万物简史英文版_比尔·布莱森-第1章
按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
睄鎺ㄨ崘璇峰埌銆婁竾鐗╃畝鍙茶嫳鏂囩増銆嬩笓棰樼綉鍧http:///renwen/2838/
锛屾渶鏈夋枃鑹烘皵鎭殑鏂囧缃戠珯锛屾彁渚涚粡鍏哥殑鏂囧鍚嶈憲銆佹渚犲皬璇淬佽█鎯呭皬璇淬佷汉鏂囩ぞ绉戠被涔︾睄鍦ㄧ嚎闃呰锛屾墍鏈塗XT鐢靛瓙涔︽墜鏈哄厤璐逛笅杞介槄璇伙紝鎴戜滑鎻愪緵缁欐偍鐨勫皬璇翠笉姹傛渶澶氾紝浣嗘眰鏈缁忓吀鏈瀹屾暣
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
锝涘皬锝濓經璇达綕锝泃锝濓經xt锝濓經澶╋綕锝涘爞
as i sit here; in early 2003; i have before me several pages of manuscript bearing majesticallyencouraging and tactful notes from ian tattersal of the american museum of natural historypointing out; inter alia; that perigueux is not a wineproducing region; that it is inventive but atouch unorthodox of me to italicize taxonomic divisions above the level of genus and species;that i have persistently misspelled olorgesaille; a place that i recently visited; and so on insimilar vein through two chapters of text covering his area of expertise; early humans。
goodness knows how many other inky embarrassments may lurk in these pages yet; but itis thanks to dr。 tattersall and all of those whom i am about to mention that there arent manyhundreds more。 i cannot begin to thank adequately those who helped me in the preparation ofthis book。 i am especially indebted to the following; who were uniformly generous and kindlyand showed the most heroic reserves of patience in answering one simple; endlessly repeatedquestion: 〃im sorry; but can you explain that again?〃in the united states: ian tattersall of the american museum of natural history in newyork; john thorstensen; mary k。 hudson; and david blanchflower of dartmouth college inhanover; new hampshire; dr。 william abdu and dr。 bryan marsh of dartmouth…hitchcockmedical center in lebanon; new hampshire; ray anderson and brian witzke of the iowadepartment of natural resources; iowa city; mike voorhies of the university of nebraskaand ashfall fossil beds state park near orchard; nebraska; chuck offenburger of buenavista university; storm lake; iowa; ken rancourt; director of research; mount washingtonobservatory; gorham; new hampshire; paul doss; geologist of yellowstone national park;and his wife; heidi; also of the national park; frank asara of the university of california atberkeley; oliver payne and lynn addison of the national geographic society; james o。
farlow; indianapurdue university; roger l。 larson; professor of marine geophysics;university of rhode island; jeff guinn of the fort worth star…telegram newspaper; jerry kasten of dallas; texas; and the staff of the iowa historical society in desmoines。
in england: david caplin of imperial college; london; richard fortey; les ellis; and kathyway of the natural history museum; martin raff of university college; london; rosalindharding of the institute of biological anthropology in oxford; dr。 laurence smaje; formerlyof the welle institute; and keith blackmore of the times。
in australia: the reverend robert evans of hazelbrook; new south wales; alan thorneand victoria bennett of the australian national university in canberra; louise burke andjohn hawley of canberra; anne milne of the sydney morning herald; ian nowak; formerlyof the geological society of western australia; thomas h。 rich of museum victoria; timflannery; director of the south australian museum in adelaide; and the very helpful staff ofthe state library of new south wales in sydney。
and elsewhere: sue superville; information center manager at the museum of new zealandin wellington; and dr。 emma mbua; dr。 koen maes; and jillani ngalla of the kenya nationalmuseum in nairobi。
i am also deeply and variously indebted to patrick janson…smith; gerald howard; mariannevelmans; alison tulett; larry finlay; steve rubin; jed mattes; carol heaton; charles elliott;david bryson; felicity bryson; dan mclean; nick southern; patrick gallagher; larryashmead; and the staff of the peerless and ever…cheery howe library in hanover; newhampshire。
above all; and as always; my profoundest thanks to my dear wife; cynthia。
w w w。 xiao shuotxt。 co m
CONTENTS
灏彙¤ t xt 澶″爞
acknowledgments
introduction
part i lost in the cosmos
1 how to build a universe
2 wele to the solar system
3 the reverend evanss universe
part ii the size of the earth
4 the measure of things
5 the stone…breakers
6 science red in tooth and claw
7 elemental matters
part iii anew age dawns
8 einsteins universe
9 the mighty atom
10 getting the lead out
11 muster marks quarks
12 the earth moves
part iv dangerous planet
13 bang!
14 the fire below
15 dangerous beauty
part v life itself
16 lonely planet
17 into the troposphere
18 the bounding main
19 the rise of life
20 small world
21 life goes on
22 good…bye to all that
23 the richness of being
24 cells
25 darwins singular notion
26 the stuff of life
part vi the road to us
27 ice time
28 the mysterious biped
29 the restless ape
30 good…bye
notes
bibliography
index
the physicist leo szilard once announced to his friend hans bethe that he was thinking of keeping a diary: 〃i dont intend to publish。 iam merely going to record the facts for the information of god。〃〃dont you think god knows the facts?〃 bethe asked。
〃yes;〃 said szilard。
〃he knows the facts; but he does not know this version of the facts。〃
…hans christian von baeyer;taming the atom
w锛穡锛巟i锛sh锛祇txt。c锛痬
INTRODUCTION
灏彙/璇淬倀xt澶╁爞
wele。 and congratulations。 i am delighted that you could make it。 getting here wasnteasy; i know。 in fact; i suspect it was a little tougher than you realize。
to begin with; for you to be here now trillions of drifting atoms had somehow to assemblein an intricate and intriguingly obliging manner to create you。 its an arrangement sospecialized and particular that it has never been tried before and will only exist this once。 forthe next many years (we hope) these tiny particles will unplainingly engage in all thebillions of deft; cooperative efforts necessary to keep you intact and let you experience thesupremely agreeable but generally underappreciated state known as existence。
why atoms take this trouble is a bit of a puzzle。 being you is not a gratifying experience atthe atomic level。 for all their devoted attention; your atoms dont actually care about you…indeed; dont even know that you are there。 they dont even know that they are there。 they aremindless particles; after all; and not even themselves alive。 (it is a slightly arresting notionthat if you were to pick yourself apart with tweezers; one atom at a time; you would produce amound of fine atomic dust; none of which had ever been alive but all of which had once beenyou。) yet somehow for the period of your existence they will answer to a single overarchingimpulse: to keep you you。
the bad news is that atoms are fickle and their time of devotion is fleeting…fleeting indeed。
even a long human life adds up to only about 650;000 hours。 and when that modestmilestone flashes past; or at some other point thereabouts; for reasons unknown your atomswill shut you down; silently disassemble; and go off to be other things。 and thats it for you。
still; you may rejoice that it happens at all。 generally speaking in the universe it doesnt; sofar as we can tell。 this is decidedly odd because the atoms that so liberally and congeniallyflock together to form living things on earth are exactly the same atoms that decline to do itelsewhere。 whatever else it may be; at the level of chemistry life is curiously mundane:
carbon; hydrogen; oxygen; and nitrogen; a little calcium; a dash of sulfur; a light dusting ofother very ordinary elements…nothing you wouldnt find in any ordinary drugstore…and thatsall you need。 the only thing special about the atoms that make you is that they make you。
that is of course the miracle of life。
whether or not atoms make life in other corners of the universe; they make plenty else;indeed; they make everything else。 without them there would be no water or air or rocks; nostars and planets; no distant gassy clouds or swirling nebulae or any of the other things thatmake the universe so usefully material。 atoms are so numerous and necessary that we easilyoverlook that they neednt actually exist at all。 there is no law that requires the universe to fillitself with small particles of matter or to produce light and gravity and the other physicalproperties on which our existence hinges。 there neednt actually be a universe at all。 for thelongest time there wasnt。 there were no atoms and no universe for them to float about in。
there was nothing…nothing at all anywhere。
so thank goodness for atoms。 but the fact that you have atoms and that they assemble insuch a willing manner is only part of what got you here。 to be here now; alive in the twenty…first century and smart enough to know it; you also had to be the beneficiary of anextraordinary string of biological good fortune。 survival on earth is a surprisingly trickybusiness。 of the billions and billions of species of living thing that have existed since thedawn of time; most…99。99 percent…are no longer around。 life on earth; you see; is not onlybrief but dismayingly tenuous。 it is a curious feature of our existence that we e from aplanet that is very good at promoting life but even better at extinguishing it。
the average species on earth lasts for only about four million years; so if you wish to bearound for billions of years; you must be as fickle as the atoms that made you。 you must beprepared to change everything about yourself…shape; size; color; species affiliation;everything…and to do so repeatedly。 thats much easier said than done; because the process ofchange is random。 to get from 〃protoplasmal primordial atomic globule〃 (as the gilbert andsullivan song put it) to sentient upright modern human has required you to mutate new traitsover and over in a precisely timely manner for an exceedingly long while。 so at variousperiods over the last 3。8 billion years you have abhorred oxygen and then doted on it; grownfins and limbs and jaunty sails; laid eggs; flicked the air with a forked tongue; been sleek;been furry; lived underground; lived in trees; been as big as a deer and as small as a mouse;and a million things more。 the tiniest deviation from any of these evolutionary shifts; and youmight now be licking algae from cave walls or lolling walrus…like on some stony shore ordisgorging air through a blowhole in the top of your head before diving sixty feet for amouthful of delicious sandworms。
not only have you been lucky enough to be attached since time immemorial to a favoredevolutionary line; but you have also been extremely…make that miraculously…fortunate in yourpersonal ancestry。 consider the fact that for 3。8 billion years; a period of time older than theearths mountains and rivers and oceans; every one of your forebears on both sides has beenattractive enough to find a mate; healthy enough to reproduce; and sufficiently blessed by fateand circumstances to live long enough to do so。 not one of your pertinent ancestors wassquashed; devoured; drowned; starved; stranded; stuck fast; untimely wounded; or otherwisedeflected from its lifes quest of delivering a tiny charge of genetic mat