单项选择题

The present economy remains dependent on a massive inward flow of
natural resources that includes vast amounts of non-renewable resources,
followed by a reverse flow of economically spent matter back to the ecospherE.
Line Chemical sustainability problems are determined largely by these economy-
(5) ecosphere material flows which current chemistry education essentially ignores,
such that it has become imperative for chemists to develop the technological
dimension of a sustainable civilization. Chemistry teachers should better
emphasize the effect of compositions, outcomes, and economics of chemical
processes on both human health and the ecospherE.There is one overarching
(10) scientific reason why chemical technology pollutes: chemists developing new
processes strive principally to achieve reactions through relatively simple
reagent designs by employing almost the entire periodic table to attain diverse
reactivity, while by contrast nature accomplishes a huge range of selective
biochemical processes through a reagent design much more elaborate than the
(15) aforementioned synthetic ones. Electric eels can store charge via concentration
gradients of biochemically common alkali metal ions across the membranes of
electroplaque cells, while synthetically-designed batteries used for storing
charges must make use of elements such as lead and cadmium. Given this
strategic difference, manmade technologies often distribute throughout the
(20) environment persistent pollutants that are toxic because they contain elements
that are used sparingly or not at all in biochemistry.
Imagine all of Earth's chemistry as a mail sorter's wall of letter slots in a
post office, with the network of compartments extending toward infinity, each
of which representing a separate chemistry so that, for example, thousands of
(25) compartments are associated with stratospheric chemistry or with a human cell.
An environmentally mobile persistent pollutant can move from compartment to
compartment, sampling a large number and finding those it can perturb, and
while many of these perturbations may be inconsequential, others can cause
unforeseen catastrophes, such as ozone holes or endocrine disruption in the
(30) human body. Most compartments remain unidentified, furthermore, giving
ample reason for scientific humility when considering the safety of persistent
mobile compounds.
There are several obstacles to overcome in achieving a sustainable
chemistry free of these mobile pollutants, the first being that of incorporating
(35) environmental considerations into decisions concerning the reactions and
technologies to be developed in the laboratory. It is equally critical that
chemistry that is not really green does not get sold as such, and that the public
is not misled with false or insufficient safety information. And since many
chemical sustainability goals such as those associated with solar energy
(40) conversion call for ambitious, highly creative research approaches, short-term
and myopic thinking must be avoided-after all, chemistry exerts a near
boundless influence on human action and is thus inext
A.articulating potential useful applications of the development of sustainable chemistry
B.suggesting the environmental dilemma posed by the usage of non-renewables
C.reconciling opposing theories on the effects of chemical pollution
D.describing how the methods of non-sustainable chemistry must be corrected
E.proving a general overview about how sustainable chemistry could improve human existence

A.Line
B.
C.
D.
E.articulating
F.suggesting
G.reconciling
H.describing
I.proving
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单项选择题
Anderson's new theory is controversial for asserting that Britain mighthave retained its North American empire had George Ⅲ's ministers proceededless precipitously. But as Anderson himself concedes to previous historians likeLine Henvel and Rhimes, there was no indication whether the persistence of imperial(5) authority would have made much difference for any of the parties involveD.Atmost, these efforts would have endowed the British government with a'hollow' empire, wherein the exercise of effective authority would depend onthe consent of the colonists and their representatives. While the grip on theircolonies was questionable, the British had no option but to curtail their(10) authority, and at no point was the decision to do so more than a temporaryexpedient. Once the war in French Canada was resolved, England attempted toterminate the costly practices of Indian gift giving and to levy new taxation.Under such circumstances, moreover, Britain would have been able to offeronly limited protections to any of America's other inhabitants, especially the(15) Indians whose lands in the Ohio Valley were already being encroached upon by asteady influx of European settlers. In a sense, the Seven Years' War ended upconfirming the 'American' character of Britain's North American empire, anentity over which metropolitan authority had never been more than tenuous.Anderson's hypothesis concerning French Canada is corroborated both by(20) the events of the American Revolution, and, less successfully, thecontemporaneous case of India, where the British successfully implemented thecolonial strategy Anderson recommends. As witnessed in Iroquoia, the MughalEmpire's progressive collapse during the later 1740s and 1750s drew theBritish, who had been in India as traders since the early seventeenth century,(25) ever more deeply into politics on the subcontinent, first as the auxiliaries oflocal grandees and eventually as political actors in their own right. When theEast India Company governed in Bengal, it did so by virtue of cleverly acting asthe Mughal Emperor's diwani (a Muslim office roughly analogous to a Europeantax farmer). Despite the temptation to act unilaterally, the company's officials(30) were never ignorant of the fact that they owed their authority to the cooperationof local elites, who in turn accepted British rule assuming they could employ itto their own advantagE.Anderson notes that although there were undoubtedly the vast differencesbetween them, India's experience of British rule during the eighteenth century(35) points to the same devolution of imperial agency as in AmericA.It is a patternJack P. Greene has identified as 'negotiated authority', whereby the unlimitedpowers claimed by officials at the empire's center were subject to constantrevision by indigenous brokers on the periphery. Despite the fact that theIndian colonial possessions were more enduring as a result, Anderson(40) neverthelessA.survey of the inadequacies of a conventional viewpointB.reconciliation of opposing points of viewC.summary and evaluation of a recent studyD.defense of a new thesis from anticipated objectionsE.review of the subtle distinctions between apparently similar views
A.B.
C.
D.survey
E.reconciliation
F.summary
G.defense
H.review