인류를 감동시킨 명연설들, 과연 수사학이란 무엇인가?

영어만을 위해 영어를 공부하는 것은 초보적인 방법입니다.
별 재미도 없고 영어공부를 유지할만한 충분한 동기도 되지 못합니다.
영어는 어디까지나 정보와 지식을 얻거나 표현하기 위한 도구입니다.
영어를 이용하여 다른 것을 얻으십시오.
그 다른 것이 영어공부에 대한 더 강한 동기유발이 될 수 있습니다.
그러면 그 다른 것도 얻고 덤으로 영어도 얻을 것입니다.
초보 때부터 이렇게 영어를 수단으로 다른 것을 얻는 훈련을 하십시오.
이것이 가장 정상적인 어학습득 방법이요 영어고수로 가는 가장 확실한 방법입니다.

VOA에서 초급자용으로 특별 제작하여 속도가 아주 느리므로
이해하는 데 별 어려움이 없을 것입니다.

스크립트는 아래에 있습니다만 가급적 보지 마시기 바랍니다.
그냥 음성만으로 이해하시기 바랍니다.

공부는 가급적 편하게 해야합니다.
복잡하면 오래하기 힘듭니다.
듣기공부가 좋은 것은 바로 이런 점입니다.
그냥 가만히 듣고만 있으면 되니 얼마나 편합니까.
최고로 편하게 해야 가장 오래 공부할 수 있고
안전하게 고수의 자리까지 갈 수 있습니다.

한 번에 이해가 안되면 반복해 들으시기 바랍니다.
얼마나 좋습니까. 듣기 공부되죠, 발음 좋아지죠,
이해하려고 반복하다보면 어떤 것은 저절로 암기가 되니
영작문이나 회화에까지 도움이 되죠.
1 석 4 조 인가요??
당근, 여기서 얻는 최고의 것은 바로 고급 정보와 지식이죠.
그럼 1 석 몇 조인가요??
수학이 쫌 약해서...

Exploring the Art of Rhetoric

Former U.S. President Ronald Reagan in front of the Brandenburg Gate in West Berlin, on June 12, 1987
Photo: AP
Former U.S. President Ronald Reagan in front of the Brandenburg Gate in West Berlin, on June 12, 1987

STEVE EMBER: Welcome to THIS IS AMERICA in VOA Special English. I’m Steve Ember.

SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: And I’m Shirley Griffith. This week on our program, we learn about the art of rhetoric and tell you about a website that brings American rhetoric to life.

STEVE EMBER: We use rhetoric every time we use language, whether giving a speech or talking with a friend. So what is rhetoric? Dictionaries list several meanings for this word. One is the study of using language effectively. Another is the art of using language to persuade, influence or please.

The Greek philosopher Aristotle described rhetoric as "the ability, in each particular case, to see the available means of persuasion." But the word can also have a negative meaning, like when a politician gives a speech and critics dismiss it as "rhetoric." What they mean is, it sounded good, but lacked substance.

Michael Eidenmuller knows all about rhetoric, and he says it sometimes gets a bad name.

MICHAEL EIDENMULLER: "Rhetoric is not inherently evil or corrupt, in my view. It's a neutral tool or technology that has and is and will be used for both good or ill."

Michael Eidenmuller
www.americanrhetoric.com
Michael Eidenmuller

Mr. Eidenmuller is a communications professor at the University of Texas at Tyler. About ten years ago, he created a Web page for his students. It included links to famous speeches on other websites. The idea was to create a resource that his students could use in their studies.

The list of speeches grew, and so did the popularity of the page.

SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Then, in two thousand four, Mr. Eidenmuller posted a link to the speech that Senator Zell Miller gave at the Republican National Convention.

ZELL MILLER: “…For my family is more important to me than my Party.”

Shortly after that, the Web page received more hits than the server computer at the university could handle. As a result, Mr. Eidenmuller created a separate website and called it American Rhetoric.

AmericanRhetoric.com is an online speech bank of thousands of speeches. It gets as many as six hundred thousand visits each month during the school year in the United States. In the summer months, the number falls to about two hundred thousand visits a month.

Professor Eidenmuller says many students learning English outside the United States also use his website. It includes text, audio and in some cases video of some of the most popular speeches of our time.

STEVE EMBER: People can have different reactions to a speech depending on whether they listen to it, watch it or read it.

MICHAEL EIDENMULLER: "Attending to one or to multiple mediums does tend to produce different perspectives and encourage different judgments on any given speech or speaker."

Professor Eidenmuller points to the example of the candidate debates in the nineteen sixty presidential election. This was the first series of nationally televised debates between American presidential candidates. The public was able to hear and see John Kennedy, the Democratic candidate, and Richard Nixon, the Republican candidate, as they debated.

Nixon had suffered a knee injury and had spent time in the hospital before the first debate. He had lost weight as a result, and looked skinny and unhealthy. Kennedy had been campaigning in California. He arrived at the debate looking healthy, fit and suntanned, although the broadcast was in black-and-white.

People who listened to that first debate on the radio largely felt Nixon had performed better. But those who watched the debate on television were influenced by what they saw in addition to what they heard. Professor Eidenmuller says those who watched the debate were more likely to feel that Kennedy had won.

MICHAEL EIDENMULLER: "So mediums do matter."

SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: There are many rhetorical methods and devices that can add to good speech. These often have Latin or Greek names.

For example, anaphora is when a speaker repeats the same words at the start of sentences or phrases that follow each other. Hillary Clinton, then the first lady, used anaphora in her speech at the Democratic National Convention in nineteen ninety-six. Notice her use of the phrase "it takes."

Hillary Clinton addresses the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, in 1996 while she was first lady of the United States
AP
Hillary Clinton addresses the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, in 1996 while she was first lady of the United States

HILLARY CLINTON: “To raise a happy, healthy and hopeful child, it takes a family; it takes teachers; it takes clergy; it takes business people; it takes community leaders; it takes those who protect our health and safety. It takes all of us.”

An analogy is a comparison made to show a similarity between two things. In the movie "Man of the Year," a political comedian -- played by Robin Williams -- accidentally wins the presidency. He uses an analogy.

ROBIN WILLIAMS: "Remember, ladies and gentlemen, it’s an old phrase, basically anonymous -- that politicians are a lot like diapers: They should be changed frequently and for the same reason. Keep that in mind next time you vote. Good night.”

STEVE EMBER: A metaphor is another figure of speech used to suggest a comparison between two things. The civil rights leader Martin Luther King Junior used this metaphor in one of the most famous speeches of all time.

MARTIN LUTHER KING: "With this faith we will be able to transform the jangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood."

Martin Luther King Jr. gave his "I Have a Dream" speech to hundreds of thousands of marchers gathered at the Lincoln Memorial in 1963
AP
Martin Luther King Jr. gave his "I Have a Dream" speech to hundreds of thousands of marchers gathered at the Lincoln Memorial in 1963

Professor Eidenmuller says the Reverend King's "I Have a Dream" speech is by far the most popular speech on the American Rhetoric site. It took place at the Lincoln Memorial on August twenty-eighth, nineteen sixty-three, during a huge march on Washington.

MARTIN LUTHER KING: " … I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. I have a dream today!"

AmericanRhetoric.com includes a list of the "Top 100 Speeches of the 20th Century." These include the remarks that President Ronald Reagan gave at the Brandenburg Gate in West Berlin in June of nineteen eighty-seven. President Reagan was often called "the Great Communicator." Here is part of what he said.

RONALD REAGAN: "We welcome change and openness; for we believe that freedom and security go together, that the advance of human liberty -- the advance of human liberty can only strengthen the cause of world peace.”

"There is one sign the Soviets can make that would be unmistakable, that would advance dramatically the cause of freedom and peace.

"General Secretary [Mikhail] Gorbachev, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalization: Come here to this gate.”

"Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate.”

"Mr. Gorbachev -- Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!”

SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: In nineteen forty-five, World War Two ended and the United Nations began. Three years later, fifty-eight states approved the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt had worked hard for the declaration. She spoke in honor of its adoption at a UN meeting in Paris on December ninth, nineteen forty-eight.

ELEANOR ROOSEVELT: "We stand today at the threshold of a great event both in the life of the United Nations and in the life of mankind. This Universal Declaration of Human Rights may well become the international Magna Carta of all men everywhere. We hope its proclamation by the General Assembly will be an event comparable to the proclamation of the Declaration of the Rights of Man by the French people in seventeen eighty-nine, the adoption of the Bill of Rights by the people of the United States, and the adoption of comparable declarations at different times in other countries."

STEVE EMBER: Another area on AmericanRhetoric.com contains recordings about the terrorist attacks of September eleventh, two thousand one. These include the first statement that President George W. Bush made to reporters during a visit to an elementary school in Sarasota, Florida.

GEORGE W. BUSH: "… Today, we've had a national tragedy. Two airplanes have crashed into the World Trade Center in an apparent terrorist attack on our country.

"I have spoken to the vice president, to the governor of New York, to the director of the FBI, and have ordered that the full resources of the federal government go to help the victims and their families, and -- and to conduct a full-scale investigation to hunt down and to find those folks who committed this act.

'"Terrorism against our nation will not stand. And now if you [would] join me in a moment of silence."

SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: The American Rhetoric website also includes quizzes and exercises related to the art of rhetoric. People who want to learn more about rhetoric can take classes in rhetorical theory. There are also books like "Farnsworth's Classical English Rhetoric" published in two thousand ten. Author Ward Farnsworth offers eighteen chapters' worth of rhetorical devices.

And there is another way to improve your skills. Michael Eidenmuller at AmericanRhetoric.com says you can study the speakers you admire.

MICHAEL EIDENMULLER: "Read and listen and watch the great speeches and great speakers. I would recommend listening to those speeches. If you find a speaker whose delivery you particularly like, try mimicking it."

STEVE EMBER: Our program was written and produced by Brianna Blake. I’m Steve Ember.

SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: And I’m Shirley Griffith. What are some of your favorite speeches? Tell us at voaspecialenglish.com, where people learning English can also find transcripts, audio and video to read, listen and learn. Join us again next week for THIS IS AMERICA in VOA Special English.

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탐험가들이나 등반가들과 같이 극단적인 상황에 자주 직면하는 사람들은 종종
위기의 순간에 보이지 않는 제3의 존재가 자기들을 도왔다고 고백합니다.
과연 이 제3의 존재는 무엇일까요?


영어만을 위해 영어를 공부하는 것은 초보적인 방법입니다.
별 재미도 없고 영어공부를 유지할만한 충분한 동기도 되지 못합니다.
영어는 어디까지나 정보와 지식을 얻거나 표현하기 위한 도구입니다.
영어를 이용하여 다른 것을 얻으십시오.
그 다른 것이 영어공부에 대한 더 강한 동기유발이 될 수 있습니다.
그러면 그 다른 것도 얻고 덤으로 영어도 얻을 것입니다.
초보 때부터 이렇게 영어를 수단으로 다른 것을 얻는 훈련을 하십시오.
이것이 가장 정상적인 어학습득 방법이요 영어고수로 가는 가장 확실한 방법입니다.

VOA에서 초급자용으로 특별 제작하여 속도가 아주 느리므로
이해하는 데 별 어려움이 없을 것입니다.

스크립트는 아래에 있습니다만 가급적 보지 마시기 바랍니다.
그냥 음성만으로 이해하시기 바랍니다.

공부는 가급적 편하게 해야합니다.
복잡하면 오래하기 힘듭니다.
듣기공부가 좋은 것은 바로 이런 점입니다.
그냥 가만히 듣고만 있으면 되니 얼마나 편합니까.
최고로 편하게 해야 가장 오래 공부할 수 있고
안전하게 고수의 자리까지 갈 수 있습니다.

한 번에 이해가 안되면 반복해 들으시기 바랍니다.
얼마나 좋습니까. 듣기 공부되죠, 발음 좋아지죠,
이해하려고 반복하다보면 어떤 것은 저절로 암기가 되니
영작문이나 회화에까지 도움이 되죠.
1 석 4 조 인가요??
당근, 여기서 얻는 최고의 것은 바로 고급 정보와 지식이죠.
그럼 1 석 몇 조인가요??
수학이 쫌 약해서...


Explorers Sense a Guiding Presence in Times of Danger

Ernest Shackleton
Photo: shackletoncentary.org
Ernest Shackleton

People who live through life threatening situations sometimes describe a calming presence or guiding voice.


DOUG JOHNSON:  I’m Doug Johnson.

FAITH LAPIDUS:

And I’m Faith Lapidus with EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English. Today we tell about an unusual and mysterious experience that can affect people in extreme situations of danger. People who live through life threatening situations sometimes describe a calming presence or guiding voice that helps them survive.

People have described this experience as “sensed presence” or as an “imaginary shadow person.”  It is also known as the “Third Man” syndrome. The Canadian-American writer John Geiger wrote about this in a book called “The Third Man Factor.”

DOUG JOHNSON:  Ernest Shackleton spent his career exploring the little known areas of the South Pole. One of his most famous trips began in nineteen fourteen. The goal of the trip was to cross Antarctica on foot.  But it did not go as planned. His boat, the Endurance, became trapped and later crushed by ice.

The Endurance trapped on Antarctic iceThe Endurance trapped on Antarctic ice

After many months, Shackleton and a few of his men traveled through dangerous waters to the island of South Georgia to get help and rescue the rest of their crew. They faced extreme hunger, thirst and cold. But their rescue operation was successful, and all twenty-two crew members survived.

FAITH LAPIDUS:  Later, Shackleton wrote about the impossible struggles he faced. He described feeling that there was another unseen person with him and his men during the last days of their trip.

He wrote this about his experience: “I know that during that long and racking march of thirty-six hours over the unnamed mountains and glaciers of South Georgia it seemed to me often that we were four, not three.”

DOUG JOHNSON:  The American poet T.S. Eliot was influenced by Shackleton’s description. Here, the poet includes Shackleton’s vision in part of his famous poem “The Waste Land.”

MARIO RITTER:

Who is the third who walks always beside you?

When I count, there are only you and I together

But when I look ahead up the white road

There is always another walking beside you.

DOUG JOHNSON:  It is from this line of poetry about Shackleton that the Third Man syndrome takes its name.

FAITH LAPIDUS:  Writer and researcher John Geiger has twice experienced a similar reaction to extreme danger himself: once as a child and once while suffering from extreme cold in Arctic Canada. He says his experiences made him want to learn about Third Man examples among other explorers.

johngeiger.net
John Geiger

JOHN GEIGER: “In other words, my experience I think predisposed me to being interested in the kind of phenomena that people in these extreme and unusual environments encounter.”

DOUG JOHNSON:  With Shackleton’s experience in mind, John Geiger started to investigate whether other people facing death or extreme fear had faced similar situations.

He discussed the subject with explorers and extreme sports athletes. He read historical documents written by past explorers, prisoners of war, pilots, and ship wreck survivors.  He found that many different people in extreme situations have similar experiences.

JOHN GEIGER: “So when I had a handful of these cases, it seemed to me then there was likely something worth investigating. I began to look very seriously and very quickly found scores of examples of it.”

FAITH LAPIDUS:  In nineteen thirty-three, the British mountain climber Frank Smythe was attempting to climb Mount Everest in the Himalayan Mountains.

He was at the dangerous altitude of over eight thousand four hundred meters. Smythe was extremely tired and suffering from the effects of low oxygen. He decided to stop, rest and eat. He pulled out a piece of cake, divided it into two pieces, and offered it to another person he sensed nearby. But Frank Smythe was alone. The sense of strength and safety that he felt from this invisible person helped him survive his climb.

DOUG JOHNSON:  John Geiger points out that these Third Man experiences are very common among mountain climbers. But he shows in his book that they take place in other environments as well.

For example, one American astronaut on a four-month long mission on the Russian space station Mir saw a vision of his dead father. His father spoke to him, praised his hard wor k and gave the astronaut a sense of calm during a very stressful space operation.

In another example, pilot Edith Foltz Stearns was flying a plane to a military base in Scotland during World War Two. Because of bad weather she could not see where to land the plane. A voice next to her in the plane called out to warn her about a dangerous hill nearby. She said her imaginary “copilot” guided her to safety.

FAITH LAPIDUS:  John Geiger says that many people who experience the Third Man explain it as a religious experience. But he is more interested in exploring the science behind the Third Man. He discusses how scientists over the years have identified the experience and developed theories to explain it. The findings suggest that the human brain has developed this special ability as a survival method.

DOUG JOHNSON:  Geiger discusses several conditions that seem to produce Third Man experiences. One of these is being alone, far from other people. Being alone can be stressful especially when experienced with monotony. This is when the mind tires from the sameness of a repeated experience. For example, an explorer can be affected mentally after days of walking through the snowy environment of Antarctica. The terrible winds and never-ending whiteness may lead many polar explorers to have visions of other people.

FAITH LAPIDUS:  The psychologist Woodburn Heron wrote about this subject in his nineteen fifty-seven work “The Pathology of Boredom.” He said that the brain depends on having continuing information from the body’s senses. The mind can have problems if it has nothing new to sense. Often, the brain’s response is to create its own input, in the form of a hallucination.

A hallucination is a sensory experience that does not exist outside the mind.

DOUG JOHNSON:  Other stressful conditions can lead to Third Man experiences. These include the stress of injury or of seeing an expedition partner become injured or even die.  Different scientists have studied the effects of extreme conditions on the human mind and body.

One researcher found that extreme cold can have a damaging effect on the mind. The researcher said that before the body begins to freeze, cold can cause changes in brain chemistry which lead to hallucinations.

FAITH LAPIDUS:  Another doctor believes that Ernest Shackleton’s vision was caused by a drop in blood sugar. Explorers working in extreme cold often burn more energy than they can eat. This doctor believes that low glucose levels in the blood lead to hallucinations.

Another theory says that the stress of having to pay constant attention to survive leads to Third Man hallucinations.

DOUG JOHNSON:  Researchers in Switzerland were able to recreate a Third Man experience in a laboratory setting. They sent electric signals into the brain of a young patient who suffered from epilepsy. When the electric current was on, the woman described seeing a presence or shadow nearby who did not speak or move. When the scientists stopped the electricity, the woman said the presence disappeared.

John Geiger believes brain doctors and other scientists should study this interesting issue more fully.

FAITH LAPIDUS:  While writing the book, John Geiger believed that a test of its success would be whether people accepted its subject matter.

JOHN GEIGER: “Here I was writing a book about unseen beings helping people who are in life and death struggles. That seems to me to be a fairly out-there proposition. And yet, the evidence is so overwhelming, that really nobody has surfaced to suggest that indeed this does not happen.”

DOUG JOHNSON:  John Geiger says there is a wide acceptance of the Third Man experience among the scientific community and the general public.

JOHN GEIGER: “People understand that there is this phenomenon, the Third Man Factor. And, that it applies universally, it doesn’t matter what one’s faith is, it doesn’t matter whether it’s a man or a woman. It doesn’t matter whether they are at great elevation or at sea level.”

FAITH LAPIDUS:  John Geiger suggests that the brain’s effort to create a Third Man is not an accident of human brain structure, or a sign of injury in extreme conditions.

He says it may be an evolutionary characteristic developed to help us. In times of extreme hardship, the human brain may have developed a way to create a social link, the sense of a helpful and guiding partner. So, even in a person’s darkest hour, he or she can feel less alone.

DOUG JOHNSON:  This program was written and produced by Dana Demange. I’m Doug Johnson.

FAITH LAPIDUS:  And I’m Faith Lapidus. John Geiger has created a Web site where people who have had Third Man experiences can publish their stories. You can find a link to it on our Web site, voaspecialenglish.com.  Join us again next week for Explorations in VOA Special English.

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미국이 중국억제를 위해 태평양 동맹 강화에 나섰다는 기사입니다.

영어만을 위해 영어를 공부하는 것은 초보적인 방법입니다.
별 재미도 없고 영어공부를 유지할만한 충분한 동기도 되지 못합니다.
영어는 어디까지나 정보와 지식을 얻거나 표현하기 위한 도구입니다.
영어를 이용하여 다른 것을 얻으십시오.
그 다른 것이 영어공부에 대한 더 강한 동기유발이 될 수 있습니다.
그러면 그 다른 것도 얻고 덤으로 영어도 얻을 것입니다.
초보 때부터 이렇게 영어를 수단으로 다른 것을 얻는 훈련을 하십시오.
이것이 가장 정상적인 어학습득 방법이요 영어고수로 가는 가장 확실한 방법입니다.

VOA에서 초급자용으로 특별 제작하여 속도가 아주 느리므로
이해하는 데 별 어려움이 없을 것입니다.

스크립트는 아래에 있습니다만 가급적 보지 마시기 바랍니다.
그냥 음성만으로 이해하시기 바랍니다.

공부는 가급적 편하게 해야합니다.
복잡하면 오래하기 힘듭니다.
듣기공부가 좋은 것은 바로 이런 점입니다.
그냥 가만히 듣고만 있으면 되니 얼마나 편합니까.
최고로 편하게 해야 가장 오래 공부할 수 있고
안전하게 고수의 자리까지 갈 수 있습니다.

한 번에 이해가 안되면 반복해 들으시기 바랍니다.
얼마나 좋습니까. 듣기 공부되죠, 발음 좋아지죠,
이해하려고 반복하다보면 어떤 것은 저절로 암기가 되니
영작문이나 회화에까지 도움이 되죠.
1 석 4 조 인가요??
당근, 여기서 얻는 최고의 것은 바로 고급 정보와 지식이죠.
그럼 1 석 몇 조인가요??
수학이 쫌 약해서...

US, Australia Expand Military Cooperation

This is IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English.

This week, Barack Obama became the fourth American president to speak to Australia’s parliament. Mr. Obama noted the strong ties between the two countries. And, he described their security alliance as "unbreakable."

BARACK OBAMA: "From the trenches of the First World War to the mountains of Afghanistan, Aussies and Americans have stood together. We have fought together; we have given lives together in every single major conflict of the past one hundred years, every single one. This solidarity has sustained us through a difficult decade. We will never forget the attacks of nine-eleven that took the lives not only of Americans, but people from many nations, including Australia."

Mr. Obama spoke in Canberra a day after he and Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard announced plans for expanded military cooperation. They said the goal of the expanded cooperation is to improve security in the Asia and Pacific area.

President Obama and Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard with American and Australian troops in Darwin
Reuters
President Obama and Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard with American and Australian troops in Darwin

Ms. Gillard said the new cooperation would strengthen the sixty-year-old ANZUS Treaty. The treaty created a defense alliance linking Australia, New Zealand and the United States.

JULIA GILLARD: "We are a region that is growing economically, but stability is important for economic growth, too; and our alliance has been a bedrock of stability in our region."

Mr. Obama said the United States is now moving from the war on terrorism to economic and security issues in East Asia and the Pacific. He said the American message to the area is, "We are here to stay."

Under the new agreement, the United States will deploy up to two thousand five hundred Marines to Australia. There also would be closer cooperation between the two countries’ air forces.

Officials say a major goal of the agreement is to increase the ability of the United States to quickly assist countries in East and Southeast Asia. They say another goal is to train and exercise with those countries, in areas like reacting to attacks at sea or disasters.

Also this week, the United States and the Philippines restated their support for a defense treaty between the two sides. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton signed a declaration expressing support of the treaty during a visit to the Philippines.

Security experts have described the American moves as an unmistakable message to China. In Beijing, a Foreign Ministry spokesman expressed concern at the developments:

Chinese spokesman Liu Weimin called for discussions about the increased American troop deployment in East Asia. He said China has never taken part in any kind of foreign military alliance like those formed by the United States.

President Obama and other American officials have repeatedly said they welcome a China that is strong and successful. And they say the United States has no plan of containing China.

During the past eighteen months, China and some of its neighbors have criticized each other for claiming territorial rights in the South China Sea. China says it wants to settle territorial disputes one on one with the countries involved. However, this way of dealing with the issue has often increased tensions.

And that's IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English. Go to voaspecialenglish.com for transcripts, MP3s and now PDF files of our stories. And follow us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and iTunes at VOA Learning English. I'm Christopher Cruise


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영어를 이용하여 다른 것을 얻으십시오.
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초보 때부터 이렇게 영어를 수단으로 다른 것을 얻는 훈련을 하십시오.
이것이 가장 정상적인 어학습득 방법이요 영어고수로 가는 가장 확실한 방법입니다.

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스크립트는 아래에 있습니다만 가급적 보지 마시기 바랍니다.
그냥 음성만으로 이해하시기 바랍니다.

공부는 가급적 편하게 해야합니다.
복잡하면 오래하기 힘듭니다.
듣기공부가 좋은 것은 바로 이런 점입니다.
그냥 가만히 듣고만 있으면 되니 얼마나 편합니까.
최고로 편하게 해야 가장 오래 공부할 수 있고
안전하게 고수의 자리까지 갈 수 있습니다.

한 번에 이해가 안되면 반복해 들으시기 바랍니다.
얼마나 좋습니까. 듣기 공부되죠, 발음 좋아지죠,
이해하려고 반복하다보면 어떤 것은 저절로 암기가 되니
영작문이나 회화에까지 도움이 되죠.
1 석 4 조 인가요??
당근, 여기서 얻는 최고의 것은 바로 고급 정보와 지식이죠.
그럼 1 석 몇 조인가요??
수학이 쫌 약해서...


Great Thinkers: Charles Darwin and Evolution

A marine iguana sunbathes on rocks of San Cristobal Island in the Galapagos Archipelago. The strange animals of the Galapagos made Darwin wonder about how species develop and change.
Photo: AP
A marine iguana sunbathes on rocks of San Cristobal Island in the Galapagos Archipelago. The strange animals of the Galapagos made Darwin wonder about how species develop and change.

STEVE EMBER: Welcome to Explorations, in VOA Special English. I'm Steve Ember.  This week, Barbara Klein and I tell about one of the most influential thinkers in science history.

Charles Darwin developed the theory of how living things develop from simpler organisms over long periods of time.  That theory is known as evolution through natural selection.

How do new kinds of life come into existence?  For much of recorded history, people have believed that organisms were created.  Few people believed that living things changed.  What process could make such change possible?

These were some of the questions Charles Darwin asked himself over years of research in botany, zoology and geology.  He was not the first person to ask them.  His own grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, believed that species evolved.  And others, like the French naturalist Jean-Baptiste Lamark, had proposed ways this could happen.  But it was Darwin who identified and explained the process, natural selection, that causes life to evolve.

BARBARA KLEIN:  Charles Darwin was born in Shrewsbury, England on February twelfth, eighteen-oh-nine. His father Robert Darwin was a doctor.  Charles' mother Susannah Darwin was the daughter of the famous potter, Josiah Wedgwood.  She died when Charles was only eight years old.

Young Charles was intensely interested in the natural world from an early age.  But his father wanted him to be a doctor.

At age sixteen, Charles was sent to study medicine at the University of Edinburgh.  But he did not like it.  He found medical operations especially horrible.  He later went to Cambridge University.  His father now hoped that Darwin would become a clergyman. But at Cambridge, Charles continued to follow his own interests.  There, he met John Henslow, a plant scientist and clergyman.  The two became friends.

A painting of young Charles DarwinA painting of young Charles Darwin

STEVE EMBER:  John Henslow suggested that Charles Darwin take the unpaid position of naturalist for a trip on the British ship H.M.S. Beagle. It sailed around the world from eighteen thirty-one to eighteen thirty-six. The main goal was to make maps of the coastline of South America.  The British government paid for the voyage.  But another purpose of the trip was to collect scientific objects from around the world.

BARBARA KLEIN:  The Beagle’s first stop was one of the Cape Verde Islands near the coast of Africa.  There, Darwin noted that levels of rock extending high above the sea contained the fossil remains of shells.  He thought that this was evidence that the bottom of the ocean had been lifted up by powerful geological forces over long periods of time.

The Beagle continued to the coast of South America.  In Valdivia, Chile, Darwin experienced an earthquake.  He collected examples of plants and animals.  He also collected the fossil remains of animals that had disappeared from the Earth.

But it was on the Galapagos Islands off the coast of Ecuador that Darwin found creatures that made him wonder about how species develop and change.  There, he saw giant tortoises and noted that the reptiles were different on each island.

He collected birds, each with different beaks.  Later, after he had returned to England, he would be shocked to find that these very different birds were all finches. Darwin found lizards called iguanas that lived on land and ones that fed in the sea.

Darwin noted that all these species were similar to those found in South America.  But, they all had differences, or adaptations, that helped them survive in the environment of the Galapagos Islands.

STEVE EMBER:  Darwin sent much of what he collected back to England on other ships the Beagle met along the way.  By the time he returned to England in October of eighteen thirty-six, he was already a well known geologist and naturalist.  Within a few years, he would be accepted into scientific organizations like the Geological Society and the Royal Society.

Darwin moved to London to be near other scientists.   He wrote a new version of the book about his travels.  He also edited works of others about the things he had collected on his trip.  Darwin also agreed to write several books including the "Zoology of the Voyage of the H.M.S. Beagle."  But in eighteen thirty-seven, the pressure of the work caused his health to suffer.  He developed problems with his heart.

BARBARA KLEIN:  Charles Darwin had poor health much of his life.  He suffered headaches and problems with his skin and stomach.  No one was able to find out what disease he may have had during his lifetime.  Recently, some experts have suggested that he might have become infected with a tropical disease.  Others suggest Darwin’s health problems were caused by conflict in his mind over his theory.  Poor health would later force him to leave London and settled at Down House near Kent, England.

A copy  of Charles Darwin's notebook containing his idea of an evolutionary tree.  The notebook is in the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.
AP
A copy of Charles Darwin's notebook containing his idea of an evolutionary tree. The notebook is in the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.

Darwin began work on a series of secret notebooks containing his thoughts about the evolutionary process.  He began to think that animals developed from earlier, simpler organisms.  As early as eighteen thirty-seven, he imagined this process as a tree with branches representing new species.  Unsuccessful branches ended.  But successful evolutionary changes continued to form new branches.

STEVE EMBER:  Charles Darwin’s personal life was also expanding.  In eighteen thirty-nine, he married Emma Wedgwood, his cousin.  He told her his ideas about how species evolve over time -- what he called the transmutation of species.

Emma did not agree with her husband.  But the two had a strong and happy marriage.  They had ten children together. Seven of them survived.

BARBARA KLEIN:  Charles Darwin read widely and sought ideas from other fields of study.  He was influenced by Thomas Malthus’ work, "An Essay on the Principle of Population" written in seventeen ninety-eight. Malthus argued that populations are always limited by the food supply.

Darwin would later say that this work caused him to realize the struggle for limited resources was a fact of life.  He said small changes took place in individual animals.  Changes that helped them survive would continue.  But those that did not would be destroyed. The result of this would be the formation of new species.

The British philosopher Herbert Spencer described this struggle as "survival of the fittest."  But biologists use the term “natural selection” to describe the evolutionary process.

STEVE EMBER:  Charles Darwin developed his idea slowly over more than twenty years.  He was concerned that he would lose the support of the scientific community if he revealed it.  He wrote to his friend, botanist Joseph Hooker, that speaking about evolution “was like confessing a murder.”

It was not until eighteen fifty-eight that Darwin was forced to release his theory to the public.  Another naturalist, Alfred Russel Wallace, had independently written a paper that contained ideas similar to Darwin's concerning evolution.  Wallace had reached these ideas from his studies on islands in the western Pacific Ocean.

With help from Darwin's friends, the two naturalists presented a joint scientific paper to the Linnean Society of London in July of eighteen fifty-eight.  At first there was little reaction.

Then, in November, eighteen fifty-nine, Darwin released the results of all his work on evolution.  The book was called "On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life."  It was an immediate success.

BARBARA KLEIN:  The "Origin of Species" was praised by many scientists.  But religious leaders denounced it.  For them, evolution opposed the explanation of creation found in the book of Genesis in the Bible.  Today, almost all scientists accept the theory of evolution.  But many non-scientists are unsure about whether humans evolved over millions of years. In the United States, public opinion studies have shown that less than half the population believes in evolution.

STEVE EMBER:  Natural selection does not explain everything about why species evolve.  Darwin did not know about Gregor Mendel’s work on heredity.  And the discovery of genetics and D.N.A. molecules took place long after his death.  Yet, Darwin theorized in a world much different from the one we know.  That is why scientists today wonder at the depth of his knowledge and the strength of his arguments.

Charles Darwin died on April nineteenth, eighteen eighty-two.  He was buried at Westminster Abbey, in London, among other heroes of Britain.

BARBARA KLEIN:  This program was written and produced by Mario Ritter. I’m Barbara Klein.

STEVE EMBER:  And I’m Steve Ember.  You can find a link to Charles Darwin's writings and research at our Web site, voaspecialenglish.com.  Join us again next week for Explorations in VOA Special English


출처:
http://www.voanews.com/learningenglish/home/science-technology/Charles-Darwin-and-Evolution--133910793.html

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유아발달 및 양육학 분야에서 미국내 최고권위자의 이야기입니다. 아기를 키우는 분들에게는 아주 중요한 정보가 되겠습니다.

VOA에서 초급자용으로 특별 제작하여 속도가 아주 느리므로
이해하는 데 별 어려움이 없을 것입니다.

스크립트는 아래에 있습니다만 가급적 보지 마시기 바랍니다.
그냥 음성만으로 이해하시기 바랍니다.

공부는 가급적 편하게 해야합니다.
복잡하면 오래하기 힘듭니다.
듣기공부가 좋은 것은 바로 이런 점입니다.
그냥 가만히 듣고만 있으면 되니 얼마나 편합니까.
최고로 편하게 해야 가장 오래 공부할 수 있고
안전하게 고수의 자리까지 갈 수 있습니다.

한 번에 이해가 안되면 반복해 들으시기 바랍니다.
얼마나 좋습니까. 듣기 공부되죠. 발음 좋아지죠.
이해하려고 반복하다보면 어떤 것은 저절로 암기가 되니
영작문이나 회화에까지 도움이 되죠.
1 석 4 조 인가요??

Dr. Spock, 1903-1998: The World’s Most Famous Baby Doctor

Dr. Spock holds a baby at a Boston baby fair in April 1993. The birthday cake was presented to Dr. Spock to celebrate his 90th birthday
Photo: AP
Dr. Spock holds a baby at a Boston baby fair in April 1993. The birthday cake was presented to Dr. Spock to celebrate his 90th birthday
 

FAITH LAPIDUS: I’m Faith Lapidus.

STEVE EMBER: And I’m Steve Ember with People in America in VOA Special English.  Today we tell about the world’s most famous doctor for children, Benjamin Spock.

FAITH LAPIDUS: Benjamin Spock’s first book caused a revolution in the way American children were raised. His book, “The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care,” was published in nineteen forty-six. The book gave advice to parents of babies and young children. The first lines of the book are famous. Dr. Spock wrote: “Trust yourself. You know more than you think you do”.

STEVE EMBER: This message shocked many parents. For years, mothers had been told that they should reject their natural feelings about their babies. Before Dr. Spock’s book appeared, the most popular guide to raising children was called “Psychological Care of Infant and Child.” The book’s writer, John B. Watson, urged extreme firmness in dealing with children. The book called for a strong structure of rules in families. It warned parents never to kiss, hug or physically comfort their children.

FAITH LAPIDUS: Dr. Spock’s book was very different. He gave gentle advice to ease the fears of new parents. Dr. Spock said his work was an effort to help parents trust their own natural abilities in caring for their children.

Dr. Benjamin Spock revised his legendary best-selling "Baby and Child Care" book many times
AP
Dr. Benjamin Spock revised his legendary best-selling "Baby and Child Care" book many times

DR. SPOCK: “I was always trying to lean in the direction of reassuring parents.”

Dr. Spock based much of his advice on the research and findings of the famous Austrian psychoanalyst, Sigmund Freud.

DR. SPOCK: “Freud was interested in where is the origin of neuroses, I was interested in the other side of it, how do children grow emotionally. And I think Freud has given us a very good explanation of the stages of development.”

FAITH LAPIDUS: Dr. Spock’s book discusses the mental and emotional development of children. It urges parents to use that information to decide how to deal with their babies when they are crying, hungry, or tired.

For example, Dr. Spock dismissed the popular idea of exactly timed feedings for babies. Baby care experts had believed that babies must be fed at the same times every day or they would grow up to be demanding children.

Dr. Spock said babies should be fed when they are hungry. He argued that babies know better than anyone about when and how much they need to eat. He did not believe that feeding babies when they cry in hunger would make them more demanding.       He also believed that showing love to babies by hugging and kissing them would make them happier and more secure.

STEVE EMBER: “The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care” examined the emotional and physical growth of children. Dr. Spock said he did not want to just tell a parent what to do. He said he tried to explain what children generally are like at different times in their development so parents would know what to expect.

Dr. Spock’s book did not receive much notice from the media when it was published in nineteen forty- six. Yet, seven hundred fifty thousand copies of the book were sold during the year after its release. Dr. Spock began receiving many letters of thanks from mothers around the country.

FAITH LAPIDUS: Dr. Spock considered his mother, Mildred Spock, to be the major influence on his personal and professional life. He said his ideas about how parents should act were first formed because of her. He reacted to the way in which his mother cared for him and his brother and sisters.

In the first printing of his legendary book there was no mention of pregnancy or drug abuse. Dr. Spock said the addition of those topics later was a new and startling change
AP
In the first printing of his legendary book there was no mention of pregnancy or drug abuse. Dr. Spock said the addition of those topics later was a new and startling change

Dr. Spock described his mother as extremely controlling. He said she believed all human action was the result of a physical health issue or a moral one. She never considered her children’s actions were based on emotional needs.

DR. SPOCK: “And though some people have said I suppose this book is a protest against the way you were brought up, well that’s only about a third of it.”

FAITH LAPIDUS: Dr. Spock later argued against this way of thinking. Yet, he praised his mother’s trust of her own knowledge of her children. In his book, “Spock on Spock,” he wrote about his mother’s ability to correctly identify her children’s sicknesses when the doctors were wrong.

DR. SPOCK: “I think that my interest in children, devotion to children and those of my sisters and brother were all because my mother was totally devoted to her children. So I think that’s part of where I got launched from, I cared a lot about children, but I think I also thought there must be easier ways, more pleasant ways to bring up children than the rather severe oppressive way that my mother used.”

STEVE EMBER: Benjamin Spock was born in nineteen-oh-three. He was the first of six children. The Spock family lived in New Haven, Connecticut. His father was a successful lawyer. Benjamin was a quiet child. He attended Phillips Academy, a private school in Andover, Massachusetts. Later he attended Yale University in New Haven. He joined a sports team at Yale that competed in rowing boats. In nineteen twenty-four, he and his team members competed in rowing at the Olympic Games in Paris, France. They won the gold medal.

FAITH LAPIDUS: Benjamin Spock worked at a camp for disabled children for three summers during his years at Yale. He said the experience probably led to his decision to enter medical school. He began at Yale Medical School, but he completed his medical degree at Columbia University in New York City. He graduated as the best student in his class in nineteen twenty-nine.

Benjamin Spock had married Jane Cheney during his second year in medical school. They later had two sons, Michael and John.

Dr. Spock began working as a pediatrician, treating babies and children in New York City in nineteen thirty-three. During the next ten years he tried to fit the theories about how children develop with what mothers told him about their children. In nineteen forty-three, a publisher asked him to write a book giving advice to parents. He finished the book by writing at night during his two years of service in the United States Navy.

Jane Spock helped her husband produce the first version of “Baby and Child Care.” She typed the book from his notes and spoken words.

STEVE EMBER: During the nineteen fifties, Dr. Spock became famous. He wrote several other books. He wrote articles for a number of magazines. He appeared on television programs. He taught at several universities. And he gave speeches around the country to talk to parents about their concerns.

During this time, he discovered things he wanted to change in the book. He wanted to make sure parents knew that they should have control over their children and expect cooperation from them. So, in nineteen fifty-seven the second version of the book was published. He continued to make changes to “Baby and Child Care” throughout his life.

Dr. Benjamin Spock  spoke at a meeting for "Peace in Vietnam" in Fair Lawn, N.J in 1968
AP
Dr. Benjamin Spock spoke at a meeting for "Peace in Vietnam" in Fair Lawn, N.J in 1968

FAITH LAPIDUS: In the nineteen sixties, Benjamin Spock began to be active in politics. He supported John F. Kennedy in his campaign for president. He joined a group opposed to the development of nuclear weapons.

Dr. Spock also took part in demonstrations to protest the Vietnam War. In nineteen sixty-eight, he was found guilty of plotting to aid men who were refusing to join the American armed forces.

STEVE EMBER: Dr. Spock appealed the ruling against him. Finally, it was cancelled. However, the legal battle cost Doctor Spock a lot of money. The events damaged public opinion of the once very trusted children’s doctor. Fewer people bought his books. Some people said Dr. Spock’s teachings were to blame for the way young people in the nineteen sixties and seventies rebelled against the rules of society. A leading American religious thinker of that time called Dr. Spock “the father of permissiveness.”

In nineteen seventy-two, Dr. Spock decided to seek election as president of the United States. He was the candidate of the small “People’s Party.”

He spoke out on issues concerning working families, children and minorities. Dr. Spock received about seventy-five thousand votes in the election that Richard Nixon won.

FAITH LAPIDUS: Dr. Spock’s marriage had been suffering for some time. For years, Jane Spock drank too much alcohol and suffered from depression. She reportedly felt her husband valued his professional and political interests more than he valued her. In nineteen seventy-five, Benjamin and Jane Spock ended their forty-eight-year marriage. One year later, Mary Morgan became his second wife.

STEVE EMBER: More than fifty million copies of Dr. Spock’s “Baby and Child Care” book have been sold since it was published. It has been translated into thirty-nine languages. The eighth edition was published in two thousand four.

Benjamin Spock died in nineteen ninety-eight at the age of ninety-four. Yet his advice continues to affect the lives of millions of children and their parents.

(MUSIC)

FAITH LAPIDUS: This program was written by Caty Weaver. It was produced by Jill Moss. I’m Faith Lapidus.

STEVE EMBER: And I’m Steve Ember. Join us again next week for another People in America program in VOA Special English.

__

Sound of Dr. Spock taken from a 1982 interview on “The Alternative Information Network”, produced by Frank Morrow

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http://www.voanews.com/learningenglish/home/Dr-Spock-1903-1998-The-Worlds-Most-Famous-Baby-Doctor-131321239.html

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세계 식량 사정이 악화될 것이라는 보고와 함께 이것을 타개할 방법에 대해 이야기 하고 있습니다.

VOA에서 초급자용으로 특별 제작한 것으로 속도가 아주 느리므로
이해하는 데 별 어려움이 없을 것입니다.

스크립트는 아래에 있습니다만 가급적 보지 마시기 바랍니다.
그냥 음성만으로 이해하시기 바랍니다.

공부는 가급적 편하게 해야합니다.
복잡하면 오래하기 힘듭니다.
듣기공부가 좋은 것은 바로 이런 점입니다.
그냥 가만히 듣고만 있으면 되니 얼마나 편합니까.
최고로 편하게 해야 가장 오래 공부할 수 있고
안전하게 고수의 자리까지 갈 수 있습니다.

한 번에 이해가 안되면 반복해 들으시기 바랍니다.
얼마나 좋습니까. 듣기 공부되죠. 발음 좋아지죠.
이해하려고 반복하다보면 어떤 것은 저절로 암기가 되니
영작문이나 회화에까지 도움이 되죠.
1 석 4 조 인가요??

 

UN Says Food Production Must Rise; How 'Fertilizer Trees' Could Help

Maize growing under Faidherbia albida
Photo: World Agroforestry Center
Maize growing under Faidherbia albida
 

This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.

The United Nations estimates that world food production will have to increase by seventy percent by twenty-fifty. A world population growing in number and wealth will require one billion tons more grain each year, and two hundred million tons more meat.

The Food and Agriculture Organization says those gains will have to happen largely on existing land through "sustainable intensification."

Download this story as a PDF

Officials say the new report provides the first "global assessment of the state of the planet's land resources." It says large parts of all continents are experiencing damage. One-fourth of all land is described as "highly degraded." The greatest threats are losses of soil quality, biodiversity and water resources.

New agricultural methods and technology increased food production in many countries during the Green Revolution. Cropland increased by twelve percent from nineteen sixty-one to two thousand nine -- yet production grew by one hundred fifty percent.

But the new report warns that production rates have been slowing in many areas. In too many places, it says, practices that have increased production have also harmed the land and water. It calls for greater use of ways that can expand production while limiting damage to ecosystems.

One such practice might be the use of "fertilizer trees." These are fast-growing trees and shrubs whose leaves and roots help improve soil. A recent study found that about four hundred thousand farmers in southern Africa are using them.

The study appeared in the International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability. Lead author Oluyede Ajayi is senior scientist at the World Agroforestry Center in Nairobi, Kenya.

OLUYEDE AJAYI: "Basically these are trees that can fix nitrogen from the atmosphere and convert them into nitrates for fertilizer, for organic fertilizer, for the soil."

Farmers who planted fertilizer trees reported double the maize production of other farmers. In Zambia, the fertilized fields provided up to one hundred fourteen additional days of food.

Farmers say they need less rainwater if they use fertilizer trees. The trees reduce water runoff and soil erosion.

Mr. Ajayi says the project began when scientists were trying to identify the main threats to food security.

OLUYEDE AJAYI: "We actually got started by about twenty years ago trying to diagnose, to look at, the chief problems within the country, within the region."

The farmers themselves designed and managed part of the testing in the field, and spread the word of their successes.

And that's the VOA Special English Agriculture Report, written by Jerilyn Watson. I’m Bob Doughty.


출처:
http://www.voanews.com/learningenglish/home/agriculture/UN-Says-Food-Production-Must-Rise-How-Fertilizer-Trees-Could-Help-134635353.html

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