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美国留学:2012年10月28日托福写作考试机经回忆

来源:毕达教育 发布时间:2012-11-15 17:15:21

毕达教育留学咨询机构在出国了留学申请方面有丰富的经验,我们的服务项目包含初中生、高中生、本科生、研究生(含博士)申请,我们服务的范围覆盖美国留学、英国留学、新加坡留学、香港留学和加拿大留学,同时我们郑重承诺,如果申请不成功,我们将全额退款。

托福考试是申请美国留学的考生都要参加的考试。以下是考生分享的2012年10月28日托福写作考试机经回忆的内容,即将参加托福考试的考生们可以借鉴参考一下试题,为下一次的新托福考试做好充足准备。希望对大家的美国留学托福写作考试有所帮助。

独立写作:重复 2012.02.03NA

Do you agree or disagree with the following statement? Governments and corporations should share all of their scientific discoveries with the rest of the world.

The majority of government and corporate research first enters the world in the form of commercial goods protected under intellectual property law. However, some believe that the results of their research should be freely shared for the good of humanity, rather than sold commercially. While I understand this well-intentioned sentiment, I have to disagree. I believe that such an idealistic system would actually be detrimental to scientific research overall.

First of all, research requires money. Equipment, staff, and facilities can quickly get expensive if you want to make any sort of reasonable progress. That is one reason why the majority of research conducted by governments and corporations (as opposed to say, non-profit organizations) is commercially driven. Take pharmaceutical research, for example: Every year, pharmaceutical companies pour billions of dollars a year into developing chemicals with medical applications. Of the countless chemicals they might investigate, only a select few turn out to be viable and make it to market. These companies have to sell their products at a price that allows them to recoup their massive research investment.

Secondly, the unfortunate reality is, the majority of people operate on greed principles. This is why capitalism works--it puts greedy people in competition with other greedy people, and as a byproduct the consumer benefits. This is not to say that all cases of research are self-serving, but if you take away the reward--that is, monetary incentive to do research--then progress in a lot of really valuable research would grind to a halt. That is why most countries have some form of intellectual property law: By protecting the creator's (or in this case, the researching organization's) right to commercially benefit from their work, governments incentivize the kind of research that society needs in order to progress. And usually, the fruits of such labor are eventually spread freely anyway: In the United States for example, work becomes public domain after a specified period of time.

Finally, as a matter of safety, certain types of research are better off not being freely distributed, at least at first. Nuclear energy research is an obvious example. Such research should be safeguarded by the countries that first develop it, in order to fully test its consequences before releasing it to the rest of the world. This is because other groups or countries may not have the expertise, resources, or ethical sensibility to apply it safely and responsibly. The same applies to any research into military technology. Can you imagine what would happen if you made such potentially destructive research available to people unable to comprehend its dangers? This would be akin to giving a child a knife.

I can understand why many wish that governments and corporations would release their research for free. However, for the reasons outlined above, such a system would just not be viable given the current realities we face. (Richard, 477 words)

以上就是2012年10月28日托福写作考试机经回忆的全部内容,各位考生可以以此作为参考,做好复习。最后预祝各位考生取得理想的成绩!

 

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