2018年2月21日 星期三

furtherance, miscreant, passion, chill out, repress, spare parts collecting dust

Get ready to compete, we tell our children. But life is a race that cannot be won. The Economist’s 1843 magazine investigated the phenomenon of high-pressure parenting
From the archive
1843MAGAZINE.COM

Did you know that Oxford University Botanic Gardens is the oldest in England?


In 1621 Henry Danvers donated around £800k in today's money to set up a medical garden for 'the glorification of the works of God and for the furtherance of learning.'


HSBC Chills on Chile HSBC will sell its four branches in Santiago, Chile, valued at about $20 million, to local group Banco Itau Chile, Reuters reports. The move is part of an overall drive to divest in territories where HBSC is not a strategic player.


But comments by other Facebook users about the photo ran the gamut from outrage to indifference to amusement. One commenter urged people to "chill out." And one man posted a photo of his foot in a sock next to a Subway sandwich to show it was shorter than a "foot."(AP)
然而,臉書其他用戶關於這張照片的留言五花八門,從憤慨、冷淡到消遣皆有。一名留言者敦促大家「放輕鬆」。而有一名男子張貼一張他穿上襪子的腿,旁邊則是一個Subway三明治,顯示它比一「腿」(呎與腿的英文相同)短。(美聯社)


 Irvine Welsh's prequel to "Trainspotting" shows how his Scottish miscreants first went wrong.

吳冠中先生曾說,要成為藝術家的條件太復雜了,除了要功力,要學術經驗,他還要痛苦,沒有痛苦,不容易培養人。吳冠中先生是痛苦的,他曾說,“苦,永遠纏繞著我,滲入心田”;季羨林先生是痛苦的,他被負載著沉重道德義務的婚姻困擾了一輩子。錢鍾書先生在寫作《管錐編》時也是痛苦的,當時正值文革後期,被趕 出家門的他棲身在北師大學生宿舍一間陋室裡,錢先生是把《管錐編》當做自己的學術遺囑來寫的。

Romney Beating Obama in a Fight for Wall St. Cash

By NICHOLAS CONFESSORE and GRIFF PALMER
Campaign finance reports underscore a chill between President Obama and the financial industry.

State-owned trains sit on sagging tracks in Glenville, N.Y., on Thursday.
Nathaniel Brooks for The New York Times

For Sale: 4 Relics of a Doomed Rail Project

A state government attempt to create a high-speed rail line between Manhattan and Albany fell apart, leaving passenger cars rusting and spare parts collecting dust.


Getting rid of workers is famously difficult in Japan. Labour laws were designed for an era that favoured lifetime employment and judges tend to favour all but the most miscreant employees over their corporate bosses.



miscreant Show phonetics

━━ a., n. 極悪非道の(人).
noun [C] FORMAL
someone who behaves badly or does not obey rules:
We need tougher penalties to discourage miscreants.

miscreant[mis・cre・ant]

  • 発音記号[mískriənt]
[形]
1 〈人が〉邪悪な, 堕落した.
2 ((古))〈人が〉不信心の;異端の.
━━[名]
1 悪漢.
2 ((古))異端者;不信心者.

chill


 
音節
chill
発音
tʃíl
chillの変化形
chills (複数形) • chilled (過去形) • chilled (過去分詞) • chilling (現在分詞) • chills (三人称単数現在)
chillの慣用句
put a person on the chill, send a chill down a person's spine, take the chill off, (全4件)
[名]
1 (ひやりとする)冷たさ, 肌寒さ;冷気
the chill of morning
朝の肌寒さ[冷気].
2 寒け, 悪寒;(悪寒を伴う)かぜ
catchtake] a chill
寒けがする, かぜをひく
I've been having chills for quite a while.
さっきから悪寒がする.
3 (突然の)ぞっと[がくっと]するような気持ち;不安, 興ざめ, しらけ
She felt a chill of fear.
恐ろしさでぞっとした
His words castthrew] a chill overonthe company.
彼の言葉で座はしらけた.
4 ((通例a 〜))冷ややかさ, よそよそしさ
a diplomatic chill between the two countries
両国間の冷たい外交関係
There was a chill in her way of speaking.
彼女の口のきき方はよそよそしかった.
5 《冶金》チル, 冷やし金.
6 ((米俗))冷たい(缶)ビール.
put a person on the chill/put the chill on a person
((米俗))〈人に〉冷たくする;〈人を〉殺す.
send a chill down a person's spine
〈人を〉ぞっとさせる.
take the chill off ...
〈牛乳などを〉少し温める.
━━[形](〜・er, 〜・est)
1 ((通例限定))冷たい;寒さで震える
the chill morning
冷え冷えする朝.
2 気をめいらせる;〈態度が〉冷淡な;形式ばった. ▼chillは文語的, 現在は通例chilly.
3 ((俗))〈計画・状況などが〉完全な.
4 ((米俗))すばらしい(cool)
That's chill!
すげえ.
━━[動](自)
1 冷える;寒さが身にしみる, ぞくぞくする.
2 《冶金》〈鋳物が〉(冷やし金に触れて)表面が硬くなる.
3 ((米俗))おとなしく従う;つかまる.
4 ((米俗))(計画・人に)懐疑的[冷淡]になる;熱意がさめる;冷静になる((out)).
━━(他)
1 ((通例受身))〈人を〉寒がらせる, 寒さでぞっとさせる;((文))恐怖でぞっとさせる;〈食べ物などを〉冷やす, (凍らない程度に)冷却[冷蔵]する
be chilled to the bonethe marrow
体のしんまで冷える
be chilled with fear
恐怖で体がぞくっとする
Serve chilled.
((ラベルの標示))(ワインなど)冷たく冷やしてお召し上がりください.
2 ((文))〈意気込みを〉くじく, 抑える;〈興を〉さます.
3 《冶金》〈金属を〉チル化する, 表面を硬くする.
4 ((米俗))〈問題・不満・苦境を〉解決する.
5 ((米俗))〈人を〉殺す;怒らせる;(やくざ社会で)〈人を〉殴って気絶させる.
chill out
((しばしば命令形))((俗))落ち着く;気楽に構える;くつろぐ.
[古英語ciele. △COOL, COLD, GELID(極寒の)]

 chill out︰慣用語/動詞片語,放鬆、冷靜。例句︰You need to chill out for a bit.(你需要放鬆一下。)
B2 to relax completely, or not allow things to upset you:
I'm just chilling out in front of the TV.

Chill out, Dad. The train doesn't leave for another hour!



Passion
n.
  1. A powerful emotion, such as love, joy, hatred, or anger.
    1. Ardent love.
    2. Strong sexual desire; lust.
    3. The object of such love or desire.
    1. Boundless enthusiasm: His skills as a player don't quite match his passion for the game.
    2. The object of such enthusiasm: Soccer is her passion.
  2. An abandoned display of emotion, especially of anger: He's been known to fly into a passion without warning.
  3. Passion
    1. The sufferings of Jesus in the period following the Last Supper and including the Crucifixion, as related in the New Testament.
    2. A narrative, musical setting, or pictorial representation of Jesus's sufferings.
  4. Archaic. Martyrdom.
  5. Archaic. Passivity.
[Middle English, from Old French, from Medieval Latin passiō, passiōn-, sufferings of Jesus or a martyr, from Late Latin, physical suffering, martyrdom, sinful desire, from Latin, an undergoing, from passus, past participle of patī, to suffer.]
SYNONYMS passion, fervor, fire, zeal, ardor. These nouns denote powerful, intense emotion. Passion is a deep, overwhelming emotion: "There is not a passion so strongly rooted in the human heart as envy" (Richard Brinsley Sheridan). The term may signify sexual desire or anger: "He flew into a violent passion and abused me mercilessly" (H.G. Wells). Fervor is great warmth and intensity of feeling: "The union of the mathematician with the poet, fervor with measure, passion with correctness, this surely is the ideal" (William James). Fire is burning passion: "In our youth our hearts were touched with fire" (Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.). Zeal is strong, enthusiastic devotion to a cause, ideal, or goal and tireless diligence in its furtherance: "Laurie [resolved], with a glow of philanthropic zeal, to found and endow an institution for ... women with artistic tendencies" (Louisa May Alcott). Ardor is fiery intensity of feeling: "the furious ardor of my zeal repressed" (Charles Churchill). See also synonyms at feeling.





2011年 08月 17日 14:24
Repressing the Internet, Western-Style

Evgeny Morozov

Did the youthful rioters who roamed the streets of London, Manchester and other British cities expect to see their photos scrutinized by angry Internet users, keen to identify the miscreants? In the immediate aftermath of the riots, many cyber-vigilantes turned to Facebook, Flickr and other social networking sites to study pictures of the violence. Some computer-savvy members even volunteered to automate the process by using software to compare rioters' faces with faces pictured elsewhere on the Internet.

The rioting youths were not exactly Luddites either. They used BlackBerrys to send their messages, avoiding more visible platforms like Facebook and Twitter. It's telling that they looted many stores selling fancy electronics. The path is short, it would seem, from 'digital natives' to 'digital restives.'

Technology has empowered all sides in this skirmish: the rioters, the vigilantes, the government and even the ordinary citizens eager to help. But it has empowered all of them to different degrees. As the British police, armed with the latest facial-recognition technology, go through the footage captured by their numerous closed-circuit TV cameras and study chat transcripts and geolocation data, they are likely to identify many of the culprits.

Authoritarian states are monitoring these developments closely. Chinese state media, for one, blamed the riots on a lack of Chinese-style controls over social media. Such regimes are eager to see what kind of precedents will be set by Western officials as they wrestle with these evolving technologies. They hope for at least partial vindication of their own repressive policies.

Some British politicians quickly called on the BlackBerry maker Research in Motion to suspend its messaging service to avoid an escalation of the riots. On Thursday, Prime Minister David Cameron said that the government should consider blocking access to social media for people who plot violence or disorder.

After the recent massacre in Norway, many European politicians voiced their concern that anonymous anti-immigrant comments on the Web were inciting extremism. They are now debating ways to limit online anonymity.

Does the Internet really need an overhaul of norms, laws and technologies that gives more control to governments? When the Egyptian secret police can purchase Western technology that allows them to eavesdrop on the Skype calls of dissidents, it seems unlikely that American and European intelligence agencies have no means of listening the calls of, say, a loner in Norway.

We tolerate such drastic proposals only because acts of terror briefly deprive us of the ability to think straight. We are also distracted by the universal tendency to imagine technology as a liberating force; it keeps us from noticing that governments already have more power than is healthy.

The domestic challenges posed by the Internet demand a measured, cautious response in the West. Leaders in Beijing, Tehran and elsewhere are awaiting our wrong-headed moves, which would allow them to claim an international license for dealing with their own protests. The yare also looking for tools and strategies that might improve their own digital surveillance.

After violent riots in 2009, Chinese officials had no qualms about cutting off the Xinjiang region's Internet access for 10 months. Still, they would surely welcome a formal excuse for such drastic measures if the West should decide to take similar measures in dealing with disorder. Likewise, any plan in the U.S. or Europe to engage in online behavioral profiling─trying to identify future terrorists based on their tweets, gaming habits or social networking activity─is likely to boost the already booming data-mining industry. It would not take long for such tools to find their way to repressive states.

But something even more important is at stake here. To the rest of the world, the efforts of Western nations, and especially the U.S., to promote democracy abroad have often smacked of hypocrisy. How could the West lecture others while struggling to cope with its own internal social contradictions? Other countries could live with this hypocrisy as long as the West held firm in promoting its ideals abroad. But this double game is harder to maintain in the Internet era.

In their concern to stop not just mob violence but commercial crimes like piracy and file-sharing, Western politicians have proposed new tools for examining Web traffic and changes in the basic architecture of the Internet to simplify surveillance. What they fail to see is that such measures can also affect the fate of dissidents in places like China and Iran. Likewise, how European politicians handle online anonymity will influence the policies of sites like Facebook, which, in turn, will affect the political behavior of those who use social media in the Middle East.

Should America and Europe abandon any pretense of even wanting to promote democracy abroad? Or should they try to figure out how to increase the resilience of their political institutions in the face of the Internet? As much as our leaders might congratulate themselves for embracing the revolutionary potential of these new technologies, they have shown little evidence of being able to think about them in a nuanced and principled way.

(-Mr. Morozov is a visiting scholar at Stanford University and the author of 'The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom.')


2011年 08月 17日 14:24
觀點﹕西方互聯網自由遭遇挑戰

Evgeny Morozov

些 遊盪在倫敦、曼徹斯特和其他英國城市的青年暴徒是否預料到自己的照片會遭到憤怒網民的仔細審查?暴亂後不久﹐許多義憤填膺的網民來到Facebook和 Flickr等社交網站研究暴力事件的照片﹐急切地想確認這些惡棍的身份。有些精通電腦的網民甚至自告奮勇將這一過程自動化﹐用軟件對照來自網上不同地方 的暴徒照片。

那些青年暴徒也不完全是反對科技進步的勒德主義者(Luddites)。他們用黑莓(BlackBerry)發消息﹐避免使 用Facebook和Twitter這樣比較顯眼的平台。據說他們搶劫了許多銷售時尚電子產品的商店。從“數字原生代”到“數字暴民”似乎沒有多長的距 離。

科技為倫敦騷亂中的各個群體都賦予了力量﹐包括暴徒、民間自警組織、政府﹐甚至是熱情的普通市民﹐但他們被賦予的力量有大有小。通過瀏覽大量閉路電視攝像頭拍攝的錄像並研究暴徒談話記錄及地理位置數據﹐擁有最新人臉識別技術的英國警察可能會認出許多肇事者的身份。

威權政府正在密切關注這些局勢的發展。中國就是其中之一。中國國有媒體稱發生暴亂是由於對社交媒體缺乏中國式的控制。這類政府急切想看到西方政府在與不斷演進的科技角力時會確立怎樣的先例。他們希望能夠為自己的壓制政策找到一些辯護理由。

部分英國政界人士迅速呼籲黑莓製造商Research in Motion取消其消息服務以防暴亂升級。上週四﹐英國首相卡梅倫(David Cameron)說﹐政府應考慮阻止密謀發起暴力或騷亂活動的人使用社交媒體。

最近挪威發生大屠殺後﹐許多歐洲政客表示﹐擔心網上匿名的反移民言論是在煽動極端主義。他們目前正在討論限制網上匿名的方法。

是否真的需要對互聯網相關規范、法律和科技進行改革以擴大政府的控制權?當埃及秘密警察都可以購買西方技術從而得以竊聽異見人士的Skype通話時﹐美國和歐洲情報機構無法監聽挪威一個“獨行俠”的通話﹐這似乎不大可能。

我們所以能夠容忍如此偏激的建議﹐僅僅是因為恐怖行徑暫時剝奪了我們理性思考的能力。而將科技想象成一種解放性力量的普遍傾向也令我們心煩意亂﹔它讓我們無視一個現象﹐即政府擁有的權力已經大到了不適宜的水平。

互聯網構成的國內挑戰要求西方國家的反應既有分寸又要慎重。中國、伊朗和其它國家的領導人正等著我們犯下執迷不悟的錯誤。這些錯誤會讓上述國家得以宣稱﹐他們對待本國抗議活動的做法是在遵循國際慣例。這些國家也正在尋找可能改善他們數字監控技術的工具和策略。

2009 年的暴力騷亂過後﹐中國官員毫不猶豫地切斷了新疆地區的互聯網通訊﹐時間長達10個月。儘管如此﹐如果西方國家在處理混亂局面時決定採取類似措施﹐中國官 員無疑仍會為他們上述激進行動獲得了一個冠冕堂皇的借口而歡喜。同樣﹐美國或歐洲從事“網絡行為側寫”(online behavioral profiling)的任何計劃﹐都有可能推動已經蓬勃發展的數據挖掘行業。要不了多久此類工具就會為壓迫政權所利用。所謂“網絡行為側寫”是指試圖根據 微博、遊戲習慣或社交網絡活動等信息找出未來的恐怖分子。

但一些更為重要的事情正處於危急關頭。對世界其他國家來說﹐以美國為首的西方國 家在國外促進民主的舉措往往讓人覺得虛偽。西方國家在奮力應對其自身的社會矛盾之際﹐他們又如何能向其它國家說教呢?只要西方國家堅持在海外推廣其理念﹐ 其它國家或許還是可以忍受這種虛偽的。但在互聯網時代﹐這種表裡不一的做法難以為繼。

西方政界人士既希望制止暴徒的暴力行為﹐還想遏止盜 版和非法文件共享等商業犯罪行為﹐他們建議採用新工具檢測網絡流量﹐並改變互聯網的基本架構以簡化監控。但他們忽視的是﹐這些舉措也能夠影響到中國和伊朗 等國異見人士的命運。同樣﹐歐洲政界人士處理網絡匿名問題的方式方法也將影響到Facebook等社交網站的政策﹐而這又將影響中東地區使用社交媒體的那 些人的政治行為。

美國和歐洲抑或應該放棄任何在海外推動民主的說辭?或是應該努力揣摩在面對互聯網時應如何提高其政治機構的應變能力?我們的領導人在為這些新技術的革命性潛能慶幸不已的時候﹐他們卻不能既細緻入微又秉持原則地思考這些新技術所帶來的影響。

(編者注:本文作者Evgeny Morozov是斯坦福大學的訪問學者﹐也是《網絡的錯覺:互聯網自由的陰暗面》(The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom)一書的作者。)





repress


(rĭ-prĕs'pronunciation

v.-pressed-press·ing-press·esv.tr.
  1. To hold back by an act of volition: couldn't repress a smirk.
  2. To put down by force, usually before total control has been lost; quell: repress a rebellion.
  3. Psychology. To exclude (painful or disturbing memories, for example) automatically or unconsciously from the conscious mind.
  4. Biology. To block (transcription of a gene) by combination of a protein to an operator gene.
v.intr.
To take repressive action.

[Middle English repressen, from Latin reprimere, repress- : re-, re- + premere, to press.]
repressibility re·press'i·bil'i·ty n.

repressible re·press'i·ble adj.

  • [riprés]
[動](他)
1 〈欲望・感情・行動・涙などを〉抑える, 抑制する
repress anger
怒りを抑える.
2 〈騒動などを〉鎮圧する;〈人々を〉抑圧[制圧]する
repress a minority race
少数民族を弾圧する.
3 〈好ましくないものを〉抑えつける;《精神分析》〈苦痛などを〉抑圧する
repress an evil tendency
悪い傾向を抑止する.
[ラテン語repressus (re-後ろへ+premere押す=騷ぎをおさめる). △PRESS1, COMPRESS, REPRIMAND


furtherance



Line breaks: fur¦ther|ance
Pronunciation: /ˈfəːð(ə)r(ə)ns/

Definition of furtherance in English:

noun

[MASS NOUN]
The advancement of a scheme or interest:the court held that the union’s acts were not in furtherance of a trade dispute

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