Science has become pervasive in modern societies and communicating scientific achievements to the wider public is important. There are many forms of scientific literature that fulfill this need, including scientific journals, magazines, books, and websites. More people are also being attracted to careers in science popularization and journalism.
The Thought Experiment: Where Philosophy Meets Other DisciplinesJoffre Balce
The presentationposes the process called the thought experiment, referred to such by Albert Einstein, as essentially a philosophical instrument in the seacrh for principles & basic truths.
English for Academic Purposes by Liz Hamp-LyonsParth Bhatt
Over the past 25 years TESL/TEFL in universities/colleges and other academic settings - or in programmes designed to prepare non-native users of English for English-medium academic settings - has grown into a multi-million-dollar enterprise around the world. Teaching those who are using English for their studies differs from teaching English to those who are learning for general purposes only, and from teaching those who are learning for occupational purposes. English for academic purposes (EAP) is not only a teaching approach. It is also a branch of applied linguistics consisting of a significant body of research into effective teaching and assessment approaches, methods of analysis of the academic language needs of students, analysis of the linguistic and discoursal structures of academic texts, and analysis of the textual practices of academics.
The Thought Experiment: Where Philosophy Meets Other DisciplinesJoffre Balce
The presentationposes the process called the thought experiment, referred to such by Albert Einstein, as essentially a philosophical instrument in the seacrh for principles & basic truths.
English for Academic Purposes by Liz Hamp-LyonsParth Bhatt
Over the past 25 years TESL/TEFL in universities/colleges and other academic settings - or in programmes designed to prepare non-native users of English for English-medium academic settings - has grown into a multi-million-dollar enterprise around the world. Teaching those who are using English for their studies differs from teaching English to those who are learning for general purposes only, and from teaching those who are learning for occupational purposes. English for academic purposes (EAP) is not only a teaching approach. It is also a branch of applied linguistics consisting of a significant body of research into effective teaching and assessment approaches, methods of analysis of the academic language needs of students, analysis of the linguistic and discoursal structures of academic texts, and analysis of the textual practices of academics.
English for Academic Purposes : Assessments. The focus of this presentation discusses group assessments such as group presentations. This presentation discusses cross-cultural communication challenges.
Teacher Talking Time and Students Talking Time in English for Academic Purpos...Dwi Firli Ashari
Paper presentation in The Third International Language and Language Teaching Conference (LLTC) 2016 on 21 – 22 October 2016 in Sanata Dharma University, Yogyakarta.
A Tool for Determining an Optimal Model of Student Engagement in Wikis for Le...Cristina Felea
Paper presented at the 10th eLearning and Software for Education Conference - eLSE 2014, Bucharest 24-25 April
The problem of learners’ engagement is receiving renewed attention against the background of the transition from traditional to technology enhanced learning environments and the ensuing shift from the transmission to the (co)construction of knowledge model in teaching/learning.
Recent studies on the use of social media for academic purposes have also revealed transformations in student and teacher roles and behavior. This study is part of an ongoing research on various pedagogical aspects related to early adoption of Web 2.0 tools (wikis) in a blended language learning program of English for Academic Purposes attended by undergraduate students in social sciences in a Romanian university.
The authors’ prior research on student behavior suggested low participation levels during the semester and high activity under the pressure of finals. Our current objective is to continue the research in an attempt to provide a more accurate learner profile that could help teachers improve the learning environment to further activate their students.
We applied the ROC analysis, a cost/benefit analysis of diagnostic decision making, in order to diagnose the features of students who would use successfully a Web 2.0 tool for learning. The study aims to exemplify how ROC analysis can be used to offer a classification of students with positive/negative inclinations to adopt a Web 2.0 tool by eliminating the false positives,respectively the false negatives.
Consequently, it may become a tool to select a possible optimal model to be considered in the process of needs analysis and of taking important decisions regarding teaching methods, course contents and design.
This is the theory I usually with my Exact and Natural Sciences EAP students, but could be useful for any group working on Reading & Writing for Academic Purposes.
This is an introduction to the Postgraduate Certificate in Teaching English for Academic Purposes - a distance learning programme developed by the English Teaching Unit and the School of Education at the University of Leicester.
Presented at the Beyond Books Conference http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ltg/events/beyond2012/ hosted by Oxford University Computing Services on June 12, 2012.
Current Developments in English for Academic Specific and Occupational Purposesmarkkski1
“Current Developments in English for Academic, Specific and Occupational Purposes” is a new book published in March 2007 by the ESP SIG & IATEFL.
To obtain a copy of the e-book (which can be purchased electronically or as a deluxe DVD/CD edition) please write an email to craig@iatefl.org
To make enquiries about the book itself, and future titles like this which the IATEFL ESP SIG is going to publish later on this year, and next year, please email ESPsig@iatefl.org or markkski2@gmail.com
We hope that the ‘sneak preview’ of the book on Slideshare will raise awareness of the title in the global academic community while putting us in touch with like-minded ESP and EAP professionals.
Mark Krzanowski
IATEFL ESP Co-ordinator
May 2007
Current English for Specific Purposes & English for Academic Purposes: Mains...Mark Krzanowski
This is a pdf copy of the talk delivered by Mark Krzanowski in the Department of Languages, the English Studies Unit, at the University of Limpopo on 14th April 2014. The talk was part of a two-week visit of M. Krzanowski to UL owing to the funding from South Africa's National Research Foundation (NRF) granted, through a competitive process, to Dr L. Junia Ngoepe. Dr Ngoepe is a Senior Lecturer in English Studies at UL.
English for Academic Purposes : Assessments. The focus of this presentation discusses group assessments such as group presentations. This presentation discusses cross-cultural communication challenges.
Teacher Talking Time and Students Talking Time in English for Academic Purpos...Dwi Firli Ashari
Paper presentation in The Third International Language and Language Teaching Conference (LLTC) 2016 on 21 – 22 October 2016 in Sanata Dharma University, Yogyakarta.
A Tool for Determining an Optimal Model of Student Engagement in Wikis for Le...Cristina Felea
Paper presented at the 10th eLearning and Software for Education Conference - eLSE 2014, Bucharest 24-25 April
The problem of learners’ engagement is receiving renewed attention against the background of the transition from traditional to technology enhanced learning environments and the ensuing shift from the transmission to the (co)construction of knowledge model in teaching/learning.
Recent studies on the use of social media for academic purposes have also revealed transformations in student and teacher roles and behavior. This study is part of an ongoing research on various pedagogical aspects related to early adoption of Web 2.0 tools (wikis) in a blended language learning program of English for Academic Purposes attended by undergraduate students in social sciences in a Romanian university.
The authors’ prior research on student behavior suggested low participation levels during the semester and high activity under the pressure of finals. Our current objective is to continue the research in an attempt to provide a more accurate learner profile that could help teachers improve the learning environment to further activate their students.
We applied the ROC analysis, a cost/benefit analysis of diagnostic decision making, in order to diagnose the features of students who would use successfully a Web 2.0 tool for learning. The study aims to exemplify how ROC analysis can be used to offer a classification of students with positive/negative inclinations to adopt a Web 2.0 tool by eliminating the false positives,respectively the false negatives.
Consequently, it may become a tool to select a possible optimal model to be considered in the process of needs analysis and of taking important decisions regarding teaching methods, course contents and design.
This is the theory I usually with my Exact and Natural Sciences EAP students, but could be useful for any group working on Reading & Writing for Academic Purposes.
This is an introduction to the Postgraduate Certificate in Teaching English for Academic Purposes - a distance learning programme developed by the English Teaching Unit and the School of Education at the University of Leicester.
Presented at the Beyond Books Conference http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ltg/events/beyond2012/ hosted by Oxford University Computing Services on June 12, 2012.
Current Developments in English for Academic Specific and Occupational Purposesmarkkski1
“Current Developments in English for Academic, Specific and Occupational Purposes” is a new book published in March 2007 by the ESP SIG & IATEFL.
To obtain a copy of the e-book (which can be purchased electronically or as a deluxe DVD/CD edition) please write an email to craig@iatefl.org
To make enquiries about the book itself, and future titles like this which the IATEFL ESP SIG is going to publish later on this year, and next year, please email ESPsig@iatefl.org or markkski2@gmail.com
We hope that the ‘sneak preview’ of the book on Slideshare will raise awareness of the title in the global academic community while putting us in touch with like-minded ESP and EAP professionals.
Mark Krzanowski
IATEFL ESP Co-ordinator
May 2007
Current English for Specific Purposes & English for Academic Purposes: Mains...Mark Krzanowski
This is a pdf copy of the talk delivered by Mark Krzanowski in the Department of Languages, the English Studies Unit, at the University of Limpopo on 14th April 2014. The talk was part of a two-week visit of M. Krzanowski to UL owing to the funding from South Africa's National Research Foundation (NRF) granted, through a competitive process, to Dr L. Junia Ngoepe. Dr Ngoepe is a Senior Lecturer in English Studies at UL.
Environmental Science Essay
Scientific Method Step Essay
Science Essay
Scientific Theory Essay
Essay on Forensic Science
Forensic Science Essay example
scientific literacy Essay
Scientific Method
Is Psychology a Science? Essay
The Scientific Method Essay
My Passion For Science
11
The integrity of science – Lost in translation?
Matthias Kaiser, Dr. Phil., Professor *
Centre for the Study of the Sciences and the Humanities (SVT), University of Bergen, Allegaten 34, PO Box
7805, N – 5020 Bergen, Norway
Keywords:
Scientific integrity
Scientific misconduct
Ethics of science
Ethical guidelines
a b s t r a c t
This paper presents some selected issues currently discussed about
the integrity of science, and it argues that there exist serious
challenges to integrity in the various sciences. Due to the involved
conceptual complexities, even core definitions of scientific integ-
rity have been disputed, and core cases of scientific misconduct
influenced the public discussion about them. It is claimed that
ethics and law may not always go well together in matters of
scientific integrity. Explanations of the causes of scientific
misconduct vary, and defining good scientific practices is not a
straightforward task. Even though the efficacy of ethics courses to
improve scientific integrity can be doubted, and universities
probably need to come up with more innovative formats to
improve ethics in scientific training, ethics talk may be the only
practical remedy.
! 2014 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Nowadays the integrity of science is seriously challenged. This is the claim defended in this article.
One needs to realize a number of basic things about such a claim at the start. First, it is not, and
cannot be, a factual statement, or objective statement if you like. It is essentially an evaluative
statement, resting on judgment, which, in the end, is always subjective. Whatever one would cite in
support of such a statement, or as disproof of it, fundamentally it all depends on how we interpret
and judge the evidence. Second, we need to explain what we mean by the terms used in the claim.
Even though many people behave as if these terms are self-explanatory, they may not really be so. In
fact, some of us may have observed that people use these terms sometimes differently, dependent on
whether they agree with the statement or not. So, we shall do this in the next few paragraphs. Third,
* Tel.: þ47 55 58 24 86; þ47 917 33 928; fax: þ47 55 58 96 64.
E-mail addresses: [email protected], [email protected]
Contents lists available at ScienceDirect
Best Practice & Research Clinical
Gastroenterology
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bpg.2014.03.003
1521-6918/! 2014 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Best Practice & Research Clinical Gastroenterology 28 (2014) 339–347
mailto:[email protected]
mailto:[email protected]
http://crossmark.crossref.org/dialog/?doi=10.1016/j.bpg.2014.03.003&domain=pdf
www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/15216918
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bpg.2014.03.003
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bpg.2014.03.003
we should be clear about our intentions: we engage in this debate, we raise this claim, for a certain
purpose. In other words, we (or rather I as author at least) have an agenda of our own. We raise
critical points about .
1 Running head THE ETHICS OF ELEPHANTS IN CIRCUSES .docxhoney725342
1
Running head: THE ETHICS OF ELEPHANTS IN CIRCUSES
The Ethics of Elephants in Circuses
Dr. Christopher Foster
PHI103: Informal Logic
Ashford University
Annotated example for Week One Assignment
2
THE ETHICS OF ELEPHANTS IN CIRCUSES
This is the argument in
Standard Form.
Standard Form means
putting each premise
and conclusion on a
separate line, as
observed here. Labeling
the premises P1, P2, etc.
is also helpful to be able
to refer to them later.
The next four
paragraphs
provide
support for
each premise
of the
argument.
The topic of
each
paragraph is
clear from the
opening
sentence.
It is good to
provide
clarification of
the meaning of
premises as well
(as indicated in
the instructions).
P1: Elephants are highly intelligent animals.
P2: Putting elephants in circuses requires them to live their
lives in extreme confinement.
P3: Anything that requires highly intelligent animals to
live their lives in extreme confinement is wrong unless it serves
a purpose that outweighs the suffering involved.
P4: Putting elephants in circuses does not serve a purpose that
outweighs the suffering involved.
C: Therefore, putting elephants in circuses is wrong.
The first premise has been widely known for decades by those who
have studied elephants. Scientific studies have shown that elephants are
able to independently discover novel methods to figure out how to retrieve
food, and they have recently been shown to be able to enlist the help of
other elephants in situations that require cooperation (Jabr, 2014).
The second premise is justified by looking at how elephants are
treated in circuses. When not performing or being transported, circus
elephants are kept on a short chain that prevents them from being able
to move around or even lie down normally. This is what is meant by
‘extreme confinement’: captivity so severe that the animal is not able
to get proper exercise and stimulation. In addition to the captivity, there
3
THE ETHICS OF ELEPHANTS IN CIRCUSES
have been many reports, and footage, of abuse of circus elephants with bullhooks, electrocution, and
other forms of cruelty (Nelson, 2011).
The third premise makes a strong moral claim. Given the intelligence of elephants, and their
natural use of vast savannahs of space, life spent on a tiny chain will involve a tremendous amount of
suffering. They develop “stereotypic behaviors” such as constant swaying back and forth, indicating
severe psychological distress (Wildlife Advocacy Project, n.d.). President of PAWS, Ed Stewart, expresses
it well:
Elephants should not be in captivity – period … The social structure isn’t correct, the space is not
right, the climate is not right, the food is not right … They are unbelievably intelligent. With all of
that brainpower – to be as limited as they are in captivity – it’s a wonder they cope at all. (Jabr,
2014)
My final premise states ...
What do the fields of cosmology, financial matters, fund, law, scien.pdfannaielectronicsvill
What do the fields of cosmology, financial matters, fund, law, science, prescription,
material science, and human science have in like manner? Very little in the method for subject
matter, that is without a doubt. Furthermore, not too much in the method for system.
What they do have in like manner, with each other and with numerous different fields, is
their reliance on a specific standard of discernment. In each of these fields,
it is expected that the members can separate between normal argumentation
taking into account expected standards or confirmation, and wild hypothesis or
nonsequiturs, claims that not the slightest bit take after from the presumptions. In other
words, these fields all presuppose a fundamental acknowledgment of essential standards
of rationale.
Besides, all objective request relies on upon rationale, on the capacity of rationale and balanced
individuals to reason accurately more often than not, and, when they neglect to reason request
effectively, on the capacity of others to call attention to the holes in their thinking.
While individuals may not all concede to a ton, they do appear to have the capacity to concur
on what can really be closed from given data. Acknowledgment of
these normally held standards of soundness is the thing that separates reasonable
request from different types of human movement.
Exactly what are the standards of judiciousness presupposed by these orders?
Also, what are the procedures by which we can recognize right or \"substantial\"
thinking from erroneous or \"invalid\" thinking? All the more fundamentally, what is it
that makes one case \"take after intelligently\" from some given data, while
some other case does not?
Numerous responses to these inquiries have been investigated. A few people have
asserted that the laws of rationale are only a question of tradition. In the event that this is in this
way, rationale and tradition
we could probably choose to change the traditions, thus embrace diverse
standards of rationale, the way we can choose which side of the street we drive
on. In any case, there is a staggering instinct that the laws of rationale are some way or another
more major, less subject to revoke, than the rules that everyone must follow, or even the
laws of material science. We can envision a nation in which a red activity light means
go, and a world on which water streams up slope. Be that as it may, we can\'t envision a
world in which there both are and are not nine planets.
The significance of rationale has been perceived since artifact. All things considered, no
science can be any more sure than its weakest connection. On the off chance that there is
something
self-assertive about rationale, then the same must hold of all sound request. Consequently
laws of rationale it gets to be significant to see exactly what the laws of rationale are, and even
more vital, why they are laws of rationale. These are the issues that one
takes up when one studies rationale itself. To study ra.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Welcome to TechSoup New Member Orientation and Q&A (May 2024).pdfTechSoup
In this webinar you will learn how your organization can access TechSoup's wide variety of product discount and donation programs. From hardware to software, we'll give you a tour of the tools available to help your nonprofit with productivity, collaboration, financial management, donor tracking, security, and more.
June 3, 2024 Anti-Semitism Letter Sent to MIT President Kornbluth and MIT Cor...Levi Shapiro
Letter from the Congress of the United States regarding Anti-Semitism sent June 3rd to MIT President Sally Kornbluth, MIT Corp Chair, Mark Gorenberg
Dear Dr. Kornbluth and Mr. Gorenberg,
The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
harassment and intimidation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Failing to act decisively to ensure a safe learning environment for all students would be a grave dereliction of your responsibilities as President of MIT and Chair of the MIT Corporation.
This Congress will not stand idly by and allow an environment hostile to Jewish students to persist. The House believes that your institution is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and the inability or
unwillingness to rectify this violation through action requires accountability.
Postsecondary education is a unique opportunity for students to learn and have their ideas and beliefs challenged. However, universities receiving hundreds of millions of federal funds annually have denied
students that opportunity and have been hijacked to become venues for the promotion of terrorism, antisemitic harassment and intimidation, unlawful encampments, and in some cases, assaults and riots.
The House of Representatives will not countenance the use of federal funds to indoctrinate students into hateful, antisemitic, anti-American supporters of terrorism. Investigations into campus antisemitism by the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Ways and Means have been expanded into a Congress-wide probe across all relevant jurisdictions to address this national crisis. The undersigned Committees will conduct oversight into the use of federal funds at MIT and its learning environment under authorities granted to each Committee.
• The Committee on Education and the Workforce has been investigating your institution since December 7, 2023. The Committee has broad jurisdiction over postsecondary education, including its compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, campus safety concerns over disruptions to the learning environment, and the awarding of federal student aid under the Higher Education Act.
• The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is investigating the sources of funding and other support flowing to groups espousing pro-Hamas propaganda and engaged in antisemitic harassment and intimidation of students. The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is the principal oversight committee of the US House of Representatives and has broad authority to investigate “any matter” at “any time” under House Rule X.
• The Committee on Ways and Means has been investigating several universities since November 15, 2023, when the Committee held a hearing entitled From Ivory Towers to Dark Corners: Investigating the Nexus Between Antisemitism, Tax-Exempt Universities, and Terror Financing. The Committee followed the hearing with letters to those institutions on January 10, 202
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
Synthetic Fiber Construction in lab .pptxPavel ( NSTU)
Synthetic fiber production is a fascinating and complex field that blends chemistry, engineering, and environmental science. By understanding these aspects, students can gain a comprehensive view of synthetic fiber production, its impact on society and the environment, and the potential for future innovations. Synthetic fibers play a crucial role in modern society, impacting various aspects of daily life, industry, and the environment. ynthetic fibers are integral to modern life, offering a range of benefits from cost-effectiveness and versatility to innovative applications and performance characteristics. While they pose environmental challenges, ongoing research and development aim to create more sustainable and eco-friendly alternatives. Understanding the importance of synthetic fibers helps in appreciating their role in the economy, industry, and daily life, while also emphasizing the need for sustainable practices and innovation.
The Roman Empire A Historical Colossus.pdfkaushalkr1407
The Roman Empire, a vast and enduring power, stands as one of history's most remarkable civilizations, leaving an indelible imprint on the world. It emerged from the Roman Republic, transitioning into an imperial powerhouse under the leadership of Augustus Caesar in 27 BCE. This transformation marked the beginning of an era defined by unprecedented territorial expansion, architectural marvels, and profound cultural influence.
The empire's roots lie in the city of Rome, founded, according to legend, by Romulus in 753 BCE. Over centuries, Rome evolved from a small settlement to a formidable republic, characterized by a complex political system with elected officials and checks on power. However, internal strife, class conflicts, and military ambitions paved the way for the end of the Republic. Julius Caesar’s dictatorship and subsequent assassination in 44 BCE created a power vacuum, leading to a civil war. Octavian, later Augustus, emerged victorious, heralding the Roman Empire’s birth.
Under Augustus, the empire experienced the Pax Romana, a 200-year period of relative peace and stability. Augustus reformed the military, established efficient administrative systems, and initiated grand construction projects. The empire's borders expanded, encompassing territories from Britain to Egypt and from Spain to the Euphrates. Roman legions, renowned for their discipline and engineering prowess, secured and maintained these vast territories, building roads, fortifications, and cities that facilitated control and integration.
The Roman Empire’s society was hierarchical, with a rigid class system. At the top were the patricians, wealthy elites who held significant political power. Below them were the plebeians, free citizens with limited political influence, and the vast numbers of slaves who formed the backbone of the economy. The family unit was central, governed by the paterfamilias, the male head who held absolute authority.
Culturally, the Romans were eclectic, absorbing and adapting elements from the civilizations they encountered, particularly the Greeks. Roman art, literature, and philosophy reflected this synthesis, creating a rich cultural tapestry. Latin, the Roman language, became the lingua franca of the Western world, influencing numerous modern languages.
Roman architecture and engineering achievements were monumental. They perfected the arch, vault, and dome, constructing enduring structures like the Colosseum, Pantheon, and aqueducts. These engineering marvels not only showcased Roman ingenuity but also served practical purposes, from public entertainment to water supply.
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
Arágon et all english grammar in context for academic and professional purposes
1. 1
ENGLISH GRAMMAR IN CONTEXT
FOR ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL
PURPOSES
Margarita Rigal Aragón
Ricardo Marín Ruiz
Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha
Departamento de Filología Moderna
Facultad de Humanidades de Albacete
This material is copyright
2. 2
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (1)
Organizing information
A paragraph is a group of related sentences that develop an idea. In
nearly every paragraph, there is one idea which more important than the
others. This idea is called the main idea and it is usually found at the
beginning of the text. Sometimes, finding main ideas might be enough but in
much of our studying we need to grasp details. Details frequently grow out of
the main idea. Details might be major or minor (examples), depending on
their importance.
? Exercise
Practise finding the main idea, major details and minor details after
reading the text below:
1 Science is practiced in universities and other scientific institutes as well as in the
2 field; as such it is a solid vocation in academia, but is also practiced by amateurs,
3 who typically engage in the observational part of science.
4 Workers in corporate research laboratories also practice science, although their
5 results are often deemed trade secrets and not published in public journals.
6 Corporate and university scientists often cooperate with the university scientists
7 focusing on basic research and the corporate scientists applying their findings to
8 a specific technology of interest to the company. Although generally this method
9 of cooperation has benefited both the advancement of science and the
10 corporations, it has also in some cases lead to ethical problems, when the results
11 arrived at in the course of research have had a negative aspect for the financing
12 corporation. A classical example is the history of health research related to
13 smoking.
14 The methods of science are also practiced in many places to achieve specific goals.
15 For example: (1) quality control in manufacturing facilities (such as a
16 microbiologist in a cheese factory ensures that cultures contain the proper species
17 of bacteria); (2) obtaining and processing crime scene evidence (forensics); (3)
18 monitoring compliance with environmental laws; (4) performing medical tests to
19 help physicians evaluate the health of their patients; or (5) investigating the
20 causes of a disaster (such as a bridge collapse or airline crash).
Main idea
Major details -
-
-
Minor details -
-
-
3. 3
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (2)
Contextual reference
Transitional markers are words used to link ideas together so that the
text is easier to read. W hen pronouns (it, they, them, I, he, which, that, such,
one), and demonstratives (this, that, these, and those) are used as transitional
markers, they refer to a word, or words mentioned earlier (sometimes later) in
the sentence or paragraph. (Other words which are often used to refer
backwards are the former, the latter, the first, the second, the last…) Their
function is to take our thoughts back to something which has already been
mentioned. Therefore, they serve as synonyms or substitutes.
2 Sample paragraph
(The words in bold refer to the underlined ones.)
Science refers to the system of acquiring knowledge – based on empiricism,
experimentation, and methodological naturalism. The term science also refers to
the organized body of knowledge humans have gained by such research.
Most scientists maintain that scientific investigation must adhere to the
scientific method, a process for evaluating empirical knowledge which explains
observable events in nature as a result of natural causes, rejecting supernatural
notions. Less formally, the word science often describes any systematic field of
study or the knowledge gained from it. Particular specialized studies that make
use of empirical methods are often referred to as sciences as well. This article
concentrates on the first. (The first refers back to a process.)
4. ? Exercise
Using the sample paragraph as a model, find what the words in bold
typeface refer to:
4
1 Fields of science are commonly classified along two major lines: Natural
2 sciences, which study the natural phenomena including biology; and Social
3 sciences, which are the systematic study of human behavior and society.
4 Mathematics has both similarities and differences compared to other fields
5 of science, and is sometimes included within a third, separate
6 classification, called formal science. Mathematics is similar to other
7 sciences because it is a rigorous, structured study (of topics such as
8 quantity, structure, space, and change). It is different because of its
9 method of arriving at its results. Mathematics as a whole is vital to the
10 sciences — indeed major advances in them have often led to major
11 advances in other sciences. Certain aspects of mathematics are
12 indispensable for the formation of hypotheses, theories and laws in
13 discovering and describing how things work (the former) and how
14 people think and act (the latter).
15 Science as defined above is sometimes termed pure science to differentiate
16 it from applied science, the application of research to human needs.
Transitional marker Line Refers to
…which line 2
…which line 3
…both line 4
…it line 7
…It line 8
…its line 8
…its line 9
…them line 10
…the former line 13
…the latter line 14
…it line 16
5. 5
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (3)
Word formation – Suffixes
W hen a person is reading, he or she will come across unfamiliar words.
It is sometimes possible to guess the meaning of those words if we understand
the way words in English are generally formed.
An English word can be divided into three parts: a prefix, a stem and a
suffix. Pre- means “before”; a prefix, thus, is what comes before the stem. A
suffix is what is attached to the end of the stem. Both prefixes and suffixes
are referred to as affixes.
Prefixes usually change the meaning of the word; for example, un-
changes the word to the negative. Suffixes change the word from one part of
speech to another; for example, -ly added to the adjective logical gives the
adverb logically.
The following are some of the most common suffixes:
Nouns Verbs Adjectives Adverb
- ance
- ize
- ence
- ate
- or
- fy
- er
- en
- ist
- ify
- ness
- able
- ible
- less
- ic
- ical
- ish
- ive
- ly
? Exercise
Read the following extract and underline all the suffixes. Then try to find out
which parts of speech the words are.
1 Regarding its etymology, the word science comes from the Latin word, scientia,
2 which means knowledge. Beginning in the "Middle ages" and until the "Age of
3 Enlightenment," the word science (or its Latin cognate) meant any systematic or
4 exact recorded knowledge. Science therefore had the same sort of very broad
5 meaning that philosophy had at that time. It should be noted that in some
6 languages (including French, Spanish, Portuguese and Italian), the word
7 corresponding to "science" still carries this meaning.
8 Centuries ago there was a distinction between "natural philosophy" (a term
9 originally coined by Aristotle and put into use during the period from about 160010
1800 CE), and "moral philosophy" (at that time referring to the studies of human
11 behavior and interaction). In the 1800's "natural philosophy" gradually gave way
12 to the term "natural science." "Natural science" was gradually narrowed down to
13 its current use, which typically includes physical sciences and biological sciences.
14 The social sciences, originally "moral philosophy," are today typically included in
15 under the auspices of science as well, to the extent that these disciplines also use
16 empirical methods. "Moral philosophy" today refers specifically to the branch of
17 philosophy called "ethics."
6. In “Language in Context (2)” we have studied how suffixes change the
part of speech of a word. Some prefixes, their usual meanings and how they
change the meaning of English words, are reproduced below:
6
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (4)
Word formation – Prefixes
Negative/
Positive
Size Location Time/ Order Number
un-non-in-dis-re-semi-mini-micro-inter-super-trans-ex-extra-mid-pre-ante-fore-post-mono-bi-hex-oct-multi-
? Exercise
Read the following extract and underline all the prefixes and suffixes. Then
try to find out what the prefixes mean.
The Scientific Method
1 The terms model, hypothesis, theory, and law have different, more specific meanings in
2 science than in colloquial speech. Scientists use model to refer to a description of
3 something, specifically one which can be used to make predictions that can be tested by
4 experiment or observation. A hypothesis is a contention that has been neither well
5 supported nor ruled out by experiment yet. A theory, in the context of science, is a
6 logically selfconsistent
model or framework for describing the behavior of a certain
7 natural phenomena. A theory typically describes the behavior of much broader sets of
8 phenomena than a hypothesis — commonly, a large number of hypotheses may be
9 logically bound together by a single theory. A physical law or law of nature is a
10 scientific generalization based on a sufficiently large number of empirical observations
11 that it is taken as fully verified.
12 The scientific method provides an objective process to find solutions to problems in a
13 number of scientific and technological fields. Often scientists have a preference for one
14 outcome over another, and it is important that this preference does not bias their
15 interpretation. The scientific method attempts to minimize the influence of a scientist's
16 bias on the outcome of an experiment. This can be achieved by correct experimental
17 design, and thorough peer review of experimental design as well as conclusions of a
18 study.
19 Scientists never claim absolute knowledge. Unlike a mathematical proof, a proven
20 scientific theory is always open to falsification, if new evidence is presented. Even the
21 most basic and fundamental theories may turn out to be imperfect if new observations
22 are inconsistent with them. Critical to this process is making every relevant aspect of
23 research publicly available, which permits peer review of published results, and also
24 allows ongoing review and repeating of experiments and observations by multiple
25 researchers operating independently of one another. Only by fulfilling these
26 expectations can it be determined how reliable the experimental results are for
27 potential use by others.
7. 7
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (5)
Making comparisons
Several are the ways of showing that similarities or differences exist
between or amongst things:
FORMATION ABSOLUTE
ADJECTIVE/
ADVERB
COMPARATIVE
ADJECTIVE/ADVERB
1. By adding –er –est to words of one
syllable.
Ø new
Ø late
Ø newer/ newest
Ø later/ latest
2. By placing the words more most in
front of adjectives or adverbs with three
syllables.
Ø convenient
Ø carefully
Ø more/ most convenient
Ø more/ most carefully
3. Words with two syllables may be
formed like 1 0r 2 above: they will add
the ending –er –est if they end in –y, -
ly, -ow, -le, -er. Most of the remaining
ones take more most in front of them.
Ø funny
Ø gentle
Ø complex
Ø funnier/ funniest
Ø gentler/ gentlest
Ø more/ most complex
4. Some common tow-syllable
adjectives can have either type of
formation.
Ø common Ø commoner/commonest
Ø more/most common
5. There is a small number of
adjectives and adverbs that form the
comparative and superlative using a
different stem.
Ø bad
Ø many
Ø little
Ø good/well
Ø worse/worst
Ø more/most
Ø less/ least
Ø better/ best
Use in sentences Words and constructions Examples
Equivalence As…as/ similar to/ each/ either/
all/ both/ alike
Mathematics has both similarities
and differences compared to other
fields of science…
Non-equivalence - not as…as
- less… than
- greater/wider/ more
wonderful… than
Learning mathematics is not as
difficult as it seems.
Television is less interesting than
books.
The concept of Science is wider than
that of Natural Sciences.
Parallel increase The (word+er) the…the more/
The (word+er) the…the less
The smaller the problem, the less
changeling it is for the scientists.
8. ? Exercise
Read this extract about “Scientific literature” and underline all the sentences
or parts of sentences that express a comparison. Identify if they show
equivalence, non-equivalence or parallel increase and by which means.
8
1 Science has become so pervasive in modern societies that it is generally perceived
2 a necessity to communicate the achievements, news, and dreams of scientists to a
3 wider populace. This need is fulfilled by an enormous range of scientific literature.
4 While scientific journals communicate and document the results of research
5 carried out in universities and various other institutions, and new discoveries in
6 various fields of science, science magazines cater to the needs of a wider
7 readership. Besides these, science books and magazines on science fiction ignite
8 the interest of many more people. A significant fraction of literature in science is
9 also available on the World Wide Web; most reputed journals and newsmagazines
10 have their own websites. Also, more and more people are being attracted towards
11 the vocation of science popularization and science journalism.
9. 9
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (6)
Listing
When reading it is important to recognize and understand the relationship in which
sentences and groups of sentences combine to present information. This information
may be linked my means of a connective word or marker.
Making a list, enumerating, and giving instructions, indicates a cataloguing of
what is being said or written. It is important to know that most enumerations belong to
clearly defined sets. The following are the markets that can be used to show the order
in which things are to be said:
! 1, 2, 3, etc.
! one, two, three, etc.
! fist(ly), second(ly), third(ly), etc.
! in the first/second/third place
! lastly, finally
! to begin with, to finish with/ to conclude…
! another, next, then
! furthermore, afterwards, moreover, etc.
! first and foremost
! first and most important
! above all
! last but not least…
There are many ways of showing sequential relationships. Those above given are
not the only ones, they are the most common ones.
? Exercise
Read the following extract about “Science and social concerns” and underline
all the listing markers.
1 A basic understanding of science and technology has become indispensable for
2 anyone living in a city or town, because technology – a product of science – has
3 become an important part of peoples' lives. Firstly, science education aims at
4 increasing common knowledge about science and widening social awareness. The
5 process of learning science begins early in life for many people; school students
6 start learning about science as soon as they acquire basic language skills, an
7 d science is always an essential part of curriculum. In the second place, science
8 education is also a very vibrant field of study and research. Foremost, learning
9 science requires learning its language, which often differs from colloquial
10 language. For example, the terminology of the physical sciences is rich in
11 mathematical jargon, and that of biological studies is rich in Latin names and,
12 last but not least, the language used to communicate science is rich in words
13 pertaining to concepts, phenomena, and processes, which are initially alien to
14 children.
10. 10
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (7)
Time sequence
It is also very important to recognize the sequence of events, especially in
such activities as scheduling, recounting historical facts, doing routine activities and
conducting and describing experiments. Events do not simply occur, they occur
either before, during or after other events. This time sequence may be
chronological, logical or casual. Once a time reference has been established,
certain adjectives and adverbials may order subsequent information in relation to
it. The following are examples of time relaters:
Previous to given time Simultaneous with given
time reference
Subsequent to time
reference
before/ earlier/ former/
formerly already/ prior/ up
to now/ yet/ so far/ in the
beginning/ long ago…
during/ contemporary/ at
present/ at this point/ now/
today/ for the time being/ at
the moment/ meantime/
when…
after/ following/ later/ next/
afterwards/ eventually/ since/
by the time/ by the end/
soon/next…
? Exercise
Read the continuation of the extract about “Science and social concerns” and
underline all the time relaters:
1 Due to today’s growing economic value of technology and industrial research, the
2 economy of any modern country depends now, more than ever, on its state of
3 science and technology. The governments of most developed and developing
4 countries therefore designate a significant part of their annual budget to science
5 and technology research and communication and often have a science policy and
6 there are some largescale
science projects often
termed as big science. The
7 practice of science by scientists has undergone remarkable changes in the past
8 few centuries. Most scientific research is currently funded by government or
9 corporate bodies. These relatively recent economic factors appear to increase the
10 incentive for some to engage in fraud in reporting results of scientific research
11 often termed scientific misconduct. Occasional instances of verified scientific
12 misconduct, however, are by no means solely modern occurrences.
11. 11
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (8)
Review
? Exercise
Read the following extract and find all instances of transitional markers,
listing markers, time relater and comparisons present in the text. Identify the
main idea, major and minor details.
Mathematics and the scientific method
1 Mathematics is essential to many sciences. The most important function of mathematics
2 in science is the role it plays in the expression of scientific models. Observing and
3 collecting measurements, as well as hypothesizing and predicting, often require
4 mathematical models and extensive use of mathematics. Mathematical branches most
5 often used in science include calculus and statistics, although virtually every branch of
6 mathematics has applications, even "pure" areas such as number theory and topology.
7 Mathematics is most prevalent in physics, but less so in chemistry, biology, and some
8 social sciences.
9 Some thinkers see mathematicians as scientists, regarding physical experiments as
10 inessential or mathematical proofs as equivalent to experiments. Others do not see
11 mathematics as a science, since it does not require experimental test of its theories and
12 hypotheses, although some theorems can be disproved by contradiction through finding
13 exceptions. (More specifically, mathematical theorems and formulas are obtained by
14 logical derivations which presume axiomatic systems, rather than a combination of
15 empirical observation and method of reasoning that has come to be known as scientific
16 method.) In either case, the fact that mathematics is such a useful tool in describing the
17 universe is a central issue in the philosophy of mathematics.
12. Using examples to explain a point or to illustrate an idea is commonly used in
texts when the primary objective is to teach the reader about some subject. It is thus
important to differentiate between the idea or ideas presented, and the illustration
of the idea, with examples.
W riters often say explicitly which things are examples by using these
12
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (9)
Giving examples
connectives:
For example Examples of Shown by
For instance Instances of Shows
An example of this Cases of Illustrates
As an example Illustrations of Namely
That is Exemplified by
Such as Illustrated by
Like Seen in
2 Sample sentences with examples in italics and connectives in bold:
1. The switches are capable of being in one or two possible states that is, on or
off.
2. Computers have circuits for performing arithmetic operations such as: addition,
subtraction, division, and multiplication.
3. The computer can only decide three things, namely: Are two numbers equal?
Or is one number less than another?
4. Computers can process information at extremely rapid rates; for example, they
can solve certain arithmetic problems millions of times faster than a skilled
mathematician.
? Exercise
Though sometimes examples can be shown explicitly, it is important to
bear in mind that they are not always presented in that way. Considering
this, try to guess which the examples in the text below are:
Some of the most common methods of inputting information is to use magnetic tapes,
disks, and terminals. The computer´s input device, which might be a card reader, a tape drive or
disk drive, depending on the medium used, reads the information into the computer. For
outputting information, two common devices used are a printer, which prints the new information
on paper, or a screen, which shows the results on a T.V.like
screen.
13. 13
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (10)
Adding information
There are many reasons why people read; but in an academic setting,
reading is primarily done to get information on a particular subject. It is important to
the reader to understand the relationship between the information given and the
information which preceded it. Often information is presented in such way as to
suggest a reinforcement of what has been said, or to show a similarity to what has
been said before.
W hen writers give explanations about something, they usually offer examples
to support their argument in favour of a particular viewpoint. They may choose to
present the information deductively, in which case a generalization is given first and
then examples are given in support of the general statement or principle. Others
prefer to provide examples first, and then make the generalization. This form of
presentation is inductive.
E Reinforcement
Some markers used to show reinforcement are:
Furthermore Too
In addition Moreover
As well as Additionally
Besides W hat is more
Examples
1. In addition to leprosy, smallpox has been one of the most
loathsome diseases suffered by Mankind.
2. In our busy world, it's not usual to feel worried at times.
You may worry about your family, your job, your health
and other personal issues. Moreover, you may worry
about friends and your community too.
14. 14
E Similarity
Markers are used to add information to show that something is
similar to what has been said before. Some of them are:
* Equally Similarly
Likewise Correspondingly
In the same way
* In initial position
Examples:
1. Many microcomputers are used merely for a fixed
application. Microcomputers operate in much the
same way as is the case in automobile emission
control systems.
2. The evidence shows that exercise can reduce blood
pressure. Equally doing sport moderately can be
very effective for lessening the risks of a heart
attack.
15. 15
? Exercise
While reading the following text, circle the markers used to add
information and underline the information that is being added.
Medicine is the branch of health science and the sector of public life concerned with
maintaining or restoring human health through the study, diagnosis and treatment of disease
and injury. Besides, medicine can be regarded at the same time as an area of knowledge – a
science of body systems, their diseases and treatment – and the applied practice of that
knowledge. However, medicine often refers more specifically to matters dealt with by physicians
and surgeons.
The various specialized branches of the science of medicine correspond to the equally
specialized medical professions dealing with particular organs or diseases. The science of
medicine is the knowledge of body systems and diseases, while the profession of medicine refers to
the social structure of the group of people formally trained to apply that knowledge to treat
disease.
Likewise many scientific disciplines, Medicine comprises various specialized subbranches,
such as cardiology or neurology, or other fields such as sports medicine, research or
public health.
Similarly, Medicine is also often used amongst medical professionals as shorthand for
internal medicine. Veterinary medicine is the practice of health care in animal species other than
human beings.
16. 16
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (11)
Giving an explanation or a definition
Authors often give definitions to new or unfamiliar terms, or vocabulary items and
concepts, or ideas which are specific to the subject being discussed. Not only are definitions
given, but explanations are frequently supplied, either implicitly or explicitly, to avoid
confusion in the mind of the reader.
E Some expressions or markers used to define or explain a statement explicitly are:
Means *By … we mean
It is taken to be *By … is meant
Denotes In other words
Refers to *That is (to say)
It is defined as
*In initial position
Examples:
1. The term computer is defined as the processor plus the internal memory.
2. In general, by the word culture we mean the human activity.
3. The word "literature" spelled with a lower-case "l" can refer to any form of writing,
such as essays; while "Literature" spelled with an upper-case "L" is taken to be a
whole body of literary work, worldwide
or relating to a specific culture.
17. 17
E There are other ways used to define or explain, depending on the style
used. One very common method is to give the term being defined and say
what it is without repeating the term.
Examples
1. Enzymes are organic compounds.
2. An essay is a short work.
3. Geology is the study of the Earth's litosphere, mantle, and core.
E Another very common method is to use the same pattern as above and
also give some distinguishing characteristics:
1. Enzymes are organic compounds that take part in thousands of
chemical reactions in our body.
2. An essay is a short work that treats a topic from an author's personal
point of view.
3. Tapes and disks are memory devices that can be stored for future
use.
One of the most frequent forms of definition or explanation is to write two
nouns or noun phrases separated by commas.
18. 18
2 Examples:
1. Computers, electronic devices for processing information, are used
in practically every aspect of life.
2. The Dorsal Cavity, one of the major cavities in the human body,
contains the brain and the spinal cord.
3. Politics, the process and method of gaining or maintaining support for
public or common action, predates human society.
? Exercises:
A) Study the following definitions. A definition usually includes all
these parts: the term to be defined, the group it belongs to, and the
characteristics which distinguish it from other members of the group.
1. A cereal is a plant that produces grains that can be eaten or used for
making flour or bread.
2. A preservative is a substance which stops food from going off.
3. A computer is a machine with an intricate network of electronic circuits
that operate switches.
4. Market Research is the activity of collecting and studying information
about what people want, need, and buy.
5. Guidelines are pieces of advice that an organization or person issues,
intended to help you do something.
B) Identify the definitions and explanations given in the following text:
Society is a group of people who form a semiclosed
system. At its simplest, the term
society refers to a large group of people sharing their own culture and institutions. A society,
then, is a network of relationships between people. The English word society is derived from the
French société, which, in turn, had its origin in the Latin societas, a "friendly association with
others," from socius meaning "companion, associate, comrade or business partner." Thus, the
meaning of society is closely related to what is considered to be social. Implicit in the meaning of
society is that its members may share some mutual concern or interest, a common objective or
common characteristics. The social sciences generally use the term society to mean a group of
people who form a semiclosed
social system, in which most interactions are with other
individuals belonging to the group. More abstractly, a society is defined as a network of
relationships between social entities. A society is also sometimes defined as an interdependent
community, but the sociologist Tönnies sought to draw a contrast between society and
community. An important feature of society is social culture, aspects of which include roles and
social ranking.
19. 19
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (12)
Classifying
The term “classification” means to separate objects from one another. The
simplest classification divides things into those that show groups of characteristics that
are shared and those that are not. For example, one would not place fish and birds
together in the same class with trees.
Classification usually goes from general to specific and is essential in
attempting to make sense out of things around us. Classification, then, is a process of
bringing order out of confusion by breaking down the general topic into its related
parts in a logical way. Outlining is very closely related to classification, because it
organizes information a logical fashion, going from general to specific, or from least
important to most important, or from specific to general.
E From general to specific
There are several ways of expressing each of these relationships:
…can be divided into …is of
…has … includes
…is made up …is composed of
…comprises …consists of
20. E From specific to general
Some of the most common expressions to make reference to this kind of relationship
are:
? Exercises:
Taking the following the example, try to write it again by using the
expressions above:
1. The CPU is divided into three parts: the control unit, the artihmeticlogical
unit, and memory.
2. The introduction, the development of the topic, the conclusion, and the
bibliography are the parts of a dissertation.
20
…are of …make up
…form …constitute
…are classified as
21. 21
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (13)
Contrasting
Reading texts often have connectives omitted without seriously affecting
the flow of intelligibility. However, connectives dealing with contrasting elements
within a sentence or paragraph are very rarely absent because without these,
the reading would be nonsensical and confusing. There are many ways of
showing that contrast exists between things.
E The easiest indicator that a contrast exists and that also emphasizes that the
opposite is true, is when a statement is introduced by one of the following
markers:
On the contrary On the one hand … on the other hand
By contrast Conversely
Opposite In comparison By way of contrast
E Sometimes contrastive connective are used to indicate that what follows is a
replacement of what was said before. Examples of such markers are:
Alternatively Instead But Then
Rather than W hereas
An/ the alternative is (initial position)
It might be better if (initial position)
E W hen the writer wants to express that what has been said before is true or
correct, but what follows is, in contrast, also tru or correct, the following
connective markers are used:
But However Nevertheless Nonetheless
Even if Even though Although Though
In spite of+ noun Despite+ noun or -ing
On the other hand
22. 22
? Exercises
A) Rewrite the following sentence by using the expressions above:
1. A computer can solve a complex problem in seconds; by way of contrast,
man would take weeks, maybe months, to do the same operations.
B) Write a suitable connective in each of the following sentences:
1. In A Homage to Catalonia Orwell does not praise communism, …………….
he criticizes it.
2. W hen a computer fails to produce the desire output, it is often due to
human error …………………….. the fault of the computer itself.
3. Fat people are likely to suffer from a heart failure, ………………… slim
people are usually out of that risk.
4. …………………………………. to ordinary medicine is homeopathy.
C) Read the following text and fill in the table below:
The Simple yet Elegant Furnishings of an Athenian Home.These
houses, even owned by
the lordly rich, are surprisingly simple in their furnishings. The accumulation of heavy furniture,
wall decorations, and bricabrac
which will characterize the dwellings of a later age, would be
utterly offensive to an Atheniancontradicting
all his ideas of harmony and "moderation." The
Athenian house lacks of course bookcases and framed pictures. It probably too lacks any genuine
closets. Beds, couches, chairs (usually backless), stools, footstools, and small portable tables,these
alone seem in evidence. In place of bureaus, dressers and cupboards, there are huge chests,
heavy and carved, in which most of the household gear can be locked away. In truth, the whole
style of Greek household life expresses that simplicity on which we have already commented.
Oriental carpets are indeed met with, but they are often used as wall draperies or couch covers
rather than upon the floors. Greek costume (see p. 43) is so simple that there is small need for
elaborate chests of drawers, and a line of pegs upon the wall cares for most of the family
wardrobe.
All this is true; yet what furniture one finds is fashioned with commendable grace. There
is a marked absence of heavy and unhealthful upholstery; but the simple bed (four posts
sustaining a springless cushion stuffed with feathers or wool) has its woodwork adorned with
carving which is a true mean betwixt the too plain and the too ornate; and the whole bed is given
an elegant effect by the magnificently embroidered scarlet tapestry which overspreads it. The
lines of the legs of the low wooden tables which are used at the dinner parties will be a lesson (if
we have time to study them) upon just proportion and the value of subtle curves. Moreover, the
different household vessels, the stone and bronze lamps, the various table dishes, even the
common pottery put to the humblest uses, all have a beauty, a chaste elegance, a saving touch of
deft ornamentation, which transforms them out of "kitchen ware" into works of art. Those black
water pots covered with redclay
figures which the serving maids are bearing so carelessly into
the scullery at the screaming summons of the cook will be some day perchance the pride of a
23. museum, and teach a later age that costly material and aristocratic uses are not needful to make
an article supremely beautiful.
Of course the welltodo
Athenian is proud to possess certain "valuables." He will have a
few silver cups elegantly chased, and at least one diner's couch in the andron will be made of rare
imported wood, and be inlaid with gilt or silver. On festival days the house will be hung with
brilliant and elaborately wrought tapestries which will suddenly emerge from the great chests.
Also, despite frowns and criticisms, the custom is growing of decorating one's walls with brightlined
frescoes after the manner of the Agora colonnades. In the course of a few generations the
homes of the wealthier Greeks will come to resemble those of the Romans, such as a later age has
resurrected at Pompeii.
These houses, even if owned by the lordly rich, are surprisingly simple in their
furnishings. The accumulation of heavy furniture, wall decorations, and bricabrac
which will
characterize the dwellings of a later age, would be utterly offensive to an Atheniancontradicting
all his ideas of harmony and "moderation." The Athenian house lacks of course bookcases and
framed pictures. It probably too lacks any genuine closets. Beds, couches, chairs (usually
backless), stools, footstools, and small portable tables,these
alone seem in evidence. In place of
bureaus, dressers and cupboards, there are huge chests, heavy and carved, in which most of the
household gear can be locked away. In truth, the whole style of Greek household life expresses
that simplicity on which we have already commented. Oriental carpets are indeed met with, but
they are often used as wall draperies or couch covers rather than upon the floors. Greek costume
is so simple that there is small need for elaborate chests of drawers, and a line of pegs upon the
wall cares for most of the family wardrobe.
All this is true; yet what furniture one finds is fashioned with commendable grace. There
is a marked absence of heavy and unhealthful upholstery; but the simple bed (four posts
sustaining a springless cushion stuffed with feathers or wool) has its woodwork adorned with
carving which is a true mean betwixt the too plain and the too ornate; and the whole bed is given
an elegant effect by the magnificently embroidered scarlet tapestry which overspreads it. The
lines of the legs of the low wooden tables which are used at the dinner parties will be a lesson (if
we have time to study them) upon just proportion and the value of subtle curves. Moreover, the
different household vessels, the stone and bronze lamps, the various table dishes, even the
common pottery put to the humblest uses, all have a beauty, a chaste elegance, a saving touch of
deft ornamentation, which transforms them out of "kitchen ware" into works of art. Those black
water pots covered with redclay
figures which the serving maids are bearing so carelessly into
the scullery at the screaming summons of the cook will be some day perchance the pride of a
museum, and teach a later age that costly material and aristocratic uses are not needful to make
an article supremely beautiful.
Of course the welltodo
Athenian is proud to possess certain "valuables." He will have a
few silver cups elegantly chased, and at least one diner's couch in the andron will be made of rare
imported wood, and be inlaid with gilt or silver. On festival days the house will be hung with
brilliant and elaborately wrought tapestries which will suddenly emerge from the great chests.
Also, despite frowns and criticisms, the custom is growing of decorating one's walls with brightlined
frescoes after the manner of the Agora colonnades. In the course of a few generations the
homes of the wealthier Greeks will come to resemble those of the Romans, such as a later age has
resurrected at Pompeii.
23
Contrastive marker Function of marker Items contrasted
24. 24
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (15)
Cause and effect
Understanding the different way of expressing the relationship between the
causes and effects of an action is very important when you are reading English. If an
argument begins with effects or results, the causes are the reasons that logically lead
to those results. This cause-effect relationship is commonly used in academic texts.
E There are many different ways of expressing cause and effect:
A causes/ results in B
Dust causes the recording condition of disks to deteriorate.
B results from/ is caused by A
Deterioration in the recording condition of disks is caused by dust .
E Often, the choice of verbs in a sentence will indicate a cause-effect relationship.
The following verbs are used to link a cause with an effect:
Result Cause Produce Allow
Enable Prevent Be caused by Be
produced by
Result in Result from Bring about
2 Examples:
1. The idea of keeping instructions for the computer inside the computer memory
brought about significant changes in computer technology.
2. The misleading and disappointing experience in earlier trials with idoxuridine
(IDU) resulted in more controlled studies.
3. The widespread conviction during the postwar years that adolescents could not
really be helped by psychiatry prevented psychiatric services from being
provided for adolescents aged 13 or 14.
25. 25
E Connectives commonly used to specify a cause are:
Because Due to Since
If As As the/ a result of
In response to
E Some expressions used to introduce a result are:
Thus Hence So that
Therefore Consequently For this reason
W ith the result that
? Exercises
A) Rewrite the following sentence by using some of the connectives
above:
Many people are attracted to running because they think it is good for
developing muscle tone and losing weight.
B) Rewrite the following extract so that it does not have changes in
meaning:
Job loss is the most traumatic job-related experience that anybody can ever
have. It creates economic problems through the loss of income in addition to loss
of self-esteem and prestige and a sense of doubt about competence.
C) Read the following text about Adam Smith, the 18 th century renowned
economist, and underline those sentences expressing either cause or
effect:
Shortly before his death Smith had nearly all his manuscripts destroyed. In his last years he
seemed to have been planning two major treatises, one on the theory and history of law and one
on the sciences and arts. The posthumously published Essays on Philosophical Subjects (1795)
probably contain parts of what would have been the latter treatise.
The Wealth of Nations was influential since it did so much to create the field of economics and
develop it into an autonomous systematic discipline. In the Western world, it is arguably the most
influential book on the subject ever published. When the book, which has become a classic
manifesto against mercantilism (the theory that large reserves of bullion are essential for
economic success), appeared in 1776, there was a strong sentiment for free trade in both Britain
and America. This new feeling had been born out of the economic hardships and poverty caused
by the American War of Independence. However, at the time of publication, not everybody was
26. immediately convinced of the advantages of free trade: the British public and Parliament still
clung to mercantilism for many years to come.
The Wealth of Nations also rejects the Physiocratic school's emphasis on the importance of
land; instead, Smith believed labour was paramount, and that a division of labour would affect a
great increase in production. Nations was so successful, in fact, that it led to the abandonment of
earlier economic schools, and later economists, such as Thomas Malthus and David Ricardo,
focused on refining Smith's theory into what is now known as classical economics (Modern
economics evolved from this). Malthus expanded Smith's ruminations on overpopulation, while
Ricardo believed in the "iron law of wages" — that overpopulation would prevent wages from
topping the subsistence level. Smith postulated an increase of wages with an increase in
production, a view considered more accurate today.
One of the main points of The Wealth of Nations is that the free market, while appearing
chaotic and unrestrained, is actually guided to produce the right amount and variety of goods by a
socalled
"invisible hand" (originally written in Moral Sentiments). If a product shortage occurs,
for instance, its price rises, creating a profit margin that creates an incentive for others to enter
production, eventually curing the shortage. If too many producers enter the market, the increased
competition among manufacturers and increased supply would lower the price of the product to
its production cost, the "natural price". Even as profits are zeroed out at the "natural price," there
would be incentives to produce goods and services, as all costs of production, including
compensation for the owner's labour, are also built into the price of the goods. If prices dip below a
zero profit, producers would drop out of the market; if they were above a zero profit, producers
would enter the market. Smith believed that while human motives are often selfish and greedy,
the competition in the free market would tend to benefit society as a whole by keeping prices low,
while still building in an incentive for a wide variety of goods and services. Nevertheless, he was
wary of businessmen and argued against the formation of monopolies.
26
27. 27
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (16)
Making predictions
A prediction is a statement about a particular subject which is related to a
prior condition being fulfilled. It is a special kind of inference in which we tell in
advance what we think will happen in the future. It is therefore impossible to predict
without having any knowledge of an existing condition. By examining existing data,
a logical conclusion can be often logically drawn about what is likely to happen
next. Predictions of results based on existing conditions can be expressed as
different levels of certainty. They are not absolute, and can change according to
context. For example:
1. Certainty can be conveyed by:
W ill (definitely, certainly)
Certain, sure
W ithout a doubt, without question
2. Probability can be conveyed by:
Probable, probably
Likely
Most probable, most probably, highly
probable, most likely, highly likely
3. Possibility can be expressed by:
May (not), might (not), can, could, possible,
possibly, perhaps
28. 28
4. Improbability:
5. Impossibility:
? Exercise
Improbable, unlikely
Doubtful, questionable
Probably not
Most / highly improbable/ unlikely
Most/ highly doubtful/ questionable
Most probably not
Cannot, could not, not possible,
impossible
Read the following sentences and underline the part that expresses a
condition, once; and the part expressing a prediction, twice:
1. It has been said that if transport technology had developed as rapidly as
computer technology, a trip across the Atlantic Ocean today would take a
few seconds.
2. W orking for the U.S. Census Bureau, Dr. Hollerith realized that unless some
means of speeding up the analyses of census data were found, it would take
more than ten years to complete the job.
3. If the hammer in train printers hits a little early or late, the character will
appear slightly to the right of its proper position.
4. Mainframes would still be occupying a lot of space if it were not for
microminiaturization.
5. If computer technology continues growing at the rate it has, bubble memory
will soon replace the chip.
29. 29
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT (17)
Final Review
? Exercise
Read the following extract about Charles Dickens. Then try to find all
instances of examples, definitions, added information, classifications, and
markers expressing cause and effect. Finally, identify the main ideas in the
text.
In the nineteenth century the writing of novels emerged from a permitted indulgence to
an acceptable career. Fielding and Smollet, Dickens´s heroes, did not depend on their novels for a
living any more than did Richardson and Jane Austen, whereas for Dickens, Thackeray, Trollope
and Henry James, their art ensured not only a means of subsistence but social prestige as well. It
is customary to think of Dickens as a critic of the Victorian way of life, but whatever reservations
the novels may express about selfaggrandizement,
no career could demonstrate the ideal of the
selfmade
man more effectively than his own.
A man of phenomenal energy, Dickens combined his literary career with a variety of social
and theatrical interests. Some of his social concerns are documented in essays such as Philip
Collin´s two studies, Dickens and Crime (1962) and Dickens and Education (1963), while the
theatrical involvement embraced writing, acting and producing for the stage, and culminated in
the famous public readings from his own works. However, a glance through the list of his novels
shows the extent in which Dickens´s life was dominated by the demands of authorship, for apart
from the gaps between the last three items there is scarcely an unproductive year. When one
considers how each of the novels appeared in either weekly or monthly instalments, and that they
were supplemented by short stories and occasional journalism, as well as, from time to time, the
duties of an editor, it can be fairly said that Dickens´s literary activity over a period of more than
thirty years was uninterrupted. Due to lack of space, I have confined myself in the study of the
novels alone.
The practice of serial publication, a publisher´s device to facilitate sales which became an
important factor in the development of nineteenthcentury
fiction, had consequences for Dickens´s
novels which it is difficult for the modern reader confronted by a set of eighthundred
page
volumes to appreciate. Nine of the novels written by Dickens were originally brought out in
illustrated monthly parts, each consisting of three or four chapters. Of the remaining six, one,
Oliver Twist, appeared as a monthly serial in the magazine Bentley´s Miscellany, while the other
five, all of them rather shorter, were published in serial form in weekly papers. The method of
publication had a great bearing on the tone and content of the novels concerned. In the first place,
the need to maintain interest by the deployment of an easily identifiable narrative was
paramount. Much has been made of the complexity of Dickens´s plots but fundamentally a
Dickens novel is based on a simple narrative concept as it can be seen in Pickwick´s journey, the
lives Oliver Twist and David Copperfield, or in the hidden secrets of Bleak House, Little Dorrit or
Our Mutual Friend. On the other hand, with a basic story established, there is ample opportunity
for the multiplicity of character and event for which Dickens is famous. The wealth of apparently
extraneous detail that is a feature of his novels has sometimes led to the supposition that Dickens
wrote without plan, but the information that he gave, along with his own notes for individual
novels, shows very clearly the extent to which, particularly in his later novels, he formulated a
basic narrative concept to which he could keep firm hold as his novel progressed.