Life is hectic.

② Our days are filled with so many of the "have tos" that we feel there's no time left for the "want tos.

③ "Further, spending all our time with others doesn't give us the ability to hit the reset button and relax.

④ Leaving little to no time for ourselves or for the things that are important to us can lead to unmanaged stress, frustration, fatigue, resentment, or worse, health issues.

⑤ Building in regular "you time," however, can provide numerous benefits, all of which help to make life a little bit sweeter and a little bit more manageable.

⑥ Unfortunately, many individuals struggle with reaching goals due to an inability to prioritize their own needs.

⑦ Alone time, however, forces you to take a break from everyday responsibilities and the requirements of others so you can dedicate time to move forward with your own goals, meet your own personal needs, and further explore your personal dreams.


1809H3-21
① Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi suggests that the common idea of a creative individual coming up with great insights, discoveries, works, or inventions in isolation is wrong.

② Creativity results from a complex interaction between a person and his or her environment or culture, and also depends on timing.

③ For instance, if the great Renaissance artists like Ghiberti or Michelangelo had been born only 50 years before they were, the culture of artistic patronage would not have been in place to fund or shape their great achievements.

④ Consider also individual astronomers.

⑤ Their discoveries could not have happened unless centuries of technological development of the telescope and evolving knowledge of the universe had come before them.

⑥ Csikszentmihalyi's point is that we should devote as much attention to the development of a domain as we do to the people working within it, as only this can properly explain how advances are made.

⑦ Individuals are only "a link in a chain, a phase in a process," he notes.


1809H3-22
① Consumers like a bottle of wine more if they are told it cost ninety dollars a bottle than if they are told it cost ten.

② Belief that the wine is more expensive turns on the neurons in the medial orbitofrontal cortex, an area of the brain associated with pleasure feelings.

③ Wine without a price tag doesn't have this effect.

④ In 2008, American food and wine critics teamed up with a statistician from Yale and a couple of Swedish economists to study the results of thousands of blind tastings of wines ranging from $1.65 to $150 a bottle.

⑤ They found that when they can't see the price tag, people prefer cheaper wine to pricier bottles.

⑥ Experts' tastes did move in the proper direction: they favored finer, more expensive wines.

⑦ But the bias was almost imperceptible.

⑧ A wine that cost ten times more than another was ranked by experts only seven points higher on a scale of one to one hundred.


1809H3-23
① 1950s critics separated themselves from the masses by rejecting the 'natural' enjoyment afforded by products of mass culture through judgments based on a refined sense of realism.

② For example, in most critics championing Douglas Sirk's films' social critique, self-reflexivity, and, in particular, distancing effects, there is still a refusal of the 'vulgar' enjoyments suspected of soap operas.

③ This refusal again functions to divorce the critic from an image of a mindless, pleasure-seeking crowd he or she has actually manufactured in order to definitively secure the righteous logic of 'good' taste.

④ It also pushes negative notions of female taste and subjectivity.

⑤ Critiques of mass culture seem always to bring to mind a disrespectful image of the feminine to represent the depths of the corruption of the people.

⑥ The process of taste-making operated, then, to create hierarchical differences between the aesthete and the masses through the construction of aesthetic positions contrary to the perceived tasteless pleasures of the crowd.


1809H3-24
① Radioactive waste disposal has become one of the key environmental battlegrounds over which the future of nuclear power has been fought.

② Environmentalists argue that no system of waste disposal can be absolutely safe, either now or in the future.

③ Governments and the nuclear industry have tried to find acceptable solutions.

④ But in countries where popular opinion is taken into consideration, no mutually acceptable solution has been found.

⑤ As a result, most spent fuel has been stored in the nuclear power plants where it was produced.

⑥ This is now causing its own problems as storage ponds designed to store a few years' waste become filled or overflowing.

⑦ One avenue that has been explored is the reprocessing of spent fuel to remove the active ingredients.

⑧ Some of the recovered material can be recycled as fuel.

⑨ The remainder must be stored safely until it has become inactive.

⑩ But reprocessing has proved expensive and can exacerbate the problem of disposal rather than assisting it.

⑪ As a result, it too appears publicly unacceptable.


1809H3-25
① This graph shows the distribution of university graduates in Canada by age group in 1996, 2001, and 2007.

② Although its share was less than 50% in each of the three years, the group of university graduates aged 22 to 24 accounted for the largest single share in those respective years.

③ The second largest single share of university graduates in each of the three years was held by those who were 25 to 29 years old.

④ The share of university graduates who were 30 years old and over was higher than 20% in each of the three years.

⑤ In 1996, the share of the group of university graduates aged 18 to 21 was 7.7%, and the share of the same age group was 6% in 2001.

⑥ In 2007, the combined share of those who were 25 to 29years old and those who were 30 years old and over accounted for less than 50% of that year's university graduates.


1809H3-26
① Victor Borge, born in Copenhagen, Denmark in 1909, was a comedian and pianist.

② Initially a concert musician, Victor Borge soon developed a performance style that combined comedy with classical music.

③ When the Nazis invaded Denmark in 1940, he was performing in Sweden, and a short time later managed to escape to America.

④ When he arrived in the US, he didn't speak a word of English.

⑤ Learning English by watching movies, he soon managed to translate his jokes for the American audience.

⑥ In 1948, Victor Borge became an American citizen and a few years later was offered a show of his own, Comedy in Music.

⑦ The show remains the longest-running one-man show in Broadway history.

⑧ At the age of 90, he still performed 60 times a year.

⑨ He died on December 23rd, 2000 at his home in Greenwich, Connecticut, US.


1809H3-29
① Not all organisms are able to find sufficient food to survive, so starvation is a kind of disvalue often found in nature.

② It also is part of the process of selection by which biological evolution functions.

③ Starvation helps filter out those less fit to survive, those less resourceful in finding food for themselves and their young.

④ In some circumstances, it may pave the way for genetic variants to take hold in the population of a species and eventually allow the emergence of a new species in place of the old one.

⑤ Thus starvation is a disvalue that can help make possible the good of greater diversity.

⑥ Starvation can be of practical or instrumental value, even as it is an intrinsic disvalue.

⑦ That some organisms must starve in nature is deeply regrettable and sad.

⑧ The statement remains implacably true, even though starvation also may sometimes subserve ends that are good.


1809H3-30
① For every toxic substance, process, or product in use today, there is a safer alternative ― either already in existence, or waiting to be discovered through the application of human intellect, ingenuity, and effort.

② In almost every case, the safer alternative is available at a comparable cost.

③ Industry may reject these facts and complain about the high cost of acting, but history sets the record straight.

④ The chemical industry denied that there were practical alternatives to ozone-depleting chemicals, predicting not only economic disaster but numerous deaths because food and vaccines would spoil without refrigeration.

⑤ They were wrong.

⑥ The motor vehicle industry initially denied that cars caused air pollution, then claimed that no technology existed to reduce pollution from vehicles, and later argued that installing devices to reduce air pollution would make cars extremely expensive.

⑦ They were wrong every time.

⑧ The pesticide industry argues that synthetic pesticides are absolutely necessary to grow food.

⑨ Thousands of organic farmers are proving them wrong.


1809H3-31
① Among the most fascinating natural temperature-regulating behaviors are those of social insects such as bees and ants.

② These insects are able to maintain a nearly constant temperature in their hives or mounds throughout the year.

③ The constancy of these microclimates depends not just on the location and insulation of the habitat, but on the activity of the insects in the colony.

④ When the surrounding temperature increases, the activity in the hive decreases, which decreases the amount of heat generated by insect metabolism.

⑤ In fact, many animals decrease their activity in the heat and increase it in the cold, and people who are allowed to choose levels of physical activity in hot or cold environments adjust their workload precisely to body temperature.

⑥ This behavior serves to avoid both hypothermia and hyperthermia.


1809H3-32
① Although most people, including Europe's Muslims, have numerous identities, few of these are politically salient at any moment.

② It is only when a political issue affects the welfare of those in a particular group that identity assumes importance.

③ For instance, when issues arise that touch on women's rights, women start to think of gender as their principal identity.

④ Whether such women are American or Iranian or whether they are Catholic or Protestant matters less than the fact that they are women.

⑤ Similarly, when famine and civil war threaten people in sub-Saharan Africa, many African-Americans are reminded of their kinship with the continent in which their ancestors originated centuries earlier, and they lobby their leaders to provide humanitarian relief.

⑥ In other words, each issue calls forth somewhat different identities that help explain the political preferences people have regarding those issues.


1809H3-33
① Food unites as well as distinguishes eaters because what and how one eats forms much of one's emotional tie to a group identity, be it a nation or an ethnicity.

② The famous twentieth-century Chinese poet and scholar Lin Yutang remarks, "Our love for fatherland is largely a matter of recollection of the keen sensual pleasure of our childhood.

③ The loyalty to Uncle Sam is the loyalty to American doughnuts, and the loyalty to the Vaterland is the loyalty to Pfannkuchen and Stollen.

④ "Such keen connection between food and national or ethnic identification clearly indicates the truth that cuisine and table narrative occupy a significant place in the training grounds of a community and its civilization, and thus, eating, cooking, and talking about one's cuisine are vital to a community's wholeness and continuation.

⑤ In other words, the destiny of a community depends on how well it nourishes its members.


1809H3-34
① Modern psychological theory states that the process of understanding is a matter of construction, not reproduction, which means that the process of understanding takes the form of the interpretation of data coming from the outside and generated by our mind.

② For example, the perception of a moving object as a car is based on an interpretation of incoming data within the framework of our knowledge of the world.

③ While the interpretation of simple objects is usually an uncontrolled process, the interpretation of more complex phenomena, such as interpersonal situations, usually requires active attention and thought.

④ Psychological studies indicate that it is knowledge possessed by the individual that determines which stimuli become the focus of that individual's attention, what significance he or she assigns to these stimuli, and how they are combined into a larger whole.

⑤ This subjective world, interpreted in a particular way, is for us the "objective" world; we cannot know any world other than the one we know as a result of our own interpretations.


1809H3-35
① While the transportation infrastructure may shape where we travel today, in the early eras of travel, it determined whether people could travel at all.

② The development and improvement of transportation was one of the most important factors in allowing modern tourism to develop on a large scale and become a regular part of the lives of billions of people around the world.

③ Technological advances provided the basis for the explosive expansion of local, regional, and global transportation networks and made travel faster, easier, and cheaper.

④ This not only created new tourist-generating and tourist-receiving regions but also prompted a host of other changes in the tourism infrastructure, such as accommodations.

⑤ As a result, the availability of transportation infrastructure and services has been considered a fundamental precondition for tourism.


1809H3-36
① Most of us have a general, rational sense of what to eat and when ― there is no shortage of information on the subject.

② Yet there is often a disconnect between what we know and what we do.

③ We may have the facts, but decisions also involve our feelings.

④ Many people who struggle with difficult emotions also struggle with eating problems.

⑤ Emotional eating is a popular term used to describe eating that is influenced by emotions, both positive and negative.

⑥ Feelings may affect various aspects of your eating, including your motivation to eat, your food choices, where and with whom you eat, and the speed at which you eat.

⑦ Most overeating is prompted by feelings rather than physical hunger.

⑧ Individuals who struggle with obesity tend to eat in response to emotions.

⑨ However, people who eat for emotional reasons are not necessarily overweight.

⑩ People of any size may try to escape an emotional experience by preoccupying themselves with eating or by obsessing over their shape and weight.


1809H3-37
① Ever since the first scientific opinion polls revealed that most Americans are at best poorly informed about politics, analysts have asked whether citizens are equipped to play the role democracy assigns them.

② However, there is something worse than an inadequately informed public, and that's a misinformed public.

③ It's one thing when citizens don't know something, and realize it, which has always been a problem.

④ It's another thing when citizens don't know something, but think they know it, which is the new problem.

⑤ It's the difference between ignorance and irrationality.

⑥ Whatever else one might conclude about self-government, it's at risk when citizens don't know what they're talking about.

⑦ Our misinformation owes partly to psychological factors, including our tendency to see the world in ways that suit our desires.

⑧ Such factors, however, can explain only the misinformation that has always been with us.

⑨ The sharp rise in misinformation in recent years has a different source: our media.

⑩ "They are making us dumb," says one observer.

⑪ When fact bends to fiction, the predictable result is political distrust and polarization.


1809H3-38
① Both the budget deficit and federal debt have soared during the recent financial crisis and recession.

② During 2009-2010, nearly 40 percent of federal expenditures were financed by borrowing.

③ The huge recent federal deficits have pushed the federal debt to levels not seen since the years immediately following World War II.

④ The rapid growth of baby-boomer retirees in the decade immediately ahead will mean higher spending levels and larger and larger deficits for both Social Security and Medicare.

⑤ Moreover, more than half of Americans age 18 and older derive benefits from various transfer programs, while paying little or no personal income tax.

⑥ All of these factors are going to make it extremely difficult to slow the growth of federal spending and keep the debt from ballooning out of control.

⑦ Projections indicate that the net federal debt will rise to 90 percent of GDP by 2019, and many believe it will be even higher unless constructive action is taken soon.


1809H3-39
① Erikson believes that when we reach the adult years, several physical, social, and psychological stimuli trigger a sense of generativity.

② A central component of this attitude is the desire to care for others.

③ For the majority of people, parenthood is perhaps the most obvious and convenient opportunity to fulfill this desire.

④ Erikson believes that another distinguishing feature of adulthood is the emergence of an inborn desire to teach.

⑤ We become aware of this desire when the event of being physically capable of reproducing is joined with the events of participating in a committed relationship, the establishment of an adult pattern of living, and the assumption of job responsibilities.

⑥ According to Erikson, by becoming parents we learn that we have the need to be needed by others who depend on our knowledge, protection, and guidance.

⑦ We become entrusted to teach culturally appropriate behaviors, values, attitudes, skills, and information about the world.

⑧ By assuming the responsibilities of being primary caregivers to children through their long years of physical and social growth, we concretely express what Erikson believes to be an inborn desire to teach.


1809H3-40
① Perceptions of forest use and the value of forests as standing timber vary considerably from indigenous peoples to national governments and Western scientists.

② These differences in attitudes and values lie at the root of conflicting management strategies and stimulate protest groups such as the Chipko movement.

③ For example, the cultivators of the Himalayas and Karakoram view forests as essentially a convertible resource.

④ That is, under increasing population pressure and growing demands for cultivable land, the conversion of forest into cultivated terraces means a much higher productivity can be extracted from the same area.

⑤ Compensation in the form of planting on terrace edges occurs to make up for the clearance.

⑥ This contrasts with the national view of the value of forests as a renewable resource, with the need or desire to keep a forest cover over the land for soil conservation, and with a global view of protection for biodiversity and climate change purposes, irrespective of the local people's needs.

⑦ For indigenous peoples forests serve as a source of transformable resources, while national and global perspectives prioritize the preservation of forests, despite the local needs.


1809H3-4142
① As a couple start to form a relationship, they can be seen to develop a set of constructs about their own relationship and, in particular, how it is similar or different to their parents' relationship.

② The couple's initial disclosures involve them forming constructs about how much similarity there is between them and each other's families.

③ What each of them will remember is selective and coloured by their family's constructs system.

④ In turn it is likely that as they tell each other their already edited stories, there is a second process of editing whereby what they both hear from each other is again interpreted within their respective family of origin's construct systems.

⑤ The two sets of memories ― the person talking about his or her family and the partner's edited version of this story ― go into the 'cooking-pot' of the couple's new construct system.

⑥ Subsequently, one partner may systematically recall a part of the other's story as a tactic in negotiations.

⑦ For example, Harry may say to Doris that she is being 'bossy ― just like her mother'.

⑧ Since this is probably based on what Doris has told Harry, this is likely to be a very powerful tactic.

⑨ She may protest or attempt to rewrite this version of her story, thereby possibly adding further material that Harry could use in this way.

⑩ These exchanges of stories need not always be employed in such malevolent ways.

⑪ These reconstructed memories can become very powerful, to a point where each partner may become confused even about the simple factual details of what actually did happen in their past.


1809H3-4345
① Over the last week, Jason had been feeling worried about his daughter, Sally.

② For two months now, Sally had been absorbed, perhaps even excessively, in studying birds.

③ He was afraid she might begin to ignore her schoolwork.

④ While shopping, Jason was glad to run into his old friend Jennifer, a bird expert working at the local university.

⑤ Maybe she could help ease his concern.

⑥ Upon hearing about Sally's interest, Jennifer invited them both to visit her office to see just how deep Sally's fascination was.

⑦ Two days later, Jason and Sally visited Jennifer's office.

⑧ Sally was delighted by the books about birds and she joyfully looked at the beautiful pictures in them.

⑨ It was while Jason and Jennifer were talking that Sally suddenly shouted, "Oh, I've seen this bird!"

⑩ "Impossible," replied Jennifer, not believing it.

⑪ "This book shows rare birds.

⑫ You can't see any of them around here."

⑬ But she insisted, "I spotted a pair of them in their nest in a huge oak tree nearby!

⑭ "Jennifer walked up to Sally and took a close look at the page.

⑮ She calmly said, "That's the black robin of Chathas Island.

⑯ It's one of the rarest birds, Sally.

⑰ You couldn't have seen it in this town.

⑱ "Yet Sally persisted.

⑲ "In that case, can you show me the nest?" asked Jennifer.

⑳ "Yes, I can right now if you want," answered Sally full of confidence.

㉑ Jennifer put on her coat, pulled out a pair of binoculars, and stepped out.

㉒ Sally and Jason followed.

㉓ Approaching the tree, Sally shouted excitedly, "There, that's the nest!"

㉔ Jennifer looked up to see a small cup-shaped nest within a fork of the branches.

㉕ Quickly, she took out her binoculars and peered where Sally pointed.

㉖ In the fading evening light, she found the two rare black birds in their nest.

㉗ "See, didn't I tell you?" exclaimed Sally.

㉘ Looking at her in joyful surprise, both Jason and Jennifer were proud of Sally.

㉙ They now recognized her extraordinary gift and passion as a bird-watcher.

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1811h3 안녕! | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | wayne.tistory.com | 01033383436 | 제작일 181224 18:57:45



1811H3-18
① I submitted my application and recipe for the 2nd Annual DC Metro Cooking Contest.

② However, I would like to change my recipe if it is possible.

③ I have checked the website again, but I could only find information about the contest date, time, and prizes.

④ I couldn't see any information about changing recipes.

⑤ I have just created a great new recipe, and I believe people will love this more than the one I have already submitted.

⑥ Please let me know if I can change my submitted recipe.

⑦ I look forward to your response.


1811H3-19
① The waves were perfect for surfing.

② Dave, however, just could not stay on his board.

③ He had tried more than ten times to stand up but never managed it.

④ He felt that he would never succeed.

⑤ He was about to give up when he looked at the sea one last time.

⑥ The swelling waves seemed to say, "Come on, Dave.

⑦ One more try!"

⑧ Taking a deep breath, he picked up his board and ran into the water.

⑨ He waited for the right wave.

⑩ Finally, it came.

⑪ He jumped up onto the board just like he had practiced.

⑫ And this time, standing upright, he battled the wave all the way back to shore.

⑬ Walking out of the water joyfully, he cheered, "Wow, I did it!"


1811H3-20
① War is inconceivable without some image, or concept, of the enemy.

② It is the presence of the enemy that gives meaning and justification to war.

③ 'War follows from feelings of hatred', wrote Carl Schmitt.

④ 'War has its own strategic, tactical, and other rules and points of view, but they all presuppose that the political decision has already been made as to who the enemy is'.

⑤ The concept of the enemy is fundamental to the moral assessment of war:.

⑥ 'The basic aim of a nation at war in establishing an image of the enemy is to distinguish as sharply as possible the act of killing from the act of murder'.

⑦ However, we need to be cautious about thinking of war and the image of the enemy that informs it in an abstract and uniform way.

⑧ Rather, both must be seen for the cultural and contingent phenomena that they are.


1811H3-21
① Although not the explicit goal, the best science can really be seen as refining ignorance.

② Scientists, especially young ones, can get too obsessed with results.

③ Society helps them along in this mad chase.

④ Big discoveries are covered in the press, show up on the university's home page, help get grants, and make the case for promotions.

⑤ But it's wrong.

⑥ Great scientists, the pioneers that we admire, are not concerned with results but with the next questions.

⑦ The highly respected physicist Enrico Fermi told his students that an experiment that successfully proves a hypothesis is a measurement; one that doesn't is a discovery.

⑧ A discovery, an uncovering ― of new ignorance.

⑨ The Nobel Prize, the pinnacle of scientific accomplishment, is awarded, not for a lifetime of scientific achievement, but for a single discovery, a result.

⑩ Even the Nobel committee realizes in some way that this is not really in the scientific spirit, and their award citations commonly honor the discovery for having "opened a field up," "transformed a field," or "taken a field in new and unexpected directions."


1811H3-22
① With the industrial society evolving into an information-based society, the concept of information as a product, a commodity with its own value, has emerged.

② As a consequence, those people, organizations, and countries that possess the highest-quality information are likely to prosper economically, socially, and politically.

③ Investigations into the economics of information encompass a variety of categories including the costs of information and information services; the effects of information on decision making; the savings from effective information acquisition; the effects of information on productivity; and the effects of specific agencies (such as corporate, technical, or medical libraries) on the productivity of organizations.

④ Obviously many of these areas overlap, but it is clear that information has taken on a life of its own outside the medium in which it is contained.

⑤ Information has become a recognized entity to be measured, evaluated, and priced.


1811H3-23
① We argue that the ethical principles of justice provide an essential foundation for policies to protect unborn generations and the poorest countries from climate change.

② Related issues arise in connection with current and persistently inadequate aid for these nations, in the face of growing threats to agriculture and water supply, and the rules of international trade that mainly benefit rich countries.

③ Increasing aid for the world's poorest peoples can be an essential part of effective mitigation.

④ With 20 percent of carbon emissions from (mostly tropical) deforestation, carbon credits for forest preservation would combine aid to poorer countries with one of the most cost-effective forms of abatement.

⑤ Perhaps the most cost-effective but politically complicated policy reform would be the removal of several hundred billions of dollars of direct annual subsidies from the two biggest recipients in the OECD ― destructive industrial agriculture and fossil fuels.

⑥ Even a small amount of this money would accelerate the already rapid rate of technical progress and investment in renewable energy in many areas, as well as encourage the essential switch to conservation agriculture.


1811H3-24
① A defining element of catastrophes is the magnitude of their harmful consequences.

② To help societies prevent or reduce damage from catastrophes, a huge amount of effort and technological sophistication are often employed to assess and communicate the size and scope of potential or actual losses.

③ This effort assumes that people can understand the resulting numbers and act on them appropriately.

④ However, recent behavioral research casts doubt on this fundamental assumption.

⑤ Many people do not understand large numbers.

⑥ Indeed, large numbers have been found to lack meaning and to be underestimated in decisions unless they convey affect (feeling).

⑦ This creates a paradox that rational models of decision making fail to represent.

⑧ On the one hand, we respond strongly to aid a single individual in need.

⑨ On the other hand, we often fail to prevent mass tragedies or take appropriate measures to reduce potential losses from natural disasters.


1811H3-25
① The tables above show the top ten origin countries and the number of international students enrolled in U.S. colleges and universities in two school years, 1979-1980 and 2016-2017.

② The total number of international students in 2016-2017 was over three times larger than the total number of international students in 1979-1980.

③ Iran, Taiwan, and Nigeria were the top three origin countries of international students in 1979-1980, among which only Taiwan was included in the list of the top ten origin countries in 2016-2017.

④ The number of students from India was over twenty times larger in 2016-2017 than in 1979-1980, and India ranked lower than China in 2016-2017.

⑤ South Korea, which was not included among the top ten origin countries in 1979-1980, ranked third in 2016-2017.

⑥ Although the number of students from Japan was larger in 2016-2017 than in 1979-1980, Japan ranked lower in 2016-2017 than in 1979-1980.


1811H3-26
① Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, an American author born in Washington, D.C. in 1896, wrote novels with rural themes and settings.

② While she was young, one of her stories appeared in The Washington Post.

③ After graduating from university, Rawlings worked as a journalist while simultaneously trying to establish herself as a fiction writer.

④ In 1928, she purchased an orange grove in Cross Creek, Florida.

⑤ This became the source of inspiration for some of her writings which included The Yearling and her autobiographical book, Cross Creek.

⑥ In 1939, The Yearling, which was about a boy and an orphaned baby deer, won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.

⑦ Later, in 1946, The Yearling was made into a film of the same name.

⑧ Rawlings passed away in 1953, and the land she owned at Cross Creek has become a Florida State Park honoring her achievements.


1811H3-29
① "Monumental" is a word that comes very close to expressing the basic characteristic of Egyptian art.

② Never before and never since has the quality of monumentality been achieved as fully as it was in Egypt.

③ The reason for this is not the external size and massiveness of their works, although the Egyptians admittedly achieved some amazing things in this respect.

④ Many modern structures exceed those of Egypt in terms of purely physical size.

⑤ But massiveness has nothing to do with monumentality.

⑥ An Egyptian sculpture no bigger than a person's hand is more monumental than that gigantic pile of stones that constitutes the war memorial in Leipzig, for instance.

⑦ Monumentality is not a matter of external weight, but of "inner weight."

⑧ This inner weight is the quality which Egyptian art possesses to such a degree that everything in it seems to be made of primeval stone, like a mountain range, even if it is only a few inches across or carved in wood.


1811H3-30
① Europe's first Homo sapiens lived primarily on large game, particularly reindeer.

② Even under ideal circumstances, hunting these fast animals with spear or bow and arrow is an uncertain task.

③ The reindeer, however, had a weakness that mankind would mercilessly exploit: it swam poorly.

④ While afloat, it is uniquely vulnerable, moving slowly with its antlers held high as it struggles to keep its nose above water.

⑤ At some point, a Stone Age genius realized the enormous hunting advantage he would gain by being able to glide over the water's surface, and built the first boat.

⑥ Once the easily overtaken and killed prey had been hauled aboard, getting its body back to the tribal camp would have been far easier by boat than on land.

⑦ It would not have taken long for mankind to apply this advantage to other goods.


1811H3-31
① Finkenauer and Rimé investigated the memory of the unexpected death of Belgium's King Baudouin in 1993 in a large sample of Belgian citizens.

② The data revealed that the news of the king's death had been widely socially shared.

③ By talking about the event, people gradually constructed a social narrative and a collective memory of the emotional event.

④ At the same time, they consolidated their own memory of the personal circumstances in which the event took place, an effect known as "flashbulb memory."

⑤ The more an event is socially shared, the more it will be fixed in people's minds.

⑥ Social sharing may in this way help to counteract some natural tendency people may have.

⑦ Naturally, people should be driven to "forget" undesirable events.

⑧ Thus, someone who just heard a piece of bad news often tends initially to deny what happened.

⑨ The repetitive social sharing of the bad news contributes to realism.


1811H3-32
① Minorities tend not to have much power or status and may even be dismissed as troublemakers, extremists or simply 'weirdos'.

② How, then, do they ever have any influence over the majority?

③ The social psychologist Serge Moscovici claims that the answer lies in their behavioural style, i_e the way the minority gets its point across.

④ The crucial factor in the success of the suffragette movement was that its supporters were consistent in their views, and this created a considerable degree of social influence.

⑤ Minorities that are active and organised, who support and defend their position consistently, can create social conflict, doubt and uncertainty among members of the majority, and ultimately this may lead to social change.

⑥ Such change has often occurred because a minority has converted others to its point of view.

⑦ Without the influence of minorities, we would have no innovation, no social change.

⑧ Many of what we now regard as 'major' social movements (e_g Christianity, trade unionism or feminism) were originally due to the influence of an outspoken minority.


1811H3-33
① Heritage is concerned with the ways in which very selective material artefacts, mythologies, memories and traditions become resources for the present.

② The contents, interpretations and representations of the resource are selected according to the demands of the present; an imagined past provides resources for a heritage that is to be passed onto an imagined future.

③ It follows too that the meanings and functions of memory and tradition are defined in the present.

④ Further, heritage is more concerned with meanings than material artefacts.

⑤ It is the former that give value, either cultural or financial, to the latter and explain why they have been selected from the near infinity of the past.

⑥ In turn, they may later be discarded as the demands of present societies change, or even, as is presently occurring in the former Eastern Europe, when pasts have to be reinvented to reflect new presents.

⑦ Thus heritage is as much about forgetting as remembering the past.


1811H3-34
① The human species is unique in its ability to expand its functionality by inventing new cultural tools.

② Writing, arithmetic, science ― all are recent inventions.

③ Our brains did not have enough time to evolve for them, but I reason that they were made possible because we can mobilize our old areas in novel ways.

④ When we learn to read, we recycle a specific region of our visual system known as the visual word-form area, enabling us to recognize strings of letters and connect them to language areas.

⑤ Likewise, when we learn Arabic numerals we build a circuit to quickly convert those shapes into quantities ― a fast connection from bilateral visual areas to the parietal quantity area.

⑥ Even an invention as elementary as finger-counting changes our cognitive abilities dramatically.

⑦ Amazonian people who have not invented counting are unable to make exact calculations as simple as, say, 6–2.

⑧ This "cultural recycling" implies that the functional architecture of the human brain results from a complex mixture of biological and cultural constraints.


1811H3-35
① When photography came along in the nineteenth century, painting was put in crisis.

② The photograph, it seemed, did the work of imitating nature better than the painter ever could.

③ Some painters made practical use of the invention.

④ There were Impressionist painters who used a photograph in place of the model or landscape they were painting.

⑤ But by and large, the photograph was a challenge to painting and was one cause of painting's moving away from direct representation and reproduction to the abstract painting of the twentieth century.

⑥ Since photographs did such a good job of representing things as they existed in the world, painters were freed to look inward and represent things as they were in their imagination, rendering emotion in the color, volume, line, and spatial configurations native to the painter's art.


1811H3-36
① Researchers in psychology follow the scientific method to perform studies that help explain and may predict human behavior.

② This is a much more challenging task than studying snails or sound waves.

③ It often requires compromises, such as testing behavior within laboratories rather than natural settings, and asking those readily available (such as introduction to psychology students) to participate rather than collecting data from a true cross-section of the population.

④ It often requires great cleverness to conceive of measures that tap into what people are thinking without altering their thinking, called reactivity.

⑤ Simply knowing they are being observed may cause people to behave differently (such as more politely!).

⑥ People may give answers that they feel are more socially desirable than their true feelings.

⑦ But for all of these difficulties for psychology, the payoff of the scientific method is that the findings are replicable;.

⑧ That is, if you run the same study again following the same procedures, you will be very likely to get the same results.


1811H3-37
① Clearly, schematic knowledge helps you ― guiding your understanding and enabling you to reconstruct things you cannot remember.

② But schematic knowledge can also hurt you, promoting errors in perception and memory.

③ Moreover, the types of errors produced by schemata are quite predictable:.

④ Bear in mind that schemata summarize the broad pattern of your experience, and so they tell you, in essence, what's typical or ordinary in a given situation.

⑤ Any reliance on schematic knowledge, therefore, will be shaped by this information about what's "normal."

⑥ Thus, if there are things you don't notice while viewing a situation or event, your schemata will lead you to fill in these "gaps" with knowledge about what's normally in place in that setting.

⑦ Likewise, if there are things you can't recall, your schemata will fill in the gaps with knowledge about what's typical in that situation.

⑧ As a result, a reliance on schemata will inevitably make the world seem more "normal" than it really is and will make the past seem more "regular" than it actually was.


1811H3-38
① The printing press boosted the power of ideas to copy themselves.

② Prior to low-cost printing, ideas could and did spread by word of mouth.

③ While this was tremendously powerful, it limited the complexity of the ideas that could be propagated to those that a single person could remember.

④ It also added a certain amount of guaranteed error.

⑤ The spread of ideas by word of mouth was equivalent to a game of telephone on a global scale.

⑥ The advent of literacy and the creation of handwritten scrolls and, eventually, handwritten books strengthened the ability of large and complex ideas to spread with high fidelity.

⑦ But the incredible amount of time required to copy a scroll or book by hand limited the speed with which information could spread this way.

⑧ A well-trained monk could transcribe around four pages of text per day.

⑨ A printing press could copy information thousands of times faster, allowing knowledge to spread far more quickly, with full fidelity, than ever before.


1811H3-39
① A major challenge for map-makers is the depiction of hills and valleys, slopes and flatlands collectively called the topography.

② This can be done in various ways.

③ One is to create an image of sunlight and shadow so that wrinkles of the topography are alternately lit and shaded, creating a visual representation of the shape of the land.

④ Another, technically more accurate way is to draw contour lines.

⑤ A contour line connects all points that lie at the same elevation.

⑥ A round hill rising above a plain, therefore, would appear on the map as a set of concentric circles, the largest at the base and the smallest near the top.

⑦ When the contour lines are positioned closely together, the hill's slope is steep; if they lie farther apart, the slope is gentler.

⑧ Contour lines can represent scarps, hollows, and valleys of the local topography.

⑨ At a glance, they reveal whether the relief in the mapped area is great or small: a "busy" contour map means lots of high relief.


1811H3-40
① Biological organisms, including human societies both with and without market systems, discount distant outputs over those available at the present time based on risks associated with an uncertain future.

② As the timing of inputs and outputs varies greatly depending on the type of energy, there is a strong case to incorporate time when assessing energy alternatives.

③ For example, the energy output from solar panels or wind power engines, where most investment happens before they begin producing, may need to be assessed differently when compared to most fossil fuel extraction technologies, where a large proportion of the energy output comes much sooner, and a larger (relative) proportion of inputs is applied during the extraction process, and not upfront.

④ Thus fossil fuels, particularly oil and natural gas, in addition to having energy quality advantages (cost, storability, transportability, etc) over many renewable technologies, also have a "temporal advantage" after accounting for human behavioral preference for current consumption/return.


1811H3-4142
① Industrial capitalism not only created work, it also created 'leisure' in the modern sense of the term.

② This might seem surprising, for the early cotton masters wanted to keep their machinery running as long as possible and forced their employees to work very long hours.

③ However, by requiring continuous work during work hours and ruling out non-work activity, employers had separated out leisure from work.

④ Some did this quite explicitly by creating distinct holiday periods, when factories were shut down, because it was better to do this than have work disrupted by the casual taking of days off.

⑤ 'Leisure' as a distinct non-work time, whether in the form of the holiday, weekend, or evening, was a result of the disciplined and bounded work time created by capitalist production.

⑥ Workers then wanted more leisure and leisure time was enlarged by union campaigns, which first started in the cotton industry, and eventually new laws were passed that limited the hours of work and gave workers holiday entitlements.

⑦ Leisure was also the creation of capitalism in another sense, through the commercialization of leisure.

⑧ This no longer meant participation in traditional sports and pastimes.

⑨ Workers began to pay for leisure activities organized by capitalist enterprises.

⑩ Mass travel to spectator sports, especially football and horse-racing, where people could be charged for entry, was now possible.

⑪ The importance of this can hardly be exaggerated, for whole new industries were emerging to exploit and develop the leisure market, which was to become a huge source of consumer demand, employment, and profit.


1811H3-4345
① Olivia and her sister Ellie were standing with Grandma in the middle of the cabbages.

② Suddenly, Grandma asked, "Do you know what a Cabbage White is?"

③ "Yes, I learned about it in biology class.

④ It's a beautiful white butterfly," Olivia answered.

⑤ "Right!

⑥ But it lays its eggs on cabbages, and then the caterpillars eat the cabbage leaves!

⑦ So, why don't you help me to pick the caterpillars up?"

⑧ Grandma suggested.

⑨ The two sisters gladly agreed and went back to the house to get ready.

⑩ Soon, armed with a small bucket each, Olivia and Ellie went back to Grandma.

⑪ When they saw the cabbage patch, they suddenly remembered how vast it was.

⑫ There seemed to be a million cabbages.

⑬ Olivia stood open-mouthed at the sight of the endless cabbage field.

⑭ She thought they could not possibly pick all of the caterpillars off.

⑮ Olivia sighed in despair.

⑯ Grandma smiled at her and said, "Don't worry.

⑰ We are only working on this first row here today."

⑱ Relieved, she and Ellie started on the first cabbage.

⑲ The caterpillars wriggled as they were picked up while Cabbage Whites filled the air around them.

⑳ It was as if the butterflies were making fun of Olivia; they seemed to be laughing at her, suggesting that they would lay millions more eggs.

㉑ The cabbage patch looked like a battlefield.

㉒ Olivia felt like she was losing the battle, but she fought on.

㉓ She kept filling her bucket with the caterpillars until the bottom disappeared.

㉔ Feeling exhausted and discouraged, she asked Grandma, "Why don't we just get rid of all the butterflies, so that there will be no more eggs or caterpillars?"

㉕ Grandma smiled gently and said, "Why wrestle with Mother Nature?

㉖ The butterflies help us grow some other plants because they carry pollen from flower to flower."

㉗ Olivia realized she was right.

㉘ Grandma added that although she knew caterpillars did harm to cabbages, she didn't wish to disturb the natural balance of the environment.

㉙ Olivia now saw the butterflies' true beauty.

㉚ Olivia and Ellie looked at their full buckets and smiled.

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1811h1 안녕! | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | wayne.tistory.com | 01033383436 | 제작일 181224 18:56:39



1811H1-18
① I am a staff member at the Eastville Library, and I work weekday afternoons.

② Each day, as school closes, dozens of students come to the library to do homework, use the library's computers, or socialize in a safe place.

③ Many of these children would otherwise go home to empty houses, and the library is the one place that provides a secure, supervised alternative to being home alone.

④ Your proposed policy of closing libraries on Mondays as a cost cutting measure could be harmful to these children, and I'm certain there are other ways to save money.

⑤ I urge you and other city council representatives to cancel the plan and to keep libraries open!


1811H1-19
① Clara, an 11-year-old girl, sat in the back seat of her mother's car with the window down.

② The wind from outside blew her brown hair across her ivory pale skin ―she sighed deeply.

③ She was sad about moving and was not smiling.

④ Her heart felt like it hurt.

⑤ The fact that she had to leave everything she knew broke her heart.

⑥ Eleven years ―that was a long time to be in one place and build memories and make friends.

⑦ She had been able to finish out the school year with her friends, which was nice, but she feared she would face the whole summer and the coming school year alone.

⑧ Clara sighed heavily.


1811H1-20
① If you were at a social gathering in a large building and you overheard someone say that "the roof is on fire," what would be your reaction?

② Until you knew more information, your first inclination might be toward safety and survival.

③ But if you were to find out that this particular person was talking about a song called "The Roof Is on Fire," your feelings of threat and danger would be diminished.

④ So once the additional facts are understood ―that the person was referring to a song and not a real fire ― the context is better understood and you are in a better position to judge and react.

⑤ All too often people react far too quickly and emotionally over information without establishing context.

⑥ It is so important for us to identify context related to information because if we fail to do so, we may judge and react too quickly.


1811H1-21
① Imagine that your body is a battery and the more energy this battery can store, the more energy you will be able to have within a day.

② Every night when you sleep, this battery is recharged with as much energy as you spent during the previous day.

③ If you want to have a lot of energy tomorrow, you need to spend a lot of energy today.

④ Our brain consumes only 20% of our energy, so it's a must to supplement thinking activities with walking and exercises that spend a lot of energy, so that your internal battery has more energy tomorrow.

⑤ Your body stores as much energy as you need: for thinking, for moving, for doing exercises.

⑥ The more active you are today, the more energy you spend today and the more energy you will have to burn tomorrow.

⑦ Exercising gives you more energy and keeps you from feeling exhausted.


1811H1-22
① When we read a number, we are more influenced by the leftmost digit than by the rightmost, since that is the order in which we read, and process, them.

② The number 799 feels significantly less than 800 because we see the former as 7-something and the latter as 8-something, whereas 798 feels pretty much like 799.

③ Since the nineteenth century, shopkeepers have taken advantage of this trick by choosing prices ending in a 9, to give the impression that a product is cheaper than it is.

④ Surveys show that around a third to two-thirds of all retail prices now end in a 9.

⑤ Though we are all experienced shoppers, we are still fooled.

⑥ In 2008, researchers at the University of Southern Brittany monitored a local pizza restaurant that was serving five types of pizza at €8.00 each.

⑦ When one of the pizzas was reduced in price to €7.99, its share of sales rose from a third of the total to a half.


1811H1-23
① In a competitive environment, such as a college admissions process or a job application situation, almost everyone has strong qualifications.

② Almost everyone has facts in their favor.

③ But how valuable are facts alone?

④ Think back to the most recent lecture or presentation you attended.

⑤ How many facts do you remember from it?

⑥ If you're like most people, you can't recall many, if any.

⑦ Chances are good, however, that you remember stories, anecdotes, and examples from the event, even if you can't think of their exact context.

⑧ The average person today is flooded with facts and data, and we let most of this pass through our brains with minimal retention or reaction ―unless something makes the information stand out in a meaningful way.

⑨ That's where story comes in.


1811H1-25
① Born in 1867 in Cincinnati, Ohio, Charles Henry Turner was an early pioneer in the field of insect behavior.

② His father owned an extensive library where Turner became fascinated with reading about the habits and behavior of insects.

③ Proceeding with his study, Turner earned a doctorate degree in zoology, the first African American to do so.

④ Even after receiving his degree, Turner was unable to get a teaching or research position at any major universities, possibly as a result of racism.

⑤ He moved to St. Louis and taught biology at Sumner High School, focusing on research there until 1922.

⑥ Turner was the first person to discover that insects are capable of learning, illustrating that insects can alter behavior based on previous experience.

⑦ He died of cardiac disease in Chicago in 1923.

⑧ During his 33-year career, Turner published more than 70 papers.

⑨ His last scientific paper was published the year after his death.


1811H1-28
① The belief that humans have morality and animals don't is such a longstanding assumption that it could well be called a habit of mind, and bad habits, as we all know, are extremely hard to break.

② A lot of people have caved in to this assumption because it is easier to deny morality to animals than to deal with the complex effects of the possibility that animals have moral behavior.

③ The historical tendency, framed in the outdated dualism of us versus them, is strong enough to make a lot of people cling to the status quo.

④ Denial of who animals are conveniently allows for maintaining false stereotypes about the cognitive and emotional capacities of animals.

⑤ Clearly a major paradigm shift is needed, because the lazy acceptance of habits of mind has a strong influence on how animals are understood and treated.


1811H1-29
① We notice repetition among confusion, and the opposite: we notice a break in a repetitive pattern.

② But how do these arrangements make us feel?

③ And what about "perfect" regularity and "perfect" chaos?

④ Some repetition gives us a sense of security, in that we know what is coming next.

⑤ We like some predictability.

⑥ We arrange our lives in largely repetitive schedules.

⑦ Randomness, in organization or in events, is more challenging and more frightening for most of us.

⑧ With "perfect" chaos we are frustrated by having to adapt and react again and again.

⑨ But "perfect" regularity is perhaps even more horrifying in its monotony than randomness is.

⑩ It implies a cold, unfeeling, mechanical quality.

⑪ Such perfect order does not exist in nature; there are too many forces working against each other.

⑫ Either extreme, therefore, feels threatening.


1811H1-31
① If you follow science news, you will have noticed that cooperation among animals has become a hot topic in the mass media.

② For example, in late 2007 the science media widely reported a study by Claudia Rutte and Michael Taborsky suggesting that rats display what they call "generalized reciprocity."

③ They each provided help to an unfamiliar and unrelated individual, based on their own previous experience of having been helped by an unfamiliar rat.

④ Rutte and Taborsky trained rats in a cooperative task of pulling a stick to obtain food for a partner.

⑤ Rats who had been helped previously by an unknown partner were more likely to help others.

⑥ Before this research was conducted, generalized reciprocity was thought to be unique to humans.


1811H1-32
① We have to recognize that there always exists in us the strongest need to utilize all our attention.

② And this is quite evident in the great amount of displeasure we feel any time the entirety of our capacity for attention is not being put to use.

③ When this is the case, we will seek to find outlets for our unused attention.

④ If we are playing a chess game with a weaker opponent, we will seek to supplement this activity with another: such as watching TV, or listening to music, or playing another chess game at the same time.

⑤ Very often this reveals itself in unconscious movements, such as playing with something in one's hands or pacing around the room; and if such an action also serves to increase pleasure or relieve displeasure, all the better.


1811H1-33
① From an economic perspective, a short-lived event can become an innovative event if it generates goods and services that can be sold to people, in particular to those from outside the locality.

② The remarkable growth of art exhibitions, cultural festivals and sports competitions, for example, can be analysed in this light.

③ They are temporary activities that can attract large numbers of outsiders to a locality, bringing in new sources of income.

④ But even here, there is a two-way interaction between the event and the context.

⑤ The existence of an infrastructure, a reputation, a history of an activity for an area may have important effects on the economic success or failure of an event.

⑥ In other words, events do not take place in a vacuum.

⑦ They depend on an existing context which has been in the making for a long time.

⑧ The short-lived event, therefore, would be performed in relation to this long-term context.


1811H1-34
① Interestingly, in nature, the more powerful species have a narrower field of vision.

② The distinction between predator and prey offers a clarifying example of this.

③ The key feature that distinguishes predator species from prey species isn't the presence of claws or any other feature related to biological weaponry.

④ The key feature is the position of their eyes.

⑤ Predators evolved with eyes facing forward ―which allows for binocular vision that offers accurate depth perception when pursuing prey.

⑥ Prey, on the other hand, often have eyes facing outward, maximizing peripheral vision, which allows the hunted to detect danger that may be approaching from any angle.

⑦ Consistent with our place at the top of the food chain, humans have eyes that face forward.

⑧ We have the ability to gauge depth and pursue our goals, but we can also miss important action on our periphery.


1811H1-35
① Wouldn't it be nice if you could take your customers by the hand and guide each one through your store while pointing out all the great products you would like them to consider buying?

② Most people, however, would not particularly enjoy having a stranger grab their hand and drag them through a store.

③ Rather, let the store do it for you.

④ Have a central path that leads shoppers through the store and lets them look at many different departments or product areas.

⑤ This path leads your customers from the entrance through the store on the route you want them to take all the way to the checkout.


1811H1-36
① Color can impact how you perceive weight.

② Dark colors look heavy, and bright colors look less so.

③ Interior designers often paint darker colors below brighter colors to put the viewer at ease.

④ Product displays work the same way.

⑤ Place bright-colored products higher and dark-colored products lower, given that they are of similar size.

⑥ This will look more stable and allow customers to comfortably browse the products from top to bottom.

⑦ In contrast, shelving dark-colored products on top can create the illusion that they might fall over, which can be a source of anxiety for some shoppers.

⑧ Black and white, which have a brightness of 0% and 100%, respectively, show the most dramatic difference in perceived weight.

⑨ In fact, black is perceived to be twice as heavy as white.

⑩ Carrying the same product in a black shopping bag, versus a white one, feels heavier.

⑪ So, small but expensive products like neckties and accessories are often sold in dark-colored shopping bags or cases.


1811H1-37
① Ethical and moral systems are different for every culture.

② According to cultural relativism, all of these systems are equally valid, and no system is better than another.

③ The basis of cultural relativism is the notion that no true standards of good and evil actually exist.

④ Therefore, judging whether something is right or wrong is based on individual societies' beliefs, and any moral or ethical opinions are affected by an individual's cultural perspective.

⑤ There exists an inherent logical inconsistency in cultural relativism, however.

⑥ If one accepts the idea that there is no right or wrong, then there exists no way to make judgments in the first place.

⑦ To deal with this inconsistency, cultural relativism creates "tolerance."

⑧ However, with tolerance comes intolerance, which means that tolerance must imply some sort of ultimate good.

⑨ Thus, tolerance also goes against the very notion of cultural relativism, and the boundaries of logic make cultural relativism impossible.


1811H1-38
① The way we communicate influences our ability to build strong and healthy communities.

② Traditional ways of building communities have emphasized debate and argument.

③ For example, the United States has a strong tradition of using town hall meetings to deliberate important issues within communities.

④ In these settings, advocates for each side of the issue present arguments for their positions, and public issues have been discussed in such public forums.

⑤ Yet for debate and argument to work well, people need to come to such forums with similar assumptions and values.

⑥ The shared assumptions and values serve as a foundation for the discussion.

⑦ However, as society becomes more diverse, the likelihood that people share assumptions and values diminishes.

⑧ As a result, forms of communication such as argument and debate become polarized, which may drive communities apart as opposed to bringing them together.


1811H1-39
① Some people believe that the social sciences are falling behind the natural sciences.

② They maintain that not only does social science have no exact laws, but it also has failed to eliminate great social evils such as racial discrimination, crime, poverty, and war.

③ They suggest that social scientists have failed to accomplish what might reasonably have been expected of them.

④ Such critics are usually unaware of the real nature of social science and of its special problems and basic limitations.

⑤ For example, they forget that the solution to a social problem requires not only knowledge but also the ability to influence people.

⑥ Even if social scientists discover the procedures that could reasonably be followed to achieve social improvement, they are seldom in a position to control social action.

⑦ For that matter, even dictators find that there are limits to their power to change society.


1811H1-40
① We cannot predict the outcomes of sporting contests, which vary from week to week.

② This heterogeneity is a feature of sport.

③ It is the uncertainty of the result and the quality of the contest that consumers find attractive.

④ For the sport marketer, this is problematic, as the quality of the contest cannot be guaranteed, no promises can be made in relations to the result and no assurances can be given in respect of the performance of star players.

⑤ Unlike consumer products, sport cannot and does not display consistency as a key feature of marketing strategies.

⑥ The sport marketer therefore must avoid marketing strategies based solely on winning, and must instead focus on developing product extensions such as the facility, parking, merchandise, souvenirs, food and beverages rather than on the core product (that is, the game itself).


1811H1-4142
① Plants are nature's alchemists; they are expert at transforming water, soil, and sunlight into an array of precious substances.

② Many of these substances are beyond the ability of human beings to conceive.

③ While we were perfecting consciousness and learning to walk on two feet, they were, by the same process of natural selection, inventing photosynthesis (the astonishing trick of converting sunlight into food) and perfecting organic chemistry.

④ As it turns out, many of the plants' discoveries in chemistry and physics have served us well.

⑤ From plants come chemical compounds that nourish and heal and delight the senses.

⑥ Why would they go to all this trouble?

⑦ Why should plants bother to devise the recipes for so many complex molecules and then expend the energy needed to manufacture them?

⑧ Plants can't move, which means they can't escape the creatures that feed on them.

⑨ A great many of the chemicals plants produce are designed, by natural selection, to compel other creatures to leave them alone: deadly poisons, foul flavors, toxins to confuse the minds of predators.

⑩ Plants also can't change location or extend their reproductive range without help.

⑪ Many other of the substances plants make draw other creatures to them by stirring and gratifying their desire.

⑫ It is this fact of plants' immobility that causes them to make chemicals.


1811H1-4345
① Rangan opened his cycle shop early in the morning.

② Yesterday he could not attend to business as he was laid up with high fever, but today he made it up to the shop to earn money for his family.

③ Shouting to the tea boy in the next shop for a strong cup of tea, he lined up all the bicycles to be repaired outside.

④ He took a sip of the tea, thinking about the order in which he had to go ahead with his job.

⑤ Rangan's thoughts were disturbed by an old man walking with his bicycle towards his shop.

⑥ The old man was wearing an old turban on his head.

⑦ His hands and face were covered in wrinkles.

⑧ In a gloomy tone, he said, "Would you please replace the tire?

⑨ I'll pay you this evening."

⑩ Feeling sympathy for him, Rangan fixed the bicycle.

⑪ He even treated the old man to a cup of tea.

⑫ The old man thanked Rangan and left.

⑬ Rangan worked hard to finish what he had to do.

⑭ It was already late evening but there was no sign of the old man.

⑮ Doubts filled him.

⑯ What if the old man does not return with the money?

⑰ He regretted fixing up the old man's bicycle.

⑱ Suddenly he lost all hope and he could wait no longer.

⑲ He locked up his shop later than usual and cursed himself for getting tricked by an old man.

⑳ At home, Rangan was confused.

㉑ Washing his greasy hands, he heard a knock at his door.

㉒ It was the old man and the tea boy.

㉓ The old man said, "Your shop was closed when I returned.

㉔ Luckily, I saw this boy in front of the shop."

㉕ Handing over the money to Rangan, he continued, "Thanks for your hospitality."

㉖ Rangan grinned at the kind words the old man spoke to him.

㉗ The fact that he had suspected the old man pained his heart.

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1809h1 안녕! | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | wayne.tistory.com | 01033383436 | 제작일 181224 18:56:10



1809H1-18
① This is a reply to your inquiry about the shipment status of the desk you purchased at our store on September 26.

② Unfortunately, the delivery of your desk will take longer than expected due to the damage that occurred during the shipment from the furniture manufacturer to our warehouse.

③ We have ordered an exact replacement from the manufacturer, and we expect that delivery will take place within two weeks.

④ As soon as the desk arrives, we will telephone you immediately and arrange a convenient delivery time.

⑤ We regret the inconvenience this delay has caused you.


1809H1-19
① Garnet blew out the candles and lay down.

② It was too hot even for a sheet.

③ She lay there, sweating, listening to the empty thunder that brought no rain, and whispered, "I wish the drought would end.

④ "Late in the night, Garnet had a feeling that something she had been waiting for was about to happen.

⑤ She lay quite still, listening.

⑥ The thunder rumbled again, sounding much louder.

⑦ And then slowly, one by one, as if someone were dropping pennies on the roof, came the raindrops.

⑧ Garnet held her breath hopefully.

⑨ The sound paused.

⑩ "Don't stop, Please" she whispered.

⑪ Then the rain burst strong and loud upon the world.

⑫ Garnet leaped out of bed and ran to the window.

⑬ She shouted with joy, "It's raining hard!

⑭ "She felt as though the thunderstorm was a present.


1809H1-20
① How do you encourage other people when they are changing their behavior?

② Suppose you see a friend who is on a diet and has been losing a lot of weight.

③ It's tempting to tell her that she looks great and she must feel wonderful.

④ It feels good for someone to hear positive comments, and this feedback will often be encouraging.

⑤ However, if you end the discussion there, then the only feedback your friend is getting is about her progress toward an outcome.

⑥ Instead, continue the discussion.

⑦ Ask about what she is doing that has allowed her to be successful.

⑧ What is she eating?

⑨ Where is she working out?

⑩ What are the lifestyle changes she has made?

⑪ When the conversation focuses on the process of change rather than the outcome, it reinforces the value of creating a sustainable process.


1809H1-21
① It might seem that praising your child's intelligence or talent would boost his self-esteem and motivate him.

② But it turns out that this sort of praise backfires.

③ Carol Dweck and her colleagues have demonstrated the effect in a series of experimental studies: "When we praise kids for their ability, kids become more cautious.

④ They avoid challenges.

⑤ "It's as if they are afraid to do anything that might make them fail and lose your high appraisal.

⑥ Kids might also get the message that intelligence or talent is something that people either have or don't have.

⑦ This leaves kids feeling helpless when they make mistakes.

⑧ What's the point of trying to improve if your mistakes indicate that you lack intelligence?


1809H1-22
① Fast fashion refers to trendy clothes designed, created, and sold to consumers as quickly as possible at extremely low prices.

② Fast fashion items may not cost you much at the cash register, but they come with a serious price: tens of millions of people in developing countries, some just children, work long hours in dangerous conditions to make them, in the kinds of factories often labeled sweatshops.

③ Most garment workers are paid barely enough to survive.

④ Fast fashion also hurts the environment.

⑤ Garments are manufactured using toxic chemicals and then transported around the globe, making the fashion industry the world's second-largest polluter, after the oil industry.

⑥ And millions of tons of discarded clothing piles up in landfills each year.


1809H1-23
① If you want to protect yourself from colds and flu, regular exercise may be the ultimate immunity-booster.

② Studies have shown that moderate aerobic exercise can more than halve your risk for respiratory infections and other common winter diseases.

③ But when you feel sick, the story changes.

④ "Exercise is great for prevention, but it can be lousy for therapy," says David Nieman, the director of the Human Performance Lab.

⑤ Research shows that moderate exercise has no effect on the duration or severity of the common cold.

⑥ If you have the flu or other forms of fever-causing systemic infections, exercise can slow recovery and, therefore, is a bad idea.

⑦ Your immune system is working overtime to fight off the infection, and exercise, a form of physical stress, makes that task harder.


1809H1-25
① Eddie Adams was born in New Kensington, Pennsylvania.

② He developed his passion for photography in his teens, when he became a staff photographer for his high school paper.

③ After graduating, he joined the United States Marine Corps, where he captured scenes from the Korean War as a combat photographer.

④ In 1958, he became staff at the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, a daily evening newspaper published in Philadelphia.

⑤ In 1962, he joined the Associated Press (AP), and after 10 years, he left the AP to work as a freelancer for Time magazine.

⑥ The Saigon Execution photo that he took in Vietnam earned him the Pulitzer Prize for Spot News Photography in 1969.

⑦ He shot more than 350 covers of magazines with portraits of political leaders such as Deng Xiaoping, Richard Nixon, and George Bush.


1809H1-28
① My dad worked very late hours as a musician―until about three in the morning―so he slept late on weekends.

② As a result, we didn't have much of a relationship when I was young other than him constantly nagging me to take care of chores like mowing the lawn and cutting the hedges, which I hated.

③ He was a responsible man dealing with an irresponsible kid.

④ Memories of how we interacted seem funny to me today.

⑤ For example, one time he told me to cut the grass and I decided to do just the front yard and postpone doing the back, but then it rained for a couple days and the backyard grass became so high I had to cut it with a sickle.

⑥ That took so long that by the time I was finished, the front yard was too high to mow, and so on.


1809H1-29
① People are innately inclined to look for causes of events, to form explanations and stories.

② That is one reason storytelling is such a persuasive medium.

③ Stories resonate with our experiences and provide examples of new instances.

④ From our experiences and the stories of others we tend to form generalizations about the way people behave and things work.

⑤ We attribute causes to events, and as long as these cause-and-effect pairings make sense, we use them for understanding future events.

⑥ Yet these causal attributions are often mistaken.

⑦ Sometimes they implicate the wrong causes, and for some things that happen, there is no single cause.

⑧ Rather, there is a complex chain of events that all contribute to the result;.

⑨ If any one of the events would not have occurred, the result would be different.

⑩ But even when there is no single causal act, that doesn't stop people from assigning one.


1809H1-30
① Leaving a store, I returned to my car only to find that I'd locked my car key and cell phone inside the vehicle.

② A teenager riding his bike saw me kick a tire in frustration.

③ "What's wrong" he asked.

④ I explained my situation.

⑤ "But even if I could call my husband," I said, "he can't bring me his car key, since this is our only car.

⑥ "He handed me his cell phone.

⑦ The thoughtful boy said, "Call your husband and tell him I'm coming to get his key."

⑧ "Are you sure?

⑨ That's four miles round trip.

⑩ ""Don't worry about it."

⑪ An hour later, he returned with the key.

⑫ I offered him some money, but he refused.

⑬ "Let's just say I needed the exercise," he said.

⑭ Then, like a cowboy in the movies, he rode off into the sunset.


1809H1-31
① One CEO in one of Silicon Valley's most innovative companies has what would seem like a boring, creativity-killing routine.

② He holds a three-hour meeting that starts at 9:00 A.M. one day a week.

③ It is never missed or rescheduled at a different time.

④ It is mandatory―so much so that even in this global firm all the executives know never to schedule any travel that will conflict with the meeting.

⑤ At first glance there is nothing particularly unique about this.

⑥ But what is unique is the quality of ideas that come out of the regular meetings.

⑦ Because the CEO has eliminated the mental cost involved in planning the meeting or thinking about who will or won't be there, people can focus on creative problem solving.


1809H1-32
① When meeting someone in person, body language experts say that smiling can portray confidence and warmth.

② Online, however, smiley faces could be doing some serious damage to your career.

③ In a new study, researchers found that using smiley faces makes you look incompetent.

④ The study says, "contrary to actual smiles, smileys do not increase perceptions of warmth and actually decrease perceptions of competence.

⑤ "The report also explains, "Perceptions of low competence, in turn, lessened information sharing.

⑥ "Chances are, if you are including a smiley face in an email for work, the last thing you want is for your coworkers to think that you are so inadequate that they chose not to share information with you.


1809H1-33
① How funny are you?

② While some people are natural humorists, being funny is a set of skills that can be learned.

③ Exceptionally funny people don't depend upon their memory to keep track of everything they find funny.

④ In the olden days, great comedians carried notebooks to write down funny thoughts or observations and scrapbooks for news clippings that struck them as funny.

⑤ Today, you can do that easily with your smartphone.

⑥ If you have a funny thought, record it as an audio note.

⑦ If you read a funny article, save the link in your bookmarks.

⑧ The world is a funny place and your existence within it is probably funnier.

⑨ Accepting that fact is a blessing that gives you everything you need to see humor and craft stories on a daily basis.

⑩ All you have to do is document them and then tell someone.


1809H1-34
① If you ask a physicist how long it would take a marble to fall from the top of a ten-story building, he will likely answer the question by assuming that the marble falls in a vacuum.

② In reality, the building is surrounded by air, which applies friction to the falling marble and slows it down.

③ Yet the physicist will point out that the friction on the marble is so small that its effect is negligible.

④ Assuming the marble falls in a vacuum simplifies the problem without substantially affecting the answer.

⑤ Economists make assumptions for the same reason: Assumptions can simplify the complex world and make it easier to understand.

⑥ To study the effects of international trade, for example, we might assume that the world consists of only two countries and that each country produces only two goods.

⑦ By doing so, we can focus our thinking on the essence of the problem.

⑧ Thus, we are in a better position to understand international trade in the complex world.


1809H1-35
① Water is the ultimate commons.

② Once, watercourses seemed boundless and the idea of protecting water was considered silly.

③ But rules change.

④ Time and again, communities have studied water systems and redefined wise use.

⑤ Now Ecuador has become the first nation on Earth to put the rights of nature in its constitution.

⑥ This move has proclaimed that rivers and forests are not simply property but maintain their own right to flourish.

⑦ According to the constitution, a citizen might file suit on behalf of an injured watershed, recognizing that its health is crucial to the common good.

⑧ More countries are acknowledging nature's rights and are expected to follow Ecuador's lead.


1809H1-36
① No one likes to think they're average, least of all below average.

② When asked by psychologists, most people rate themselves above average on all manner of measures including intelligence, looks, health, and so on.

③ Self-control is no different:.

④ People consistently overestimate their ability to control themselves.

⑤ This overconfidence in self-control can lead people to assume they'll be able to control themselves in situations in which, it turns out, they can't.

⑥ This is why trying to stop an unwanted habit can be an extremely frustrating task.

⑦ Over the days and weeks from our resolution to change, we start to notice it popping up again and again.

⑧ The old habit's well-practiced performance is beating our conscious desire for change into submission.


1809H1-37
① Trade will not occur unless both parties want what the other party has to offer.

② This is referred to as the double coincidence of wants.

③ Suppose a farmer wants to trade eggs with a baker for a loaf of bread.

④ If the baker has no need or desire for eggs, then the farmer is out of luck and does not get any bread.

⑤ However, if the farmer is enterprising and utilizes his network of village friends, he might discover that the baker is in need of some new cast-iron trivets for cooling his bread, and it just so happens that the blacksmith needs a new lamb's wool sweater.

⑥ Upon further investigation, the farmer discovers that the weaver has been wanting an omelet for the past week.

⑦ The farmer will then trade the eggs for the sweater, the sweater for the trivets, and the trivets for his fresh-baked loaf of bread.


1809H1-38
① Have you heard someone say, "He has no one to blame but himself" for some problem?

② In everyday life we often blame people for "creating" their own problems.

③ Although individual behavior can contribute to social problems, our individual experiences are often largely beyond our own control.

④ They are determined by society as a whole ― by its historical development and its organization.

⑤ If a person sinks into debt because of overspending or credit card abuse, other people often consider the problem to be the result of the individual's personal failings.

⑥ However, thinking about it this way overlooks debt among people in low-income brackets who have no other way than debt to acquire basic necessities of life.

⑦ By contrast, at middle- and upper-income levels, overspending takes on a variety of meanings typically influenced by what people think of as essential for their well-being and associated with the so-called "good life" that is so heavily marketed.

⑧ But across income and wealth levels, larger-scale economic and social problems may affect the person's ability to pay for consumer goods and services.


1809H1-39
① Traditionally, people were declared dead when their hearts stopped beating, their blood stopped circulating and they stopped breathing.

② So doctors would listen for a heartbeat, or occasionally conduct the famous mirror test to see if there were any signs of moisture from the potential deceased's breath.

③ It is commonly known that when people's hearts stop and they breathe their last, they are dead.

④ But in the last half-century, doctors have proved time and time again that they can revive many patients whose hearts have stopped beating by various techniques such as cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

⑤ So a patient whose heart has stopped can no longer be regarded as dead.

⑥ Instead, the patient is said to be 'clinically dead'.

⑦ Someone who is only clinically dead can often be brought back to life.


1809H1-40
① At the Leipzig Zoo in Germany, 34 zoo chimpanzees and orangutans participating in a study were each individually tested in a room, where they were put in front of two boxes.

② An experimenter would place an object inside one box and leave the room.

③ Another experimenter would enter the room, move the object into the other box and exit.

④ When the first experimenter returned and tried retrieving the object from the first box, the great ape would help the experimenter open the second box, which it knew the object had been transferred to.

⑤ However, most apes in the study did not help the first experimenter open the second box if the first experimenter was still in the room to see the second experimenter move the item.

⑥ The findings show the great apes understood when the first experimenter still thought the item was where he or she last left it.


1809H1-4142
① It's reasonable to assume that every adult alive today has, at some point in their life, expressed or heard from someone else a variation of the following: "Where did all the time go?"

② "I can't believe it's the New Year.

③ Time flies" "Enjoy it.

④ One day you'll wake up and you'll be 50."

⑤ While different on the surface, the sentiment behind these phrases is the same: time feels like it moves faster as we get older.

⑥ But why does this happen?

⑦ According to psychologist Robert Ornstein, the speed of time and our perception of it is heavily influenced by how much new information is available for our minds to absorb and process.

⑧ In essence, the more new information we take in, the slower time feels.

⑨ This theory could explain in part why time feels slower for children.

⑩ Assigned the enormous task of absorbing and processing all this new perceptual and sensory information around them, their brains are continuously alert and attentive.

⑪ Why?

⑫ Because everything is unfamiliar.

⑬ Consider the mind of a child: having experienced so little, the world is a mysterious and fascinating place.

⑭ Adults and children may live in the same world, but reality for a child is vastly different ―full of wonders and curiosities and miraculous little events that most adults ignore.

⑮ Perhaps this is why we think so fondly about the joy of childhood, that freedom of mind and body before the world becomes familiar and predictable.


1809H1-4345
① A 10-year-old boy decided to learn judo despite the fact that he had lost his left arm in a devastating car accident.

② The boy began lessons with an old Japanese judo master.

③ The boy was doing well, so he couldn't understand why, after three months of training, the master had taught him only one move.

④ Not quite understanding but believing in his master, the boy kept training.

⑤ Several months later, the master took the boy to his first tournament.

⑥ Surprising himself, the boy easily won his first two matches.

⑦ The third match proved to be more difficult, but after some time, his opponent became impatient and charged;.

⑧ The boy skillfully used his one move to win the match.

⑨ Still amazed by his success, he was now in the finals.

⑩ This time, his opponent was bigger, stronger, and more experienced.

⑪ Concerned that he might get hurt, the referee called a timeout to stop the match.

⑫ Then the master intervened.

⑬ "No," the master insisted, "let him continue.

⑭ "Soon after the match resumed, his opponent made a critical mistake: he dropped his guard.

⑮ Instantly, the boy used his move to pin him.

⑯ The boy had won the match and the tournament.

⑰ He was the champion.

⑱ On the way home, after reviewing all the matches he had, he summoned the courage to ask what was on his mind.

⑲ "Master, how did I become the champion with only one move?"

⑳ "You won for two reasons," the master answered.

㉑ "First, you've mastered one of the most difficult throws in all of judo.

㉒ And second, the only known defense for that move is for your opponent to grab your left arm.

㉓ "The boy's biggest weakness had become his biggest strength.

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1806h1 안녕! | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | wayne.tistory.com | 01033383436 | 제작일 181224 18:55:30



1806H1-18
① The upgrade of the Wellington Waste Water Treatment Facility will begin on Monday, July 30, 2018.

② The construction will take about 28 months and may lead to increased traffic along Baker Street due to work on and around it.

③ Construction vehicles may also use this street to gain access to the main construction site.

④ We sincerely apologize for any inconveniences that may be experienced.

⑤ We will try to keep them to a minimum.

⑥ This work is part of our continuous effort to maintain and improve the basic systems and services of our city.

⑦ For any questions, please contact Ronald Brown at 022-807-4725.


1806H1-19
① One night, I opened the door that led to the second floor, noting that the hallway light was off.

② I thought nothing of it because I knew there was a light switch next to the stairs that I could turn on.

③ What happened next was something that chilled my blood.

④ When I put my foot down on the first step, I felt a movement under the stairs.

⑤ My eyes were drawn to the darkness beneath them.

⑥ Once I realized something strange was happening, my heart started beating fast.

⑦ Suddenly, I saw a hand reach out from between the steps and grab my ankle.

⑧ I let out a terrifying scream that could be heard all the way down the block, but nobody answered!


1806H1-20
① Something comes over most people when they start writing.

② They write in a language different from the one they would use if they were talking to a friend.

③ If, however, you want people to read and understand what you write, write it in spoken language.

④ Written language is more complex, which makes it more work to read.

⑤ It's also more formal and distant, which makes the readers lose attention.

⑥ You don't need complex sentences to express ideas.

⑦ Even when specialists in some complicated field express their ideas, they don't use sentences any more complex than they do when talking about what to have for lunch.

⑧ If you simply manage to write in spoken language, you have a good start as a writer.


1806H1-21
① Too many companies advertise their new products as if their competitors did not exist.

② They advertise their products in a vacuum and are disappointed when their messages fail to get through.

③ Introducing a new product category is difficult, especially if the new category is not contrasted against the old one.

④ Consumers do not usually pay attention to what's new and different unless it's related to the old.

⑤ That's why if you have a truly new product, it's often better to say what the product is not, rather than what it is.

⑥ For example, the first automobile was called a "horseless" carriage, a name which allowed the public to understand the concept against the existing mode of transportation.


1806H1-22
① Human beings are driven by a natural desire to form and maintain interpersonal relationships.

② From this perspective, people seek relationships with others to fill a fundamental need, and this need underlies many emotions, actions, and decisions throughout life.

③ Probably, the need to belong is a product of human beings' evolutionary history as a social species.

④ Human beings have long depended on the cooperation of others for the supply of food, protection from predators, and the acquisition of essential knowledge.

⑤ Without the formation and maintenance of social bonds, early human beings probably would not have been able to cope with or adapt to their physical environments.

⑥ Thus, seeking closeness and meaningful relationships has long been vital for human survival.


1806H1-23
① Mammals tend to be less colorful than other animal groups, but zebras are strikingly dressed in black-and-white.

② What purpose do such high contrast patterns serve?

③ The colors' roles aren't always obvious.

④ The question of what zebras can gain from having stripes has puzzled scientists for more than a century.

⑤ To try to solve this mystery, wildlife biologist Tim Caro spent more than a decade studying zebras in Tanzania.

⑥ He ruled out theory after theory ― stripes don't keep them cool, stripes don't confuse predators ― before finding an answer.

⑦ In 2013, he set up fly traps covered in zebra skin and, for comparison, others covered in antelope skin.

⑧ He saw that flies seemed to avoid landing on the stripes.

⑨ After more research, he concluded that stripes can literally save zebras from disease-carrying insects.


1806H1-25
① Tomas Luis de Victoria, the greatest Spanish composer of the sixteenth century, was born in Avila and as a boy sang in the church choir.

② When his voice broke, he went to Rome to study and he remained in that city for about 20 years, holding appointments at various churches and religious institutions.

③ In Rome, he met Palestrina, a famous Italian composer, and may even have been his pupil.

④ In the 1580s, after becoming a priest, he returned to Spain and spent the rest of his life peacefully in Madrid as a composer and organist to members of the royal household.

⑤ He died in 1611, but his tomb has yet to be identified.


1806H1-28
① Plastic is extremely slow to degrade and tends to float, which allows it to travel in ocean currents for thousands of miles.

② Most plastics break down into smaller and smaller pieces when exposed to ultraviolet (UV) light, forming microplastics.

③ These microplastics are very difficult to measure once they are small enough to pass through the nets typically used to collect them.

④ Their impacts on the marine environment and food webs are still poorly understood.

⑤ These tiny particles are known to be eaten by various animals and to get into the food chain.

⑥ Because most of the plastic particles in the ocean are so small, there is no practical way to clean up the ocean.

⑦ One would have to filter enormous amounts of water to collect a relatively small amount of plastic.


1806H1-29
① People have higher expectations as their lives get better.

② However, the higher the expectations, the more difficult it is to be satisfied.

③ We can increase the satisfaction we feel in our lives by controlling our expectations.

④ Adequate expectations leave room for many experiences to be pleasant surprises.

⑤ The challenge is to find a way to have proper expectations.

⑥ One way to do this is by keeping wonderful experiences rare.

⑦ No matter what you can afford, save great wine for special occasions.

⑧ Make an elegantly styled silk blouse a special treat.

⑨ This may seem like an act of denying your desires, but I don't think it is.

⑩ On the contrary, it's a way to make sure that you can continue to experience pleasure.

⑪ What's the point of great wines and great blouses if they don't make you feel great?


1806H1-30
① "Wanna work together?"

② a cheerful voice spoke on Amy's first day at a new school.

③ It was Wilhemina.

④ Amy was too surprised to do anything but nod.

⑤ The big black girl put her notebook down beside Amy's.

⑥ After dropping the notebook, she lifted herself up onto the stool beside Amy.

⑦ "I'm Wilhemina Smiths, Smiths with an s at both ends," she said with a friendly smile.

⑧ "My friends call me Mina.

⑨ You're Amy Tillerman.

⑩ "Amy nodded and stared.

⑪ As the only new kid in the school, she was pleased to have a lab partner.

⑫ But Amy wondered if Mina chose her because she had felt sorry for the new kid.


1806H1-31
① One outcome of motivation is behavior that takes considerable effort.

② For example, if you are motivated to buy a good car, you will research vehicles online, look at ads, visit dealerships, and so on.

③ Likewise, if you are motivated to lose weight, you will buy low-fat foods, eat smaller portions, and exercise.

④ Motivation not only drives the final behaviors that bring a goal closer but also creates willingness to expend time and energy on preparatory behaviors.

⑤ Thus, someone motivated to buy a new smartphone may earn extra money for it, drive through a storm to reach the store, and then wait in line to buy it.


1806H1-32
① Good managers have learned to overcome the initial feelings of anxiety when assigning tasks.

② They are aware that no two people act in exactly the same way and so do not feel threatened if they see one employee going about a task differently than another.

③ Instead, they focus on the end result.

④ If a job was successfully done, as long as people are working in a manner acceptable to the organization (for example, as long as salespeople are keeping to the company's ethical selling policy), then that's fine.

⑤ If an acceptable final outcome wasn't achieved, then such managers respond by discussing it with the employee and analyzing the situation, to find out what training or additional skills that person will need to do the task successfully in the future.


1806H1-33
① There is good evidence that in organic development, perception starts with recognizing outstanding structural features.

② For example, when two-year-old children and chimpanzees had learned that, of two boxes presented to them, the one with a triangle of a particular size and shape always contained attractive food, they had no difficulty applying their training to triangles of very different appearance.

③ The triangles were made smaller or larger or turned upside down.

④ A black triangle on a white background was replaced by a white triangle on a black background, or an outlined triangle by a solid one.

⑤ These changes seemed not to interfere with recognition.

⑥ Similar results were obtained with rats.

⑦ Karl Lashley, a psychologist, has asserted that simple transpositions of this type are universal in all animals including humans.


1806H1-34
① There is a very old story involving a man trying to fix his broken boiler.

② Despite his best efforts over many months, he can't do it.

③ Eventually, he gives up and decides to call in an expert.

④ The engineer arrives, gives one gentle tap on the side of the boiler, and it springs to life.

⑤ The engineer gives a bill to the man, and the man argues that he should pay only a small fee as the job took the engineer only a few moments.

⑥ The engineer explains that the man is not paying for the time he took to tap the boiler but rather the years of experience involved in knowing exactly where to tap.

⑦ Just like the expert engineer tapping the boiler, effective change does not have to be time-consuming.

⑧ In fact, it is often simply a question of knowing exactly where to tap.


1806H1-35
① Interpersonal messages combine content and relationship dimensions.

② That is, they refer to the real world, to something external to both speaker and listener;.

③ At the same time they also refer to the relationship between parties.

④ For example, a supervisor may say to a trainee, "See me after the meeting.

⑤ "This simple message has a content message that tells the trainee to see the supervisor after the meeting.

⑥ It also contains a relationship message that says something about the connection between the supervisor and the trainee.

⑦ Even the use of the simple command shows there is a status difference that allows the supervisor to command the trainee.

⑧ You can appreciate this most clearly if you visualize the same command being made by the trainee to the supervisor.

⑨ It appears awkward and out of place, because it violates the normal relationship between supervisor and trainee.


1806H1-36
① The scientific study of the physical characteristics of colors can be traced back to Isaac Newton.

② One day, he spotted a set of prisms at a big county fair.

③ He took them home and began to experiment with them.

④ In a darkened room he allowed a thin ray of sunlight to fall on a triangular glass prism.

⑤ As soon as the white ray hit the prism, it separated into the familiar colors of the rainbow.

⑥ This finding was not new, as humans had observed the rainbow since the beginning of time.

⑦ It was only when Newton placed a second prism in the path of the spectrum that he found something new.

⑧ The composite colors produced a white beam.

⑨ Thus he concluded that white light can be produced by combining the spectral colors.


1806H1-37
① When I was very young, I had a difficulty telling the difference between dinosaurs and dragons.

② But there is a significant difference between them.

③ Dragons appear in Greek myths, legends about England's King Arthur, Chinese New Year parades, and in many tales throughout human history.

④ But even if they feature in stories created today, they have always been the products of the human imagination and never existed.

⑤ Dinosaurs, however, did once live.

⑥ They walked the earth for a very long time, even if human beings never saw them.

⑦ They existed around 200 million years ago, and we know about them because their bones have been preserved as fossils.


1806H1-38
① Acoustic concerns in school libraries are much more important and complex today than they were in the past.

② Years ago, before electronic resources were such a vital part of the library environment, we had only to deal with noise produced by people.

③ Today, the widespread use of computers, printers, and other equipment has added machine noise.

④ People noise has also increased, because group work and instruction are essential parts of the learning process.

⑤ So, the modern school library is no longer the quiet zone it once was.

⑥ Yet libraries must still provide quietness for study and reading, because many of our students want a quiet study environment.

⑦ Considering this need for library surroundings, it is important to design spaces where unwanted noise can be eliminated or at least kept to a minimum.


1806H1-39
① Of the many forest plants that can cause poisoning, wild mushrooms may be among the most dangerous.

② This is because people sometimes confuse the poisonous and edible varieties, or they eat mushrooms without making a positive identification of the variety.

③ Many people enjoy hunting wild species of mushrooms in the spring season, because they are excellent edible mushrooms and are highly prized.

④ However, some wild mushrooms are dangerous, leading people to lose their lives due to mushroom poisoning.

⑤ To be safe, a person must be able to identify edible mushrooms before eating any wild one.


1806H1-40
① Recent studies point to the importance of warm physical contact for healthy relationships with others.

② In one study, participants who briefly held a cup of hot (versus iced) coffee judged a target person as having a "warmer" personality (generous, caring); in another study, participants holding a hot (versus cold) pack were more likely to choose a gift for a friend instead of something for themselves.

③ These findings illustrate that mere contact experiences of physical warmth activate feelings of interpersonal warmth.

④ Moreover, this temporarily increased activation of interpersonal warmth feelings then influences judgments toward other people in an unintentional manner.

⑤ Such feelings activated in one context last for a while thereafter and have influence on judgment and behavior in later contexts without the person's awareness.


1806H1-4142
① Hundreds of thousands of people journeyed far to take part in the Canadian fur trade.

② Many saw how inhabitants of the northern regions stored their food in the winter ― by burying the meats and vegetables in the snow.

③ But probably few of them had thoughts about how this custom might relate to other fields.

④ One who did was a young man named Clarence Birdseye.

⑤ He was amazed to find that freshly caught fish and duck, frozen quickly in such a fashion, kept their taste and texture.

⑥ He started wondering: Why can't we sell food in America that operates on the same basic principle?

⑦ With this thought, the frozen foods industry was born.

⑧ He made something extraordinary from what, for the northern folk, was the ordinary practice of preserving food.

⑨ So, what went on in his mind when he observed this means of storage?

⑩ Something mysterious happened in his curious, fully engaged mind.

⑪ Curiosity is a way of adding value to what you see.

⑫ In the case of Birdseye, it was strong enough to lift him out of the routine way of seeing things.

⑬ It set the stage for innovation and discovery, for coming up with something new.


1806H1-4345
① There was a business executive who was deep in debt and could see no way out.

② He couldn't borrow more money from any bank, and couldn't pay his suppliers.

③ One day, he sat on a park bench, head in hands, wondering if anything could save his company from bankruptcy.

④ Suddenly an old man appeared before him.

⑤ I can see that something is troubling you, he said.

⑥ After listening to the executive's worries, the old man said, "I believe I can help you.

⑦ "He asked the man his name, wrote out a check, and pushed it into his hand.

⑧ He said, "Take this money.

⑨ Meet me here exactly one year from today, and you can pay me back at that time.

⑩ "Then he turned and disappeared as quickly as he had come.

⑪ The executive saw in his hand a check for $500,000, signed by John D. Rockefeller, then one of the richest men in the world!

⑫ I can erase my money worries in an instant, he thought.

⑬ But instead, the executive decided to put the check in his safe.

⑭ Just knowing it was there might give him the strength to work out a way to save his business, he thought.

⑮ Within a few months, he was out of debt and making money once again.

⑯ Exactly one year later, he returned to the park with the check.

⑰ At the agreed-upon time, the old man appeared.

⑱ But just then, a nurse came running up and grabbed the old man.

⑲ "I hope he hasn't been bothering you.

⑳ He's always escaping from the rest home and telling people he's John D. Rockefeller," the nurse said.

㉑ The surprised executive just stood there.

㉒ Suddenly, he realized that it wasn't the money, real or imagined, that had turned his life around.

㉓ It was his newfound self-confidence that enabled him to achieve anything he went after.

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1703h1 안녕! | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | wayne.tistory.com | 01033383436 | 제작일 181224 18:54:13



1703H1-18
① Dear Mrs Coling, My name is Susan Harris and I am writing on behalf of the students at Lockwood High School.

② Many students at the school have been working on a project about the youth unemployment problem in Lockwood.

③ You are invited to attend a special presentation that will be held at our school auditorium on April 16th.

④ At the presentation, students will propose a variety of ideas for developing employment opportunities for the youth within the community.

⑤ As one of the famous figures in the community, we would be honored by your attendance.

⑥ We look forward to seeing you there.


1703H1-19
① Finally, it was Shaun's turn to give a speech.

② When he opened his mouth, nothing but air escaped his throat.

③ Then he tried to speak again, not knowing what to say.

④ He had prepared to talk about time and he started with the word: 'Time.

⑤ 'But nothing followed.

⑥ Shaun could not find the words.

⑦ Laughter started to pass through the auditorium from front to back.

⑧ Even the judges looked disappointed.

⑨ He didn't know what to say.

⑩ He looked into the crowd.

⑪ The audience at the contest were laughing out loud now, at him, at his inability.


1703H1-20
① Recent studies show some interesting findings about habit formation.

② In these studies, students who successfully acquired one positive habit reported less stress; less impulsive spending; better dietary habits; decreased caffeine consumption; fewer hours spent watching TV; and even fewer dirty dishes.

③ Keep working on one habit long enough, and not only does it become easier, but so do other things as well.

④ It's why those with the right habits seem to do better than others.

⑤ They're doing the most important thing regularly and, as a result, everything else is easier.


1703H1-21
① Noise in the classroom has negative effects on communication patterns and the ability to pay attention.

② Thus, it is not surprising that constant exposure to noise is related to children's academic achievement, particularly in its negative effects on reading and learning to read.

③ Some researchers found that, when preschool classrooms were changed to reduce noise levels, the children spoke to each other more often and in more complete sentences, and their performance on pre-reading tests improved.

④ Research with older children suggests similar findings.

⑤ On reading and math tests, elementary and high school students in noisy schools or classrooms consistently perform below those in quieter settings.


1703H1-22
① Studies from cities all over the world show the importance of life and activity as an urban attraction.

② People gather where things are happening and seek the presence of other people.

③ Faced with the choice of walking down an empty or a lively street, most people would choose the street with life and activity.

④ The walk will be more interesting and feel safer.

⑤ Events where we can watch people perform or play music attract many people to stay and watch.

⑥ Studies of benches and chairs in city space show that the seats with the best view of city life are used far more frequently than those that do not offer a view of other people.


1703H1-23
① Consumers are generally uncomfortable with taking high risks.

② As a result, they are usually motivated to use a lot of strategies to reduce risk.

③ Consumers can collect additional information by conducting online research, reading news articles, talking to friends or consulting an expert.

④ Consumers also reduce uncertainty by buying the same brand that they did the last time, believing that the product should be at least as satisfactory as their last purchase.

⑤ In addition, some consumers may employ a simple decision rule that results in a safer choice.

⑥ For example, someone might buy the most expensive offering or choose a heavily advertised brand in the belief that this brand has higher quality than other brands.


1703H1-25
① New technologies create new interactions and cultural rules.

② As a way to encourage TV viewing, social television systems now enable social interaction among TV viewers in different locations.

③ These systems are known to build a greater sense of connectedness among TV-using friends.

④ One field study focused on how five friends between the ages of 30-36 communicated while watching TV at their homes.

⑤ The technology allowed them to see which of the friends were watching TV and what they were watching.

⑥ They chose how to communicate via social television—whether through voice chat or text chat.

⑦ The study showed a strong preference for text over voice.

⑧ Users offered two key reasons for favoring text chat.

⑨ First, text chat required less effort and attention, and was more enjoyable than voice chat.

⑩ Second, study participants viewed text chat as more polite.


1703H1-28
① Take time to read the comics.

② This is worthwhile not just because they will make you laugh but because they contain wisdom about the nature of life.

③ Charlie Brown and Blondie are part of my morning routine and help me to start the day with a smile.

④ When you read the comics section of the newspaper, cut out a cartoon that makes you laugh.

⑤ Post it wherever you need it most, such as on your refrigerator or at work—so that every time you see it, you will smile and feel your spirit lifted.

⑥ Share your favorites with your friends and family so that everyone can get a good laugh, too.

⑦ Take your comics with you when you go to visit sick friends who can really use a good laugh.


1703H1-29
① Chuckwallas are fat lizards, usually 20-25cm long, though they may grow up to 45cm.

② They weigh about 1・5kg when mature.

③ Most chuckwallas are mainly brown or black.

④ Just after the annual molt, the skin is shiny.

⑤ Lines of dark brown run along the back and continue down the tail.

⑥ As the males grow older, these brown lines disappear and the body color becomes lighter; the tail becomes almost white.

⑦ It is not easy to distinguish between male and female chuckwallas, because young males look like females and the largest females resemble males.


1703H1-30
① Meghan Vogel was tired.

② She had just won the 2012 state championship in the 1,600meter race.

③ She was so exhausted afterward that she was in last place toward the end of her next race, the 3,200 meters.

④ As she came around the final turn in the long race, the runner in front of her, Arden McMath, fell to the ground.

⑤ Vogel made a quick decision.

⑥ She stopped and helped McMath to her feet.

⑦ Together, they walked the last 30 meters.

⑧ Vogel guided her to the finish line.

⑨ And then she gave McMath a gentle push across it, just ahead of Vogel herself.

⑩ "If you work hard to get to the state meet, you deserve to finish," she said.

⑪ Later, Vogel's hometown held a parade in her honor.

⑫ It wasn't because of the race where she finished first.

⑬ It was because of the race where she finished last.


1703H1-31
① In small towns the same workman makes chairs and doors and tables, and often the same person builds houses.

② And it is, of course, impossible for a man of many trades to be skilled in all of them.

③ In large cities, on the other hand, because many people make demands on each trade, one trade alone—very often even less than a whole trade—is enough to support a man.

④ For instance, one man makes shoes for men, and another for women.

⑤ And there are places even where one man earns a living by only stitching shoes, another by cutting them out, and another by sewing the uppers together.

⑥ Such skilled workers may have used simple tools, but their specialization did result in more efficient and productive work.


1703H1-32
① About four billion years ago, molecules joined together to form cells.

② About two billion years later, cells joined together to form more complex cells.

③ And then a billion years later, these more complex cells joined together to form multicellular organisms.

④ All of these evolved because the participating individuals could, by working together, spread their genetic material in new and more effective ways.

⑤ Fast-forward another billion years to our world, which is full of social animals, from ants to wolves to humans.

⑥ The same principle applies.

⑦ Ants and wolves in groups can do things that no single ant or wolf can do, and we humans, by cooperating with one another, have become the earth's dominant species.


1703H1-33
① What do advertising and mapmaking have in common?

② Without doubt the best answer is their shared need to communicate a limited version of the truth.

③ An advertisement must create an image that's appealing and a map must present an image that's clear, but neither can meet its goal by telling or showing everything.

④ Ads will cover up or play down negative aspects of the company or service they advertise.

⑤ In this way, they can promote a favorable comparison with similar products or differentiate a product from its competitors.

⑥ Likewise, the map must remove details that would be confusing.


1703H1-34
① Did you know you actually think in images and not in words?

② Images are simply mental pictures showing ideas and experiences.

③ Early humans communicated their ideas and experiences to others for thousands of years by drawing pictures in the sand or on the walls of their caves.

④ Only recently have humans created various languages and alphabets to symbolize these "picture" messages.

⑤ Your mind has not yet adapted to this relatively new development.

⑥ An image has a much greater impact on your brain than words; the nerves from the eye to the brain are twentyfive times larger than the nerves from the ear to the brain.

⑦ You often remember a person's face but not his or her name, for example.

⑧ The old saying, "A picture is worth a thousand words," is true.


1703H1-35
① In negotiation, there often will be issues that you do not care about—but that the other side cares about very much!

② It is important to identify these issues.

③ For example, you may not care about whether you start your new job in June or July.

④ But if your potential boss strongly prefers that you start as soon as possible, that's a valuable piece of information.

⑤ Now you are in a position to give her something that she values (at no cost to you) and get something of value in return.

⑥ For example, you might start a month earlier and receive a larger bonus for doing so.

⑦ Similarly, when purchasing my home, I discovered that the seller was very interested in closing the deal as soon as possible.

⑧ So I agreed to close one month earlier than originally offered, and the seller agreed to a lower price.


1703H1-36
① Andrew Carnegie, the great early-twentieth-century businessman, once heard his sister complain about her two sons.

② They were away at college and rarely responded to her letters.

③ Carnegie told her that if he wrote them he would get an immediate response.

④ He sent off two warm letters to the boys, and told them that he was happy to send each of them a check for a hundred dollars (a large sum in those days).

⑤ Then he mailed the letters, but didn't enclose the checks.

⑥ Within days he received warm grateful letters from both boys, who noted at the letters' end that he had unfortunately forgotten to include the check.

⑦ If the check had been enclosed, would they have responded so quickly?


1703H1-37
① Childhood friends—friends you've known forever—are really special.

② They know everything about you, and you've shared lots of firsts.

③ When you hit puberty, however, sometimes these forever-friendships go through growing pains.

④ You find that you have less in common than you used to.

⑤ Maybe you're into rap and she's into pop, or you go to different schools and have different groups of friends.

⑥ Change can be scary, but remember: Friends, even best friends, don't have to be exactly alike.

⑦ Having friends with other interests keeps life interesting—just think of what you can learn from each other.


1703H1-38
① Geography influenced human relationships in Greece.

② Because the land made travel so difficult, the guest-host relationship was valued.

③ If a stranger, even a poor man, appeared at your door, it was your duty to be a good host, to give him a shelter and share your food with him.

④ "We do not sit at a table only to eat, but to eat together," said the Greek author Plutarch.

⑤ Dining was a sign of the human community and differentiated men from beasts.

⑥ In return, the guest had duties to his host.

⑦ These included not abusing his host's hospitality by staying too long, usually not more than three days.

⑧ A violation of this relationship by either side brought human and divine anger.


1703H1-39
① Today car sharing movements have appeared all over the world.

② In many cities, car sharing has made a strong impact on how city residents travel.

③ Even in strong car-ownership cultures such as North America, car sharing has gained popularity.

④ In the US and Canada, membership in car sharing now exceeds one in five adults in many urban areas.

⑤ Strong influence on traffic jams and pollution can be felt from Toronto to New York, as each shared vehicle replaces around 10 personal cars.

⑥ City governments with downtown areas struggling with traffic jams and lack of parking lots are driving the growing popularity of car sharing.


1703H1-40
① A large American hardware manufacturer was invited to introduce its products to a distributor with good reputation in Germany.

② Wanting to make the best possible impression, the American company sent its most promising young executive, Fred Wagner, who spoke fluent German.

③ When Fred first met his German hosts, he shook hands firmly, greeted everyone in German, and even remembered to bow the head slightly as is the German custom.

④ Fred, a very effective public speaker, began his presentation with a few humorous jokes to set a relaxed atmosphere.

⑤ However, he felt that his presentation was not very well received by the German executives.

⑥ Even though Fred thought he had done his cultural homework, he made one particular error.

⑦ Fred did not win any points by telling a few jokes.

⑧ It was viewed as too informal and unprofessional in a German business setting.

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1811H1 | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | wayne.tistory.com | 01033383436 | 제작일 181204 16:27:11



 🧔🏼 읽기는 모든 것의 시작이라네 



 

[1811H1-20]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 If you were at a social gathering in a large building and you overheard someone say that "the roof is on fire," what would be your reaction?



 Until you knew more information, your first inclination might be toward safety and survival.

 But if you were to find out that this particular person was talking about a song called "The Roof Is on Fire," your feelings of threat and danger would be diminished.



 So once the additional facts are understood ―that the person was referring to a song and not a real fire ― the context is better understood and you are in a better position to judge and react.



 All too often people react far too quickly and emotionally over information without establishing context.

 It is so important for us to identify context related to information because if we fail to do so, we may judge and react too quickly.



G-CODE: 가정법 / 관-잉 / 불리는 / 앤동 / 잇포투 / 접접 / 피전
VOCAB: additional 추가의 context 문맥/상황 diminished 감소하다 emotionally 감정적으로 establishing 설립하다 identify 확인하다 inclination 성향/의향 judge 판사/판단하다 overheard 우연히 듣다/엿듣다 particular 특별한/특수한 position 위치/입장 react 반응하다 referring언급 related 관계시키다 social 사회의 survival 생존/살아남기 threat 위협/우려


🦊 해석본
 여러분이 큰 건물에서 사교 모임에 있고 누군가가 '지붕이 불타고 있어'라고 말하는 것을 우연히 듣게 된다면, 여러분의 반응은 무엇일까?
 여러분이 더 많은 정보를 알 때까지, 여러분의 맨 처음 마음은 안전과 생존을 향할 것이다.
 그러나 여러분이 이 특정한 사람이 '지붕이 불타고 있어'라고 불리는 노래에 관해 이야기하고 있다는 것을 알게 된다면, 여러분의 우려와 위험의 느낌은 줄어들 것이다.
 그러므로 그 사람이 진짜 화재가 아니라 노래를 언급하고 있다는 추가적인 사실이 일단 이해되면, 맥락이 더 잘 이해되고 여러분은 판단하고 반응할 더 나은 위치에 있게 된다.
 너무 자주 사람들은 맥락을 규명하지 않은 채 정보에 대해 지나치게 성급하고 감정적으로 반응한다.
 우리가 정보와 관련된 맥락을 확인하는 것이 매우 중요한데, 만약 우리가 그렇게 하지 않는다면 우리는 너무 성급하게 판단하고 반응할 수 있기 때문이다.


 

[1811H1-21]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Imagine that your body is a battery and the more energy this battery can store, the more energy you will be able to have within a day.



 Every night when you sleep, this battery is recharged with as much energy as you spent during the previous day.


 If you want to have a lot of energy tomorrow, you need to spend a lot of energy today.


 Our brain consumes only 20% of our energy, so it's a must to supplement thinking activities with walking and exercises that spend a lot of energy, so that your internal battery has more energy tomorrow.



 Your body stores as much energy as you need: for thinking, for moving, for doing exercises.


 The more active you are today, the more energy you spend today and the more energy you will have to burn tomorrow.


 Exercising gives you more energy and keeps you from feeling exhausted.

G-CODE: 더비더비 / 동부형 / 소댓 / 앤동 / 전-피 / 조투 / 첫잉
VOCAB: consumes 소비하다 exhausted 고갈시키다/소진하다 internal 내부의 previous 이전의 recharged 재충전- supplement 보완/보충


🦊 해석본
 여러분의 몸이 배터리이고, 이 배터리가 더 많은 에너지를 저장할수록, 하루 안에 더 많은 에너지를 여러분이 가질 수 있다고 상상해 보자.
 매일 밤 여러분이 잠잘 때, 이 배터리는 그 전날 동안 여러분이 소비했던 에너지만큼 재충전된다.
 여러분이 내일 많은 에너지를 갖기를 원한다면, 오늘 많은 에너지를 소비할 필요가 있다.
 우리의 뇌는 우리 에너지의 겨우 20퍼센트만을 소비하므로 많은 에너지를 소비하는 걷기와 운동으로 사고 활동을 보충하는 것이 반드시 필요하고, 그러면 여러분의 내부 배터리는 내일 더 많은 에너지를 가지게 된다.
 여러분의 몸은 여러분이 사고하기 위해, 움직이기 위해, 운동하기 위해 필요한 만큼의 에너지를 저장한다.
 여러분이 오늘 더 활동적일수록, 오늘 더 많은 에너지를 소비하고 그러면 내일 소모할 더 많은 에너지를 가지게 될 것이다.
 신체 활동은 여러분에게 더 많은 에너지를 주고 여러분이 지치는 것을 막아 준다.


 

[1811H1-22]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 When we read a number, we are more influenced by the leftmost digit than by the rightmost, since that is the order in which we read, and process, them.



 The number 799 feels significantly less than 800 because we see the former as 7-something and the latter as 8-something, whereas 798 feels pretty much like 799.



 Since the nineteenth century, shopkeepers have taken advantage of this trick by choosing prices ending in a 9, to give the impression that a product is cheaper than it is.



 Surveys show that around a third to two-thirds of all retail prices now end in a 9.


 Though we are all experienced shoppers, we are still fooled.

 In 2008, researchers at the University of Southern Brittany monitored a local pizza restaurant that was serving five types of pizza at €8.00 each.


 When one of the pizzas was reduced in price to €7.99, its share of sales rose from a third of the total to a half.


G-CODE: 댄~동 / 댄전 / 동전 / 앤동 / 원오복 / 전접 / 접접 / 콤투
VOCAB: advantage 유리/이점 digit 자릿수/숫자 impression 인상 감명 influenced 영향을 미치다 latter 후자의/하반기의 leftmost 극좌의 monitored 감시하다 process 경과/과정 retail 소매/유통 rightmost 극우의 significantly 크게/현저히 surveys 설문조사


🦊 해석본
 우리가 수를 읽을 때 우리는 가장 오른쪽보다 가장 왼쪽 숫자에 의해 더 영향을 받는데, 그것이 우리가 그것들을 읽고 처리하는 순서이기 때문이다.
 수 799가 800보다 현저히 작게 느껴지는 것은 우리가 전자(799)를 7로 시작하는 어떤 것으로, 후자(800)를 8로 시작하는 어떤 것으로 인식하기 때문인데, 반면에 798은 799와 상당히 비슷하게 느껴진다.
 19세기 이래 소매상인들은 상품이 실제보다 싸다는 인상을 주기 위해 9로 끝나는 가격을 선택함으로써 이 착각을 이용해 왔다.
 연구는 모든 소매가격의 1/3에서 2/3 정도가 지금은 9로 끝난다는 것을 보여준다.
 우리가 모두 경험이 많은 소비자일지라도, 우리는 여전히 속는다.
 2008년에 Southern Brittany 대학의 연구자들이 각각 8.00유로에 다섯 종류의 피자를 제공하고 있는 지역 피자 음식점을 관찰했다.
 피자 중 하나가 7.99유로로 가격이 인하되었을 때, 그것의 판매 점유율은 전체의 1/3에서 1/2로 증가했다


 

[1811H1-23]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 In a competitive environment, such as a college admissions process or a job application situation, almost everyone has strong qualifications.


 Almost everyone has facts in their favor.

 But how valuable are facts alone?

 Think back to the most recent lecture or presentation you attended.

 How many facts do you remember from it?

 If you're like most people, you can't recall many, if any.

 Chances are good, however, that you remember stories, anecdotes, and examples from the event, even if you can't think of their exact context.


 The average person today is flooded with facts and data, and we let most of this pass through our brains with minimal retention or reaction ―unless something makes the information stand out in a meaningful way.



 That's where story comes in.

G-CODE: 부전 / 부투 / 전끝 / 접XSV
VOCAB: admissions 입학/입장 anecdotes 일화 application 지원/응용 attended 참석하다 average 평균(의) competitive 경쟁의/경쟁력을 지닌 context 문맥/상황 environment 환경 exact 정확한 favor 부탁/선호하다 meaningful 의미있는 minimal 최소의 presentation 발표 process 경과/과정 qualifications 자격/자질 reaction 반동/반응 recall 상기하다 retention 보유/유지 situation 상황/사태 valuable 가치있는/귀중한


🦊 해석본
 대학 입학 과정이나 구직 상황과 같은 경쟁적 환경에서 거의 모든 사람들은 상당한 자격 조건을 갖추고 있다.
 거의 모든 사람들은 자신들에게 유리한 사실들을 가지고 있다.
 그러나 사실들만으로 얼마나 가치가 있겠는가?
 여러분이 참석했던 가장 최근의 강의나 발표를 회상해 보라.
 여러분은 그것으로부터 얼마나 많은 사실들을 기억하는가?
 만약 여러분이 대부분의 사람과 같다면, 여러분은 기억한다 하더라도 많은 것을 기억해 내지 못할 것이다.
 그러나 비록 여러분이 정확한 맥락을 기억하지는 못하더라도, 여러분은 그 행사로부터의 이야기들, 일화들, 그리고 예시들을 기억할 가능성이 높다.
 오늘날 보통 사람에게는 사실들과 데이터가 넘쳐나고, 어떤 것이 유의미한 방식으로 그 정보를 두드러지게 하지 않는다면 우리는 이것의 대부분이 최소한의 기억이나 반응만을 남긴 채 우리의 뇌를 빠져나가게 둔다.
 그것이 이야기가 들어서는 지점이다.



[1811H1-25]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Born in 1867 in Cincinnati, Ohio, Charles Henry Turner was an early pioneer in the field of insect behavior.


 His father owned an extensive library where Turner became fascinated with reading about the habits and behavior of insects.


 Proceeding with his study, Turner earned a doctorate degree in zoology, the first African American to do so.


 Even after receiving his degree, Turner was unable to get a teaching or research position at any major universities, possibly as a result of racism.


 He moved to St. Louis and taught biology at Sumner High School, focusing on research there until 1922.


 Turner was the first person to discover that insects are capable of learning, illustrating that insects can alter behavior based on previous experience.


 He died of cardiac disease in Chicago in 1923.

 During his 33-year career, Turner published more than 70 papers.

 His last scientific paper was published the year after his death.

G-CODE: 관잉 / 긴전4 / 부접잉 / 분사 / 앤동 / 앤피 / 첫잉 / 첫피 / 콤잉
VOCAB: alter 바꾸다 based 기초/기반 behavior 행동/태도 biology 생물학 capable ~할 수 있는/유능한 cardiac 심장병의 degree 정도/학위 doctorate 박사 학위 extensive 광범위한/대규모의 fascinated 매료시키다/사로잡다 illustrating 설명하다 pioneer 개척하다 position 위치/입장 possibly 아마 previous 이전의 proceeding 나아가다 published 발표하다 racism없다앋아다앋아다아
 receiving받다/수상하다 unable 할 수 없는 zoology 동물학


🦊 해석본
 1867년 Ohio주의 Cincinnati에서 태어난 Charles Henry Turner는 곤충 행동 분야의 초기 개척자였다.
 그의 아버지는 Turner가 곤충의 습성과 행동에 관한 독서에 매료될 수 있었던 다방면의 도서를 가지고 있었다.
 자신의 연구를 계속하면서 Turner는 동물학에서 박사 학위를 받았고, 그렇게 한 최초의 아프리카계 미국인이었다.
 아마도 인종 차별의 결과로, 학위를 받은 후에도 Turner는 어떤 주요 대학에 서도 교직이나 연구직을 얻을 수 없었다.
 그는 St.



[1811H1-26]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Poetry in the Park Saturday, October 13, 11:00 a.m.― 6:00 p.m.

 This annual festival, now in its sixth year, is held with the support of Riverside Public Library.


 ◈ Poetry Workshop • Meet and talk with renowned poets about their poems.

 Jane Kenny(11:30 a.m.), Michael Weil(12:30 p.m.) • Learn how to express your feelings poetically.

 ◈ Poetry Contest • Theme for this year's contest is "Arrivals and Departures."

 • Only one poem per participant • Due by 3:00 p.m. • The winners will be announced at 5:00 p.m. on the day on site.


 For questions about the festival, please visit our website at www.poetryinthepark.org.

G-CODE: 앤동 / 전피 / 첫형전 / 콤비
VOCAB: annual 연간의/연례의 arrivals 도착/등장 departures 떠남/출발 participant 참가자 poetically 시적으로 renowned 명성 support 지원하다 workshop 워크샵/토론회


🦊 해석본
 공원에서 시를 10월 13일 토요일 오전 11시 – 오후 6시 이제 여섯 번째 해인 이 연례 축제는 Riverside 공립 도서관의 후원으로 개최됩니다.
 ◈ 시 워크숍 ∙ 저명한 시인들을 만나 그들의 시에 대해 이야기할 수 있습니다.
 Jane Kenny(오전 11시 30분), Michael Weil(오후 12시 30분) ∙ 여러분의 감정을 시적으로 표현하는 방법을 배울 수 있습니다.
 ◈ 시 콘테스트 ∙ 올해 콘테스트의 주제는 '도착과 출발'입니다.
 ∙ 참가자 한 명당 한 편의 시 ∙ 오후 3시에 마감 ∙ 우승자는 현장에서 당일 오후 5시에 발표될 것입니다.
 축제에 대한 질문이 있으시면 저희 웹 사이트 www.poetryinthepark.org를 방문해 주십시오.


 

[1811H1-27]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Dinosaur Museum Established in 1993, the Dinosaur Museum has developed into the largest display of dinosaur and prehistoric life in Canada.


 Hours • 9:00 a.m. ― 5:00 p.m. (Monday ― Friday) • 9:00 a.m. ― 3:00 p.m. (Saturday & Sunday) Admission • $4 for adults, $2 for students & children Programs • Paint a Dinosaur Egg!



 At 10:00 a.m. every day, kids can paint a dinosaur egg to take home.

 • Dinosaur Quiz At 2:00 p.m. during the weekend, one winner of our dinosaur quiz will be given a real fossil as a prize.


 • Guided Tours The tours run at 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. every day.

 The tours are free and require no bookings.

 Just show up!

 Notice • Food and pets are prohibited in the museum.

 • Please do not touch or climb on the exhibits.

G-CODE: 앤동
VOCAB: admission 입학/입장 bookings 기장/예야 display (작품을) 전시하다 established 설립하다 fossil 화석/시대에 뒤진 사람 prehistoric 선사시대의 prohibited 금지하다 require 필요로하다


🦊 해석본
 공룡 박물관 1993년에 설립된 공룡 박물관은 캐나다에서 공룡과 선사 시대의 생활을 보여 주는 가장 큰 전시관으로 발전해 왔습니다.
 운영 시간 ∙ 오전 9시 – 오후 5시(월요일 – 금요일) ∙ 오전 9시 – 오후 3시(토요일, 일요일) 입장료 ∙ 성인 4달러, 학생 및 어린이 2달러 프로그램 ∙ 공룡 알을 색칠해 보세요!
 매일 오전 10시에 아이들은 공룡 알을 색칠해 집에 가져갈 수 있습니다.
 ∙ 공룡 퀴즈 주말 동안 오후 2시에, 우리 공룡 퀴즈의 우승자 한 명은 진짜 화석을 상품으로 받을 것입니다.
 ∙ 가이드가 동행하는 관람 관람은 매일 오전 11시와 오후 1시에 운영됩니다.
 관람은 무료이며 예약이 필요하지 않습니다.
 그냥 오시면 됩니다!
 공지 사항 ∙ 음식과 애완동물은 박물관에서 금지됩니다.
 ∙ 전시품에 손을 대거나 올라가지 마십시오.



[1811H1-28]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 The belief that humans have morality and animals don't is such a longstanding assumption that it could well be called a habit of mind, and bad habits, as we all know, are extremely hard to break.



 A lot of people have caved in to this assumption because it is easier to deny morality to animals than to deal with the complex effects of the possibility that animals have moral behavior.



 The historical tendency, framed in the outdated dualism of us versus them, is strong enough to make a lot of people cling to the status quo.



 Denial of who animals are conveniently allows for maintaining false stereotypes about the cognitive and emotional capacities of animals.


 Clearly a major paradigm shift is needed, because the lazy acceptance of habits of mind has a strong influence on how animals are understood and treated.



G-CODE: 관잉 / 관피 / 댄투 / 돈이즈 / 동격댓 / 불리는 / 비부동 / 서치댓 / 앤피 / 이넙투 / 전전 / 콤비 / 피전
VOCAB: acceptance 받아들임 allows 하게하다/허용하다 assumption 가정/추측 behavior 행동/태도 belief 믿음/신념 capacities 능력 cling 달라붙다/고수하다 cognitive 인지의 complex 복잡한 conveniently 편리하게/쉽게 denial 부인/부정 deny 부인하다 dualism 이중성 emotional 감정적인 extremely 매우/극도로 false 거짓의/잘못하여 framed 구조 historical 역사의/전통적인 influence 영향을 미치다 longstanding 예전부터의 maintaining 유지하다 moral 도덕의 outdated 구식의 paradigm 전형적 예/이론적 테두리 possibility 가능성/기회 shift 변화/전환 status 상태/지위 stereotypes 고정관념 tendency 경향 versus 대해/대비하여


🦊 해석본
 인간들은 도덕성을 가지고 있고 동물들은 그렇지 않다는 믿음은 너무나 오래된 가정이라서 충분히 그것은 습관적 사고로 불릴 수 있고, 우리가 모두 알다시피 나쁜 습관은 고치기가 극도로 어렵다.
 많은 사람이 이러한 가정에 굴복해 왔는데, 왜냐하면 동물들이 도덕적 태도를 가진다는 가능성의 복잡한 영향들을 다루는 것보다 동물에게서 도덕성을 부정하는 것이 더 쉽기 때문이다.
 우리 대 그들이라는 시대에 뒤처진 이원론의 틀에 갇힌 역사적 경향은 많은 사람들이 현재 상태를 고수하도록 만들기에 충분히 강력하다.
 동물들이 누구인가에 대한 부정은 동물들의 인지적, 감정적 능력에 대한 잘못된 고정관념을 유지하는 것을 편의대로 허용한다.
 분명히 중대한 패러다임의 전환이 요구되는데, 왜냐하면 습관적 사고에 대한 안일한 수용이 동물들이 어떻게 이해되고 다루어지는지에 강한 영향을 미치기 때문이다.



[1811H1-29]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 We notice repetition among confusion, and the opposite: we notice a break in a repetitive pattern.


 But how do these arrangements make us feel?

 And what about "perfect" regularity and "perfect" chaos?

 Some repetition gives us a sense of security, in that we know what is coming next.


 We like some predictability.

 We arrange our lives in largely repetitive schedules.

 Randomness, in organization or in events, is more challenging and more frightening for most of us.


 With "perfect" chaos we are frustrated by having to adapt and react again and again.

 But "perfect" regularity is perhaps even more horrifying in its monotony than randomness is.

 It implies a cold, unfeeling, mechanical quality.

 Such perfect order does not exist in nature; there are too many forces working against each other.


 Either extreme, therefore, feels threatening.

G-CODE: 댄~동 / 동전 / 분사 / 앤동 / 콤비
VOCAB: adapt 적응시키다/조정하다 against 에 대한/반대로 arrangements 준비/배열 challenging 도전 chaos 혼돈 무질서 confusion 혼란/혼동 exist 존재하다 extreme 극단의 frightening 놀라게 하다 frustrated 좌절시키다 horrifying 무서워하게 하다 implies 함축/내포하다 largely 주로/대량으로 mechanical 기계의 monotony 단조로움 opposite 정반대의/상대 organization 기관 predictability 예측 가능함 quality  randomness 임의로 함 react 반응하다 regularity 질서/규칙적임 repetition 반복/되풀이 security 안보/보안 threatening 위협하다 unfeeling 무정한/감각이 없는


🦊 해석본
 우리는 혼돈 속에서 반복을 알아차리고 그 반대, 즉 반복적인 패턴에서의 단절을 알아차린다.
 그러나 이러한 배열들이 우리로 하여금 어떻게 느끼도록 만들까?
 그리고 '완전한' 규칙성과 '완전한' 무질서는 어떨까?
 어느 정도의 반복은 우리가 다음에 무엇이 올지 안다는 점에서 우리에게 안정감을 준다.
 우리는 어느 정도의 예측 가능성을 좋아한다.
 우리는 대체로 반복적인 스케줄 속에 우리 생활을 배열한다.
 조직에서 또는 행사에서 임의성은 우리 대부분에게 더 힘들고 더 무섭다.
 '완전한' 무질서로 인해 우리는 몇 번이고 적응하고 대응해야만 하는 것에 좌절한다.
 그러나 '완전한' 규칙성은 아마도 그것의 단조로움에 있어서 임의성보다 훨씬 더 끔찍할 것이다.
 그것은 차갑고 냉혹하며 기계 같은 특성을 내포한다.
 그러한 완전한 질서가 자연에는 존재하지 않으며 서로 대항하여 작용하는 힘이 너무 많다.
 그러므로 어느 한쪽의 극단은 위협적으로 느껴진다.



[1811H1-30]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Albert Einstein once boarded a train from Philadelphia.

 The conductor came around to punch the tickets and said, "Ticket, please."

 Einstein reached into his vest pocket for the ticket, but did not find it.

 He checked his jacket pocket.

 No ticket.

 He checked his brief case.

 But still, he could not find his ticket.

 The conductor, noting his obvious distress, kindly said, "I know who you are, Dr. Einstein.

 Don't worry about your ticket."

 Several minutes later the conductor turned around from the front of the traincar to see Einstein continuing to search under his seat for the missing ticket.



 Quickly, he hurried back to assure the gray-haired gentleman.

 "Dr. Einstein, Dr. Einstein, I know who you are!"

 he repeated.

 "Please don't worry about your ticket."

 Dr. Einstein slowly arose from his knees and addressed the young conductor.

 "Son, you don't understand.

 I, too, know who I am.

 What I don't know is where I'm going."

G-CODE: 관잉 / 관피 / 부투 / 앤피
VOCAB: arose 발생했다 assure 보증하다 brief 보고서/짧은 distress 고통 괴롭히다 hurried 서두르는/매우 급한 obvious 명백한 punch 펀치/때리다 reached 도달하다 vest 의복을 입다/조끼


🦊 해석본
 Albert Einstein이 일전에 Philadelphia에서 기차를 탔다.
 차장이 차표에 (확인을 위해) 구멍을 뚫으러 다가와서 "표를 보여 주세요"라고 말했다.
 Einstein이 표를 꺼내려고 자신의 조끼 주머니에 손을 넣었지만, 그것을 찾지 못했다.
 그(Einstein)가 자신의 재킷 주머니를 확인했다.
 표가 없었다.
 그가 자신의 서류 가방을 확인했다.
 그러나 여전히 그(Einstein)는 자신의 표를 찾을 수 없었다.
 차장이 그(Einstein)의 분명한 곤란함을 알아차리고, "저는 당신이 누구인지 알아요, Einstein 박사님.
 표에 대해서 걱정하지 마세요"라고 친절하게 말했다.
 몇 분 후 차장이 기차 차량의 맨 앞쪽에서 돌아섰고 Einstein이 자신(Einstein)의 좌석 밑에서 계속해서 사라진 표를 찾고 있는 것을 보았다.
 재빠르게 그는 황급히 돌아가 그 백발의 신사를 안심시켰다.
 "Einstein 박사님, Einstein 박사님, 제가 당신이 누구인지 안다니까요!
 "라고 그(conductor)가 거듭 말했다.
 "표에 대해 걱정하지 마세요."
 Einstein 박사가 천천히 무릎을 펴고 일어나 그 젊은 차장에게 말했다.
 "젊은이, 자네는 이해하지 못하네.
 나 또한 내가 누구인지 안다네.
 내가 모르는 것은 내가 어디로 가는가 하는 것이라네."



[1811H1-31]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 If you follow science news, you will have noticed that cooperation among animals has become a hot topic in the mass media.


 For example, in late 2007 the science media widely reported a study by Claudia Rutte and Michael Taborsky suggesting that rats display what they call "generalized reciprocity."



 They each provided help to an unfamiliar and unrelated individual, based on their own previous experience of having been helped by an unfamiliar rat.


 Rutte and Taborsky trained rats in a cooperative task of pulling a stick to obtain food for a partner.


 Rats who had been helped previously by an unknown partner were more likely to help others.


 Before this research was conducted, generalized reciprocity was thought to be unique to humans.

G-CODE: 비피투 / 앤피 / 이프윌x / 콤피 / 해빙빈피 / 햅빈피
VOCAB: based 기초/기반 conducted 실시하다 cooperation 협력 display (작품을) 전시하다 follow 뒤따르다 generalized 일반화하다 individual 개인의 likely 가능성 있는/할 것 같은 mass 대규모의/거대한 obtain 얻다 previous 이전의 provided 제공하다 reciprocity 호혜주의/상호 의존 task 과제/업무 topic 주제/화제 unfamiliar 익숙지 않은 unique 독특한/특별한 unknown 알려지지 않은 unrelated 관련이 없는


🦊 해석본
 만약 여러분이 과학 뉴스에 관심을 가진다면, 여러분은 동물들 사이의 협동이 대중 매체에서 뜨거운 화제가 되어 왔다는 것을 알아차리게 될 것이다.
 예를 들어, 2007년 후반에 과학 매체는 Claudia Rutte와 Michael Taborsky가 '일반화된 호혜성'이라고 부르는 것을 쥐들이 보여 준다고 시사하는 연구를 널리 보도했다.
 그들 각각이 낯선 쥐에 의해 도움을 받았던 자신의 이전 경험에 근거하여 낯설고 무관한 개체에게 도움을 제공했다.
 Rutte와 Taborsky는 쥐들에게 파트너를 위한 음식을 얻기 위해 막대기를 잡아당기는 협동적 과업을 훈련시켰다.
 이전에 모르는 파트너에게 도움을 받은 적이 있는 쥐는 다른 쥐들을 돕는 경향이 더 높았다.
 이 연구가 수행되기 전에는, 일반화된 호혜성은 인간들에게 고유한 것으로 여겨졌다.


 

[1811H1-32]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 We have to recognize that there always exists in us the strongest need to utilize all our attention.


 And this is quite evident in the great amount of displeasure we feel any time the entirety of our capacity for attention is not being put to use.



 When this is the case, we will seek to find outlets for our unused attention.

 If we are playing a chess game with a weaker opponent, we will seek to supplement this activity with another: such as watching TV, or listening to music, or playing another chess game at the same time.



 Very often this reveals itself in unconscious movements, such as playing with something in one's hands or pacing around the room; and if such an action also serves to increase pleasure or relieve displeasure, all the better.



G-CODE: 앤동 / 앤잉 / 이프윌x / 전-피
VOCAB: attention 관심/주의력 capacity 능력/수용력 displeasure 불만/화남 entirety 완전한 상태/전부 evident 명백한/분명한 exists 존재하다 movements 운동/움직임 opponent 대립자/반대의적/적수 outlets 배출구/출구 pacing 보조 맞추기 recognize 인식하다 relieve 완화시키다/안도하다 reveals 나타내다 누설하다 supplement 보완/보충 unconscious 무의식의 unused 쓰이지 않는 utilize 이용하다 weaker 더 약한


🦊 해석본
 우리는 우리의 '모든' 주의력을 활용하려는 매우 강렬한 욕구가 우리 안에 항상 존재한다는 것을 인정해야 한다.
 그리고 이것은 우리의 주의력 전체가 사용되지 않고 있을 때마다 우리가 느끼는 엄청난 양의 불쾌감에서 꽤 명백해진다.
 이런 경우가 되면, 우리는 사용되지 않은 주의력의 배출구를 찾으려 할 것이다.
 만약 우리가 더 약한 상대와 체스 게임을 하고 있다면, 우리는 이 활동을 또 다른 것, 즉 TV 시청이나 음악 감상, 또는 동시에 다른 체스 게임 하기와 같은 것으로 보충하려고 할 것이다.
 이것은 자기 손 안의 무언가를 가지고 놀거나 방을 돌아다니는 것과 같은 무의식적인 움직임들로 매우 자주 나타나며, 만약 그런 행동이 기쁨을 증가시거나 불쾌감을 덜어주는 데에도 또한 도움이 된다면 더할 나위 없이 좋을 것이다.



[1811H1-33]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 From an economic perspective, a short-lived event can become an innovative event if it generates goods and services that can be sold to people, in particular to those from outside the locality.



 The remarkable growth of art exhibitions, cultural festivals and sports competitions, for example, can be analysed in this light.


 They are temporary activities that can attract large numbers of outsiders to a locality, bringing in new sources of income.


 But even here, there is a two-way interaction between the event and the context.

 The existence of an infrastructure, a reputation, a history of an activity for an area may have important effects on the economic success or failure of an event.



 In other words, events do not take place in a vacuum.

 They depend on an existing context which has been in the making for a long time.


 The short-lived event, therefore, would be performed in relation to this long-term context.

G-CODE: 관잉 / 관피 / 긴전3 / 비피투 / 콤조
VOCAB: analysed 분석하다 attract 끌다 competitions 경쟁/대회 context 문맥/상황 cultural 문화의/교양의 economic 경제의/경제학 existence존재/생존 failure 실패/실수 generates 낳다/발생하다 growth 성장/발전 income 소득/수입 infrastructure 기간 시설/기반 innovative 혁신적인 interaction 상호작용 locality 지역/지방 outsiders 아웃사이더 particular 특별한/특수한 performed 공연하다 perspective 가망/전망 relation 관계/관련 remarkable 놀라운/주목할만한 reputation 명성/평판 success 성공/성과 temporary 일시적인/임시의 term 임기/용어 vacuum 진공(의)


🦊 해석본
 경제적인 관점에서 볼 때, 단기간 행사가 사람들에게 특히 외부 사람들에게 판매될 수 있는 상품과 서비스를 만들어 낸다면 혁신적인 행사가 될 수 있다.
 예를 들어, 예술 전시회, 문화 축제 그리고 스포츠 경기의 눈에 띄는 성장은 이러한 관점에서 분석될 수 있다.
 그것들은 많은 외부인들을 그 지역으로 끌어들여 새로운 수입원을 가져올 수 있는 일시적 활동들이다.
 그러나 심지어 여기에서도, 행사와 맥락 간에 쌍방향 상호 작용이 있다.
 한 지역의 기반 시설, 명성, 활동의 연혁의 존재는 행사의 경제적 성공 또는 실패에 중요한 영향을 미칠 수 있다.
 다시 말해서, 행사들은 진공 상태에서 발생하지 않는다.
 그것들은 오랜 시간 동안 만들어져 왔던 기존의 맥락에 의존한다.
 그러므로 단기간 행사는 이러한 장기간의 맥락과 관련하여 시행될 것이다.



[1811H1-34]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Interestingly, in nature, the more powerful species have a narrower field of vision.

 The distinction between predator and prey offers a clarifying example of this.

 The key feature that distinguishes predator species from prey species isn't the presence of claws or any other feature related to biological weaponry.


 The key feature is the position of their eyes.

 Predators evolved with eyes facing forward ―which allows for binocular vision that offers accurate depth perception when pursuing prey.


 Prey, on the other hand, often have eyes facing outward, maximizing peripheral vision, which allows the hunted to detect danger that may be approaching from any angle.



 Consistent with our place at the top of the food chain, humans have eyes that face forward.


 We have the ability to gauge depth and pursue our goals, but we can also miss important action on our periphery.


G-CODE: 계속적 / 관잉 / 관피 / 부끝 / 부접잉 / 앤동 / 전-잉 / 첫형전 / 콤잉 / 피전
VOCAB: ability 능력/재능 accurate 정확한 allows 하게하다/허용하다 approaching 접근하다 binocular 쌍안경 biological 생물학의/생물학적 clarifying 명백히하다/분명해지다 consistent 변함없는 detect 발견하다 distinction 구별/차이 evolved 발전시키다/고안하다 feature 특징/용모 forward 앞으로/발전한 gauge 측정하다 interestingly 흥미롭게 maximizing 최대화하다 narrower 더 좁은 outward 표면상의/밖으로 향하는 perception 지각/인식 peripheral 주위의 position 위치/입장 presence 존재/영향력 prey 먹이/사냥 pursue 추구하다 related 관계시키다 species종/종류 vision 비전/시력 weaponry 무기류


🦊 해석본
 흥미롭게도 자연에서 더 강한 종은 더 좁은 시야를 가지고 있다.
 포식자와 피식자의 대비는 이에 대한 분명한 예를 제공한다.
 포식자 종과 피식자 종을 구별하는 주요 특징은 발톱이나 생물학적 무기와 관련된 어떤 다른 특징의 존재가 아니다.
 중요한 특징은 '눈의 위치'이다.
 포식자는 앞쪽을 향하고 있는 눈을 가지도록 진화하였고, 이것은 사냥감을 쫓을 때 정확한 거리 감각을 제공하는 양안시(兩眼視)를 허용한다.
 반면에 피식자는 대체로 주변 시야를 최대화하는 바깥쪽을 향하는 눈을 가지고 있으며, 이것은 어떤 각도에서도 접근하고 있을지 모르는 위험을 사냥당하는 대상이 감지할 수 있게 한다.
 먹이 사슬의 꼭대기에 있는 우리의 위치와 일치하여, 인간은 앞쪽을 향하는 눈을 가지고 있다.
 우리는 거리를 측정하고 목표물들을 추격할 수 있는 능력을 갖추고 있지만, 또한 우리 주변의 중요한 행동을 놓칠 수도 있다.



[1811H1-35]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Wouldn't it be nice if you could take your customers by the hand and guide each one through your store while pointing out all the great products you would like them to consider buying?



 Most people, however, would not particularly enjoy having a stranger grab their hand and drag them through a store.


 Rather, let the store do it for you.

 Have a central path that leads shoppers through the store and lets them look at many different departments or product areas.


 This path leads your customers from the entrance through the store on the route you want them to take all the way to the checkout.


G-CODE: V명투 / 가정법 / 부접잉 / 앤동
VOCAB: checkout 숙박료정산 consider 고려하다 customers 고객/소비자 drag 끌다 grab 잡다 particularly 특히/특별하게 route 길/방법


🦊 해석본
 만약 여러분이 고객의 손을 잡고 그들에게 구매를 고려토록 하고 싶은 모든 훌륭한 제품들을 가리키면서 여러분의 상점 안 여기저기로 각각의 고객을 안내할 수 있다면 좋지 않을까?
 그러나 대부분의 사람은 특히 낯선 사람이 그들의 손을 잡고 상점안 여기저기로 끌고 다니도록 하는 것을 좋아하지 않을 것이다.
 차라리 여러분을 위해 상점이 그것을 하게 하라.
 고객들을 상점 안 여기저기로 이끄는 중앙 통로를 만들어 고객들이 많은 다양한 매장 또는 상품이 있는 곳을 볼 수 있도록 해라.
 이 길은 여러분 의 고객들을 그들이 걸었으면 하고 여러분이 바라는 경로로 상점 안 여기저기를 통해 입구에서부터 계산대까지 내내 이끈다.



[1811H1-36]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Color can impact how you perceive weight.

 Dark colors look heavy, and bright colors look less so.

 Interior designers often paint darker colors below brighter colors to put the viewer at ease.

 Product displays work the same way.

 Place bright-colored products higher and dark-colored products lower, given that they are of similar size.

 This will look more stable and allow customers to comfortably browse the products from top to bottom.


 In contrast, shelving dark-colored products on top can create the illusion that they might fall over, which can be a source of anxiety for some shoppers.



 Black and white, which have a brightness of 0% and 100%, respectively, show the most dramatic difference in perceived weight.


 In fact, black is perceived to be twice as heavy as white.

 Carrying the same product in a black shopping bag, versus a white one, feels heavier.

 So, small but expensive products like neckties and accessories are often sold in dark-colored shopping bags or cases.


G-CODE: 계속적 / 관-잉 / 동격댓 / 비옵 / 비피투 / 앤동 / 전콤 / 전피 / 첫잉 / 콤동 / 콤피
VOCAB: allow 하게하다/허용하다 anxiety 불안/걱정 bottom 바닥/아래 brightness 광도/밝음 comfortably 편안하게 customers 고객/소비자 displays (작품을) 전시하다 ease 완화하다 illusion 착각/환상 impact 영향/충격 interior 내부/인테리어 neckties 넥타이 perceive 인지하다/인식하다 respectively 각각/각자 shelving 선반 stable 안정된/외양간 versus 대해/대비하여


🦊 해석본
 색상은 여러분이 무게를 인식하는 방식에 영향을 줄 수 있다.
 어두운 색은 무거워 보이고, 밝은 색은 덜 그렇게 보인다.
 실내 디자이너들은 보는 사람을 편안하게 해 주기 위해 종종 더 밝은 색 아래에 더 어두운 색을 칠한다.
 상품 전시도 같은 방식으로 작동한다.
 상품들이 비슷한 크기라면, 밝은 색의 상품을 더 높이, 어두운 색의 상품을 더 낮게 배치하라.
 이것은 더 안정적으로 보이고 고객이 편안하게 상품들을 위에서 아래로 훑어볼 수 있도록 해 준다.
 반대로 어두운 색의 상품을 선반 맨 위에 두는 것은 상품들이 떨어질 수 있다는 착각을 불러일으킬 수 있으며, 이것은 일부 구매자들에게 불안감의 원인이 될 수 있다.
 명도가 각각 0%와 100%인 검은색과 흰색은 인식된 무게의 가장 극적인 차이를 보여준다.
 사실, 검은색은 흰색보다 두 배 무겁게 인식된다.
 같은 상품을 흰색 쇼핑백보다 검은색 쇼핑백에 담아 드는 것이 더 무겁게 느껴진다.
 따라서 넥타이와 액세서리와 같이 작지만 값비싼 상품들은 대체로 어두운 색의 쇼핑백 또는 케이스에 담겨 판매된다.


 

[1811H1-37]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Ethical and moral systems are different for every culture.

 According to cultural relativism, all of these systems are equally valid, and no system is better than another.


 The basis of cultural relativism is the notion that no true standards of good and evil actually exist.


 Therefore, judging whether something is right or wrong is based on individual societies' beliefs, and any moral or ethical opinions are affected by an individual's cultural perspective.



 There exists an inherent logical inconsistency in cultural relativism, however.

 If one accepts the idea that there is no right or wrong, then there exists no way to make judgments in the first place.


 To deal with this inconsistency, cultural relativism creates "tolerance."

 However, with tolerance comes intolerance, which means that tolerance must imply some sort of ultimate good.


 Thus, tolerance also goes against the very notion of cultural relativism, and the boundaries of logic make cultural relativism impossible.


G-CODE: 계속적 / 동격댓
VOCAB: accepts 받아들이다/수용하다 affected 영향을 주다/작용하다 against 에 대한/반대로 based 기초/기반 basis 기초 beliefs 믿음/신념 boundaries 경계 cultural 문화의/교양의 equally 똑같이/마찬가지로 ethical 윤리의/도덕의 evil 사악한/악 exist 존재하다 imply 암시하다 impossible 불가능한 inconsistency 모순/불일치 individual 개인의 inherent 타고난 intolerance 견딜 수 없음/편협 judging 판단 logic 논리(학) moral 도덕의 notion 개념/생각 opinions 의견/생각 perspective 가망/전망 relativism없다앋아다앋아다아
 societies사회들 sort 분류하다 standards 기준/표준 tolerance 관용/포용력 ultimate 궁극적인/최종의 valid 유효한/타당한


🦊 해석본
 윤리적 그리고 도덕적 체계는 모든 문화마다 다르다.
 문화 상대주의에 따르면, 이 모든 체계는 똑같이 타당하며 어떠한 체계도 다른 체계보다 우수하지 않다.
 문화 상대주의의 기본은 선과 악의 진정한 기준이 실제로 존재하지 않는다는 개념이다.
 그러므로 무언가가 옳은지 또는 그른지를 판단하는 것은 개별 사회의 신념에 근거하며, 도덕적 또는 윤리적 견해는 개인의 문화적 관점에 의해 영향을 받는다.
 그러나 문화 상대주의에는 내재적인 논리적 모순이 존재한다.
 만일 옳고 그름이 없다는 생각을 받아들이면, 애초에 판단할 방법이 존재하지 않는다.
 이 모순을 해결하기 위해 문화 상대주의는 '관용'을 만들어 낸다.
 그러나 관용에는 불관용이 따르며, 이것은 관용이 일종의 궁극적인 선을 내포하고 있음에 틀림없다는 것을 의미한다.
 따라서 관용 또한 문화 상대주의의 바로 그 개념에 반하는 것이며, 논리의 영역이 문화 상대주의를 불가능하게 만든다.



[1811H1-38]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 The way we communicate influences our ability to build strong and healthy communities.

 Traditional ways of building communities have emphasized debate and argument.

 For example, the United States has a strong tradition of using town hall meetings to deliberate important issues within communities.


 In these settings, advocates for each side of the issue present arguments for their positions, and public issues have been discussed in such public forums.


 Yet for debate and argument to work well, people need to come to such forums with similar assumptions and values.


 The shared assumptions and values serve as a foundation for the discussion.

 However, as society becomes more diverse, the likelihood that people share assumptions and values diminishes.

 As a result, forms of communication such as argument and debate become polarized, which may drive communities apart as opposed to bringing them together.


G-CODE: 계속적 / 관피 / 동격댓 / 부접피 / 앤동 / 투잉 / 햅빈피
VOCAB: ability 능력/재능 advocates 변호하다 argument 주장/논쟁 assumptions 가정/추측 communicate 의사소통하다 debate 논쟁(하다) deliberate 고의적인/심의하다 diminishes 감소하다 discussion 논의/토론 diverse 다양한/다른 emphasized 강조하다 forums 포럼/회의 foundation 기초 influences 영향을 미치다 issue 논쟁 likelihood 가능성/기회 opposed 반대하다 polarized 대립시키다 positions 위치/입장 settings 설치/환경 traditional 전통적인/구식의 values 가치/가치관


🦊 해석본
 우리가 의사소통하는 방식은 강하고 건강한 공동체를 만드는 우리의 능력에 영향을 미친다.
 공동체를 만드는 전통적인 방식은 토론과 논쟁을 강조해 왔다.
 예를 들어, 미국은 공동체 내의 중요한 쟁점들을 숙고하기 위해 타운홀 미팅을 활용하는 확고한 전통을 갖고 있다.
 이러한 환경에서 쟁점의 각 입장에 있는 옹호자들이 자신의 입장에 대한 논거들을 제시하고, 공공의 쟁점들이 그러한 공개적인 토론회에서 논의되었다.
 그러나 토론과 논쟁이 효력을 잘 발휘하기 위해서는 사람들이 비슷한 가정과 가치를 가지고 그러한 토론회에 올 필요가 있다.
 공유된 가정과 가치가 논의를 위한 기반의 역할을 한다.
 하지만 사회가 더욱 다양해짐에 따라, 사람들이 가정과 가치를 공유할 가능성은 줄어든다.
 결과적으로 논쟁과 토론 같은 의사소통의 형태는 양극화되고, 이것은 공동체를 결합하는 것이 아니라 멀어지도록 몰아갈 수 있다.


 

[1811H1-39]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Some people believe that the social sciences are falling behind the natural sciences.

 They maintain that not only does social science have no exact laws, but it also has failed to eliminate great social evils such as racial discrimination, crime, poverty, and war.



 They suggest that social scientists have failed to accomplish what might reasonably have been expected of them.


 Such critics are usually unaware of the real nature of social science and of its special problems and basic limitations.


 For example, they forget that the solution to a social problem requires not only knowledge but also the ability to influence people.


 Even if social scientists discover the procedures that could reasonably be followed to achieve social improvement, they are seldom in a position to control social action.



 For that matter, even dictators find that there are limits to their power to change society.


G-CODE: 가정법 / 도치 / 동부형 / 비피투 / 햅빈피
VOCAB: ability 능력/재능 accomplish 성취하다 achieve 달성하다 control 제어하다/통제하다 critics 비평가/비판가 dictators 독재자 discrimination 차별/편견 eliminate 없애다/제거하다 evils 사악한/악 exact 정확한 followed 뒤따르다 improvement 개선/향상 influence 영향을 미치다 knowledge 지식/아는 것 limitations 한계/제한 maintain 유지하다 natural 자연의/당연한 position 위치/입장 poverty 빈곤 procedures수속/진행 racial 인종의 reasonably 합리적으로/상당히 requires 필요로하다 seldom 거의~않다/좀처럼 social 사회의 solution 해결/용해 unaware 모르는/알지 못하는


🦊 해석본
 어떤 사람들은 사회 과학이 자연 과학에 뒤처지고 있다고 믿는다.
 그들은 사회 과학이 정확한 법칙을 가지고 있지 않을 뿐만 아니라 인종 차별, 범죄, 가난, 그리고 전쟁과 같은 거대한 사회악을 제거하는 데에도 실패했다고 주장한다.
 그들은 사회 과학자들이 그들에게 마땅히 기대되어졌을지도 모르는 것을 달성하는 데 실패했다고 주장한다.
 그러한 비판자들은 대체로 사회 과학의 진정한 본질과 그것의 특수한 문제 그리고 기본적인 한계를 알지 못하고 있다.
 예를 들어 그들은 사회 문제에 대한 해결책은 지식뿐만 아니라 사람들에게 영향력을 행사할 수 있는 능력도 필요로 한다는 사실을 잊는다.
 비록 사회 과학자들이 사회적 발전을 이루기 위해 마땅히 따라야 할 절차를 발견한다 할지라도 그들은 좀처럼 사회적 행동을 통제할 위치에 있지 않다.
 그 점에서는 심지어 독재자들도 사회를 변화시키는 자신들의 권력에 한계가 있다는 것을 알게 된다.


 

[1811H1-40]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 We cannot predict the outcomes of sporting contests, which vary from week to week.

 This heterogeneity is a feature of sport.

 It is the uncertainty of the result and the quality of the contest that consumers find attractive.


 For the sport marketer, this is problematic, as the quality of the contest cannot be guaranteed, no promises can be made in relations to the result and no assurances can be given in respect of the performance of star players.



 Unlike consumer products, sport cannot and does not display consistency as a key feature of marketing strategies.


 The sport marketer therefore must avoid marketing strategies based solely on winning, and must instead focus on developing product extensions such as the facility, parking, merchandise, souvenirs, food and beverages rather than on the core product (that is, the game itself).



G-CODE: 계속적 / 긴전3 / 댄전 / 동전 / 앤동 / 콤잉 / 피~전
VOCAB: assurances 보장/확언 attractive 매력적인/매혹적인 avoid 피하다 based 기초/기반 beverages 음료 consistency 일관성/농도 display(작품을) 전시하다 extensions 연장/내선번호 facility 손쉬움/ (편위)시설/기관 feature 특징/용모 guaranteed 보장하다 heterogeneity 이종성 merchandise 상품 outcomes 결과/성과 performance 공연/실적 predict 예언하다 problematic 문제의 quality  relations 관계/관련 solely 오로지/오직 souvenirs 기념품/선물 strategies 전략들 uncertainty 반신반의/불확실 vary 다양하다


🦊 해석본
 우리는 스포츠 경기의 결과를 예측할 수 없고, 이것은 매주 달라진다.
 이러한 이질성이 스포츠의 특징이다.
 바로 그 결과의 불확실성과 경기의 수준을 소비자들은 매력적으로 여긴다.
 스포츠 마케팅 담당자에게 있어, 이것은 문제가 되는데 왜냐하면 이는 경기의 수준이 보장될 수 없고, (경기의) 결과와 관련하여 어떠한 약속도 할 수 없으며 스타 선수의 경기력에 대해 어떠한 확신도 주어질 수 없기 때문이다.
 소비재와 다르게, 스포츠는 마케팅 전략의 중요한 특징인 일관성을 보여 줄 수도 없고 보여 주지도 않는다.
 따라서 스포츠 마케팅 담당자는 순전히 승리에만 기반한 마케팅 전략을 피해야 하고, 대신에 핵심 제품(즉, 시합 그자체)보다는 시설, 주차, 상품, 기념품, 식음료와 같은 제품 확장 개발에 집중해야만 한다.



[1811H1-4142]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Plants are nature's alchemists; they are expert at transforming water, soil, and sunlight into an array of precious substances.


 Many of these substances are beyond the ability of human beings to conceive.

 While we were perfecting consciousness and learning to walk on two feet, they were, by the same process of natural selection, inventing photosynthesis (the astonishing trick of converting sunlight into food) and perfecting organic chemistry.



 As it turns out, many of the plants' discoveries in chemistry and physics have served us well.


 From plants come chemical compounds that nourish and heal and delight the senses.

 Why would they go to all this trouble?

 Why should plants bother to devise the recipes for so many complex molecules and then expend the energy needed to manufacture them?


 Plants can't move, which means they can't escape the creatures that feed on them.

 A great many of the chemicals plants produce are designed, by natural selection, to compel other creatures to leave them alone: deadly poisons, foul flavors, toxins to confuse the minds of predators.



 Plants also can't change location or extend their reproductive range without help.

 Many other of the substances plants make draw other creatures to them by stirring and gratifying their desire.


 It is this fact of plants' immobility that causes them to make chemicals.

G-CODE: V명투 / 계속적 / 관잉 / 동전 / 매니오 / 부콤 / 앤동 / 앤잉 / 첫형전 / 콤잉 / 콤투 / 피전
VOCAB: ability 능력/재능 alchemists 연금술사 array 다양한/정렬시키다 astonishing 놀라게 하다 bother 괴롭히다/성가시게 하다 chemical 화학적인/화학물질 compel 강요하다 conceive 마음에 품다/상상하다 confuse 혼란스럽다/혼동하다 consciousness 의식/인식 converting 바꾸다 creatures 생물/생명체 deadly 치명적인/위험한 delight 기쁘게 하다 desire 바라다 devise 고안하다/마련하다 escape 탈출하다 expend 들이다/소비하다 extend 넓히다/연장하다 feed 먹이/먹이다 flavors 맛/향기 foul 나쁜/욕설 gratifying 기쁘게 하다 heal 치료하다 immobility 부동/고정 location 장소/위치 manufacture 제조~ molecules 분자 natural 자연의/당연한 nourish 기르다 organic 유기적인/근본적인 photosynthesis 광합성 physics 물리학 poisons 독(약)중독되다/독 process 경과/과정 recipes 요리법/레시피 reproductive 복사하는/재생하는 selection 선택/선발 stirring 휘젓다 substances 물질/본질 toxins 독성물질의 transforming 변화시키다


🦊 해석본
 식물들은 자연의 연금술사들이고, 그것들은 물, 토양, 그리고 햇빛을 다수의 귀한 물질들로 바꾸는 데 전문적이다.
 이 물질들 중 상당수는 인간이 상상할 수 있는 능력을 넘어선다.
 우리가 의식을 완성해 가고 두 발로 걷는 것을 배우는 동안 그것들은 자연 선택의 동일한 과정에 의해 광합성(햇빛을 식량으로 전환하는 놀라운 비결)을 발명하고 유기 화학을 완성하고 있었다.
 밝혀진 것처럼, 화학과 물리학에서 식물들이 발견한 것 중 상당수가 우리에게 매우 도움이 되어 왔다.
 영양분을 공급하고 치료하고 감각을 즐겁게 하는 화합물들이 식물들로부터 나온다.
 왜 그것들은 이 모든 수고를 할까?
 왜 식물들은 그렇게나 많은 복합 분자들의 제조법을 고안해 내고 그런 다음에 그것들을 제조하는 데 필요한 에너지를 쏟는 것에 애를 써야만 할까?
 식물들은 움직일 수 없고, 이것은 그것들이 그것들을 먹이로 하는 생물체로부터 도망갈 수 없다는 것을 의미한다.
 치명적인 독, 역겨운 맛, 포식자의 정신을 혼란스럽게 하는 독소와 같이 식물들이 생산해 내는 아주 많은 화학 물질들은 다른 생물체가 식물들을 내버려 두도록 강제하려고 자연 선택에 의해 고안되었다.
 식물들은 또한 위치를 바꾸거나 도움 없이 그것들의 번식 범위를 확장할 수 없다.
 식물들이 만드는 상당수의 다른 물질들은 다른 생물체의 욕구를 자극하고 충족시켜줌으로써 그것을 식물들 쪽으로 끌어당긴다.
 바로 식물들의 부동성(不動性)이라는 이러한 사실이 그것들로 하여금 화학 물질을 만들도록 한다.


 

[1811H1-4345]

 What is the topic sentence? 

 Rangan opened his cycle shop early in the morning.

 Yesterday he could not attend to business as he was laid up with high fever, but today he made it up to the shop to earn money for his family.



 Shouting to the tea boy in the next shop for a strong cup of tea, he lined up all the bicycles to be repaired outside.


 He took a sip of the tea, thinking about the order in which he had to go ahead with his job.


 Rangan's thoughts were disturbed by an old man walking with his bicycle towards his shop.

 The old man was wearing an old turban on his head.

 His hands and face were covered in wrinkles.

 In a gloomy tone, he said, "Would you please replace the tire?

 I'll pay you this evening."

 Feeling sympathy for him, Rangan fixed the bicycle.

 He even treated the old man to a cup of tea.

 The old man thanked Rangan and left.

 Rangan worked hard to finish what he had to do.

 It was already late evening but there was no sign of the old man.

 Doubts filled him.

 What if the old man does not return with the money?

 He regretted fixing up the old man's bicycle.

 Suddenly he lost all hope and he could wait no longer.

 He locked up his shop later than usual and cursed himself for getting tricked by an old man.


 At home, Rangan was confused.

 Washing his greasy hands, he heard a knock at his door.

 It was the old man and the tea boy.

 The old man said, "Your shop was closed when I returned.

 Luckily, I saw this boy in front of the shop."

 Handing over the money to Rangan, he continued, "Thanks for your hospitality."

 Rangan grinned at the kind words the old man spoke to him.

 The fact that he had suspected the old man pained his heart.

G-CODE: 동격댓 / 부전 / 부투 / 분사 / 애즈~동 / 앤피 / 전-피 / 전접 / 접접 / 첫잉 / 콤잉 / 투비피 / 핻피
VOCAB: ahead 앞서/앞에 attend 참석하다 confused 혼란스럽다/혼동하다 disturbed 방해하다 doubts 의심하다 fever  gloomy 어두운/우울한 greasy 기름진/기름기가 도는 grinned 밝게 웃었다 hospitality 환대 laid 놓다(과거) locked 잠그다/갇히다 luckily 운좋게 regretted 후회- repaired 수리(하다 suddenly 갑자기/순식간에 suspected 의심하다 sympathy 동정 공감 tone 어조/톤 turban 터번/터번풍의 여성용 모자 wrinkles 주름


🦊 해석본
 Rangan이 아침 일찍 자신의 자전거 가게를 열었다.
 어제 그는 고열로 몸져누워 있었기 때문에 가게에 나올 수 없었지만, 오늘 그는 자신의 가족을 위해 돈을 벌려고 가게에 나왔다.
 진한 차 한 잔을 위해 옆 가게의 차 심부름 소년을 부르며, 그(Rangan)는 수리해야 할 모든 자전거를 밖에 줄 세워 놓았다.
 그는 차를 한 모금 마시고, 일을 해야 할 순서에 대해서 생각했다.
 Rangan의 생각은 자전거를 가지고 자신의 가게를 향해 걸어오는 한 노인에 의해 방해 받았다.
 그 노인은 머리에 오래된 터번을 쓰고 있었다.
 그의 손과 얼굴은 주름으로 덮여 있었다.
 침울한 목소리로, 그(the old man)는 "타이어를 교체해 주시겠어요?
 제가 저녁에 돈을 지불하겠습니다"라고 말했다.
 그에게 동정심을 느껴 Rangan은 자전거를 고쳤다.
 그는 심지어 그 노인에게 차 한 잔을 대접했다.
 그 노인은 Rangan에게 고마워하며 떠났다.
 Rangan은 그가 해야 하는 것을 끝내기 위해 열심히 일했다.
 벌써 늦은 저녁이 되었지만 노인이 올 기미가 없었다.
 의심이 그(Rangan)를 가득 채웠다.
 만약에 그 노인이 돈을 가지고 돌아오지 않는다면 어쩌지?
 그는 그 노인의 자전거를 수리한 것을 후회했다.
 갑자기 그(Rangan)는 모든 희망을 잃었고 더 이상 기다릴 수 없었다.
 그는 자신의 가게를 평소보다 늦게 닫았고 노인에게 속은 것에 대해 스스로를 비난했다.
 집에서 Rangan은 심란했다.
 자신의 기름 묻은 손을 씻을 때 그는 문을 두드리는 소리를 들었다.
 그 노인과 차 심부름 소년이었다.
 그 노인이 말했다, "제가 돌아왔을 때 당신의 가게는 닫혀 있었어요.
 다행히 저는 가게 앞에서 이 소년을 만났어요."
 Rangan에게 돈을 건네주면서 "당신의 호의에 감사합니다"라고 그는 이어 말했다.
 Rangan은 노인이 그(Rangan)에게 건넨 그 친절한 말에 씁쓸하게 웃었다.
 그가 그 노인을 의심했다는 사실이 자신의 마음을 아프게 했다.


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