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第 37~40 題為一題組        Although the fossil record holds few clues to the evolution of cells, recent advances in biochemistry and molecular biologyhave provided powerful new means of reconstructing the past by probing the present. Hardly 300 years have elapsed since theday when a living cell was first glimpsed by the human eye. Throughout that period, every milestone about cell discovery bearsthe name of a new tool or instrument.        The world of cells remained entirely unknown and unexplored until the middle of the

century, when individuals ofprying minds served by skilled hands started grinding lenses and using them to extend their power of vision. One of the firstdesigners of microscopes was the English scientist Robert Hooke—physicist, meteorologist, biologist, engineer, architect—amost remarkable product of his time. In 1665, he published a popular collection called Micrographia; among the beautifuldrawings of his observations was one of a thin slice of cork showing a honeycomb structure, an array of what he called“microscopic pores” or “cells.” In his description of it, Hooke used the word “cell” in its original meaning of small chamber, asin the cell of a prisoner or a monk. The word has remained, not to describe the little holes that Hooke saw in dead bark, butrather to designate the little blobs of matter that are the inmates of the holes in the living tree.        One of Hooke’s most gifted contemporaries was the Netherlander Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, who made almost threehundred microscopes of a very distinct design--- a small bead of glass inserted in a copper plate. By holding this contraptionclose to his eye and peering through the glass bead at an object held of a needle he manipulated with a screw. Leeuwenhoeksucceeded in obtaining magnification 270 times that of the naked eye. He was able to see for the first time what he called  “animalcules” in blood, sperm and the water of marshes and ponds. Amazingly, he even saw bacteria, which he drew soaccurately that specialists can identify them today.        Not all early users of microscopes were as perceptive. The images they were able to observe with their simpleinstruments—especially when it came to objects as small as living cells—were so blurred that most details had to be filled in bythe imagination. Many showed admirable restraint in the use of this faculty. Others took full advantage of it, as did theFrench scientist Gautier D’Agoty, who believed that a fully formed baby existed within a sperm cell.        For a long time, microscopy did little more than hover around the world of cells until, in 1827, the Italian physicistGiovanni Battista Amici succeeded in correcting the major optical aberrations Section 2 How to Prepare for Academic Readingand Listening of lenses. Through three pairs of matched lenses that could deflect light without separating it into colors, thesharpness of the images was dramatically increased; so much so that only a few years later the generalized theory wasformulated that plants and animals are made of one or more similar units—cells.        This theory was proposed for plants in 1837 by the German botanist Mathias Schleiden and was extended to animals byhis friend, the physiologist Theodor Schwann. The theory was subsequently completed by the pathologist Rudolf Virchow,when he proclaimed in 1855: “ Every cell arises from a cell,” an altered version of “ Every living being arises from an egg.”The latter was an assertion made by William Harvey, the English physician who discovered blood circulation and who had diedshortly before Robert Hooke’s discovery. By the turn of the century, a number of important cell parts had been described andnamed.        Later investigators found themselves confronting a new obstacle, seemingly insurmountable, as it was set by thevery laws of physics. Even with a perfect instrument, no detail smaller than about half the wavelength of the light used can beperceived, which puts the absolute limit of resolution of a microscope utilizing visible light at .25 millionth of a meter. In theworld of cells, such a dimension is quite large, relatively speaking. Just think of what we would miss in our own world if nodetail smaller than inches could be distinguished, and what classical microscopists would have seen had they been able tomagnify the living cell a millionfold.
【題組】37. In Paragraph 4, why does the author introduce the statement “Many showed admirable restraint in the use of thisfaculty.” ?
(A) To ridicule the absurd theories made by “imaginative” scientists.
(B) To emphasize how limited the early microscope models were.
(C) To point out the wisdom of consulting with other scholars.
(D) To criticize the investigators for not being more imaginative.

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儘管化石記錄中幾乎沒有細胞進化的線索,但生物化學和分子生物學的最新進展提供了通過探索現在來重建過去的強大新手段。自人眼首次看到活細胞以來,已經過去了不到 300 年。在此期間,關於細胞發現的每一個里程碑都帶有新工具或儀器的名稱。        直到本世紀中葉,細胞的世界仍然完全未知和未被探索,當時由熟練的雙手服務的具有窺探頭腦的人開始研磨鏡片並使用它們來擴展他們的視力。顯微鏡的第一批設計師之一是英國科學家羅伯特·胡克(Robert Hooke)——物理學家、氣象學家、生物學家、工程師、建築師——他那個時代最傑出的產品。 1665 年,他出版了一本名為 Micrographia 的暢銷書集;在他觀察到的精美圖畫中,有一張顯示出蜂窩結構的薄軟木塞,他稱之為“微孔”或“細胞”的陣列。在對它的描述中,胡克使用了“牢房”一詞的原始含義,即小房間,例如囚犯或僧侶的牢房。這個詞保留了下來,不是用來描述胡克在死樹皮上看到的小洞,而是用來指稱活樹上的洞中的小物質。       胡克同時代最有天賦的人之一是荷蘭人安東尼·範·列文虎克,他製造了近三百台設計非常獨特的顯微鏡——一個插入銅板的小玻璃珠。通過將這個裝置靠近他的眼睛,並透過玻璃珠凝視一個用針頭固定的物體,他用螺絲釘操縱。列文虎克成功地獲得了肉眼270倍的放大倍率。他第一次能夠在血液、精子以及沼澤和池塘的水中看到他所謂的“動物”。令人驚訝的是,他甚至看到了細菌,他畫得如此準確,以至於專家們今天可以識別它們。       並非所有顯微鏡的早期用戶都具有如此敏銳的洞察力。他們能夠用簡單的儀器觀察到的圖像——尤其是當涉及到像活細胞一樣小的物體時——是如此模糊,以至於大多數細節都必須通過想像來填充。許多人在使用這種能力時表現出令人欽佩的克制。其他人則充分利用了這一點,法國科學家戈蒂埃·達戈蒂也是如此,他認為一個完全成形的嬰兒存在於精子細胞中。        很長一段時間以來,顯微鏡只是在細胞世界中徘徊,直到 1827 年,意大利物理學家喬瓦尼·巴蒂斯塔·阿米奇(Giovanni Battista Amici)成功地糾正了主要的光學像差第 2 節如何為學術閱讀和聽力做準備。通過三對匹配的鏡片,可以使光線偏轉而不將其分離成顏色,圖像的清晰度顯著提高;以至於僅僅幾年後,就形成了廣義的理論,即植物和動物是由一種或多種相似的單位——細胞。       這一理論由德國植物學家馬蒂亞斯·施萊登於 1837 年提出,並由他的朋友生理學家西奧多·施萬擴展到動物。該理論隨後由病理學家魯道夫·維爾喬(Rudolf Virchow)完成,他在 1855 年宣稱:“每個細胞都來自一個細胞”,這是“每個生物都來自一個卵子”的修改版本。後者是威廉哈維的斷言,他是發現血液循環的英國醫生,在羅伯特胡克發現之前不久就去世了。到世紀之交,許多重要的細胞部分已經被描述和命名。       後來的調查人員發現自己面臨著一個新的障礙,似乎無法克服,因為它是由物理定律設定的。即使使用完美的儀器,也無法感知小於所用光波長約一半的細節,這將利用可見光的顯微鏡分辨率的絕對極限置於百萬分之 25 米。在細胞的世界裡,這樣的維度相對來說是相當大的。試想一下,如果無法區分小於英寸的細節,我們會在自己的世界中錯過什麼,以及如果經典顯微鏡學家能夠將活細胞放大一百萬倍,他們會看到什麼。【題組】37.在第 4 段中,作者為什麼要介紹“許多人在使用這種能力時表現出令人欽佩的克制”。 ?(A) 嘲笑“富有想像力的”科學家提出的荒謬理論。(B) 強調早期顯微鏡模型的局限性。(C) 指出諮詢其他學者的智慧。(D) 批評調查人員缺乏想像力。