問題詳情

A.In pursuing the future, it is always important to recognize the past. Occasionally, the modern world is lucky to discover archaeological artifacts thatconnect present-day humanity to its ancestry. The discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls is one such valuable link. The Dead Sea Scrolls, named for thelocation of the caves where they were discovered, are considered by many scholars to be the single greatest biblical archaeological find. Many believethat the scrolls hold crucial information about the historical relationship between Judaism and early Christianity. Some further believe that the scrollswere written by a monastic Jewish sect known as the Essenes. The scrolls, comprised mainly of “religious writings, messianic prognostications, psalmsand hymns, some of which anticipate ideas expressed in the New Testament,” may provide answers to historians’ and theologians’ questions regardinga period in history about which they had only been able to speculate.Since their discovery, the scrolls have been a constant source of controversy. They have been the subject of battles over accessibility,monopolization, and publication delays. Most recently, debate has focused on copyrightability of the reconstructed scrolls and copyright infringement.One of the unfortunate realities about archaeological artifacts is that they are rarely preserved and often are fragmented. Fragmentation of documentsmakes it necessary for scientists and scholars to put the pieces back together, as if reassembling a jigsaw puzzle. Unfortunately, ancient documentreconstruction is not as simple as solving a jigsaw puzzle. In many cases, indistinguishable fragments belong to unidentified documents. Unlike apuzzle, which has one answer, scholarly interpretation of reconstructed artifacts may yield different outcomes. A scholar or archaeologist mustdetermine which fragments belong together and how those pieces should be arranged to best recreate the original.In pursuit of the correct combination, a scholar may devote his or her life to reassembly. One Israeli biblical scholar, Elisha Qimron, devoted elevenyears of work to one of the Dead Sea Scrolls. In an effort to give free access to all of the scroll manuscripts, Hershel Shanks, founder and currentdirector of the Biblical Archaeology Society, published a book that included an “unauthorized” facsimile of the document that Qimron had spent yearsreconstructing. Subsequently, Qimron brought suit against Shanks in Israel asserting a claim of copyright infringement. This suit set an internationallegal precedent. The Israeli decision, the first ruling of its kind in the world, found a copyright in the reconstruction of an ancient text.The Israeli case and its ruling raise serious questions regarding the freedom to disseminate factual information and the consequences it may have onscholarly research. The past still contains many mysteries that may be solved only through continuous research and free exchange of ideas. Conferringa copyright on an artifact reconstruction presents a problem in this pursuit for answers because such a copyright may permit monopolization of ideas,thereby forestalling future research. Although legal issues similar to those decided in the Israeli case have yet to be fully litigated in the United States,the well-established U.S. system of copyright law makes the United States the logical forum for the continuation of this debate. In fact, two differentscholars have filed a similar case against Qimron in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. In anticipation of this futurelitigation, this Comment analyzes Qimron v. Shanks’ and theorizes as to how U.S. copyright law might apply to reconstructed documents.
【題組】41. What is the main issue of this article?
(A)The future of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
(B)The pursuit of the correct combination.
(C)The controversy over Christianity monopolization.
(D)The copyright law and its application to reconstructed documents.

參考答案

答案:D
難度:適中0.684932
統計:A(8),B(6),C(7),D(50),E(0)

用户評論

【用戶】Dex Shih

【年級】高三上

【評論內容】最後一句, In anticipation of this future litigation, this Comment analyzes Qimron v. Shanks’ and theorizes as to how U.S. copyright law might apply to reconstructed documents.

【用戶】衝刺必勝G&L

【年級】高二下

【評論內容】Dead Sea Scrolls 死海古卷死海古卷(Dead Sea Scrolls,或稱死海經卷、死海書卷、死海文書),是為目前最古老的希伯來文聖經抄本(舊約),除了《聖經·以斯帖記》以外的《舊約全書》全部內容都能在死海古卷中找到,還含有一些雖然已經得到天主教承認、但仍被新教視作外典(包括次經及偽經)的經卷,此外,當中也包含一些不屬於《聖經》的文獻。此古卷出土於公元1947年的死海附近的庫姆蘭,故名為死海古卷。古卷主要是羊皮紙,部分是紙莎草紙。抄寫的文字以希伯來文為主,當中也有少數由希臘文、亞蘭文、納巴提文和拉丁文寫成。現《死海古卷》之後,有不少書刊陸續出版,讓世界各地的學者有機會讀到初步發現的資料。可是,要看到成千上萬來自4號...