One of
the most striking features of the present century is the progress or science
and its effects on almost every aspect of social life. Building on the
foundation laid by the predecessors the scientists of today are carrying their
investigation into ever-widening fields of knowledge.
Modern
civilization depends largely on the scientist and inventor. We depend on the
doctor who seeks the cause and cure of disease, the chemist who analyses our
food and purifies our water, the entomologist who wages war on the insect
pests, the engineer who conquers time and space, and a host of other
specialists who aid in the development of agriculture and industry.
The
advance of science and technology has brought the different parts of the world
into closer touch with one another than ever before. We are able to reach
distant lands within a very short time. We are also able to communicate with
people far away by means of the telephone and the wireless. The invention of
the printing machine has made it possible for us to learn from books and
newspapers about people in other lands.
Indeed,
man's curiosity and resourcefulness have been responsible for the steady stream
of inventions that have created our civilization.
At the
same time, however, there have been harmful effects. Our machine civilization is
responsible for numerous accidents and industrial rivalries among nations.
Everyday hundreds of people are dying from serious wounds and injuries.
Further, the rapid tempo of modem life results in wide-spread nervous disorder.
Moreover, science, which has helped man to secure control over nature, has also
made it possible for him to develop more deadly weapons or war. More and more
countries are competing with one another in the production of war
material. But in these
instances the fault
lies not with
science, but rather
with man's intention to misuse
the discoveries of science.
Science
is admittedly the dominating intellectual force of the modem age.
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