5研究生英语读写佳境课文翻译unit 5.doc
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1、YHY DO YOU LAUGH?1 Why do we laugh? Because we find something funny ,most people would say. Robert Provine, a behavioral neurobiologist at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, once thought so too. But then he and his students began wandering about the college campus notebooks in hand, recor
2、ding exactly what really made people laugh.为什么我们会笑?大部分的人都会说那是因为我们找到了一些有趣的事情。Robert Provine是Maryland大学的行为精神生物学家,他曾经也是这样认为的。但是他和他的学生们开始散步在大学校园里,手里拿着笔记本,准确地记下引人发笑的原因。2 Twelve hundred “laugh episodes” later, Provine was convinced that most laughter has little to do with jokes or funny stories. The vast
3、majority or laughs followed mundane statements(普通话语) such as “It was nice meeting you, too” or “Can I join you?”Only some 10 to 20 percent followed anything remotely recognisable(细微联系)as a punch line(妙句、关键句).So what are the majority of laughs actually about?记录下一千二百个“笑的事件”后,Provine相信大部分的笑与开玩笑和滑稽的故事没有
4、关联。绝大部分的笑是出现在像“遇到你很高兴”或是“我可以加入你们吗?”这样的普通话语之后。仅仅有百分之十至二十的笑是出现在和妙句有一点点联系的话语之后。既然如此绝大部分发笑的原因是什么呢?3 The search for an answer brings you face to face with (直面)problems that are at once both the bane and lifeblood of virtually all research into human emotions. You may think the social context of the emoti
5、on is obvious; but then you realize that people laugh when theyre nervous as well as amused, disappointed as well as joyous, and sometimes simply because someone else is laughing. 对这个答案的搜寻使得我们直面这样的问题:对人类情感好坏的研究。你可以想象情感的社会环境显而易见,但是你会意识到人们在他们紧张、高兴、失望、快乐时,甚至有时仅仅因为其它人在笑也会笑。4 You may also set out with th
6、e belief that the emotion has evolved into(发展为,演变为) something rather sophisticated(相当复杂的), requiring the brains conscious(意识), cognitive centers (认知中心) to respond to subtle(微妙的) social indications like punch lines; but then you realise that most people cannot will themselves to(强迫他们去做) laugh command
7、 or suppress an unwanted attack of the giggles. Laughter arises not from our conscious mind but from a primitive, precognitive part of our brain , says Provine. “We re talking about something thats very deep in our animal nature.”你也许开始相信情感已发展为某种相当杂的东西。要求大脑的变化,认知中心对像妙语这样的微妙的话语作出回应。然后你会认识到许多人无法使自己奉命发笑
8、或压制得住自然而然的笑。Provine说,笑并不是产生于我们的意识 ,而是产生于大脑中原始的超感官的那一部分。“我们讨论的是我们原始本性深处的那部分东西。”5 Provine is one of few researchers trying to go beyond anecdote(轶事) and speculation by looking at laughter as an animal behaviourist might study birdsong or a wolfs howl. He believes that , like birdsong, laughter functio
9、ns as some kind of social signal .And others would agree . Indeed ,studies have shown that people are thirty times more likely to laugh in social settings than when they are alone, in the absence of pseudo-social stimuli like television. Even nitrous oxide, or laughing gas , loses much of its power
10、if taken in solitude , says Willibald Ruch, a psychologist at the University of Dusseldorf.Provine是那些为数不多的不是凭轶事和主观臆测的科学家之一,他是像动物行为学家研究鸟叫和狼嚎那样来研究笑。他相信笑像鸟叫那样起着某些社会信号的作用。并且其它也相信这个,研究也表明,人们在社交场合比他们独处时多笑三十部,在缺少电视机这样的虚拟社会刺激物的情况下。甚至,氧化氮或是说笑气,也会失去它的作用,如果一个人在独处时吸入的话。6 To many researchers ,laughter is about s
11、trengthening social bonds. “Laughter occurs when people are comfortable with one another ,when they feel open and free. And the more laughter, the more bonding within the group,” says Mahadev Apte, a cultural anthropologist at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. This feedback “loop” of bondin
12、g-laughter-more bonding, plus the desire not to be singled out(单单挑出) from the group, may explain why laughter is often contagious(触染的)sometimes dramatically (戏剧性的)so . In 1962, for example, an epidemic of laughter among schoolgirls in Tanganyika lasted for six months and forced officials to close sc
13、hools.对很多研究者来说,笑正在加强社会沟通与联系。“当人们舒适的与其它人在一起,当他们开放和自由的时间笑就会发生。笑得越多,彼此间的联系就越密。”Mahadev Apte说的。人们之间紧密联系会造成人们更多紧密的联系,这样环环相扣的循环,加上人们不愿意单单从组织上挑出的愿望,有助于解释笑是有传染性的,又非常的强。打个比方,在1962年,Tanganyika的一所学校的女孩子有流行性的笑病,大笑不止六个月,迫使当地的政府关闭了学校。7 The first human laughter , far back in ancient times, may have begun as a gest
14、ure of shared relief at the passing of some danger, says John Morreall , a philosopher at the University of South Florida in Tampa who also leads seminars (研究班)on humour in the workplace. “Its a signal that now we can relax,” he speculates. When someone laughs , muscles do(表强调) in fact relax through
15、out the body .Most people know the feeling of laughing so hard they have to hold onto something to keep from falling. Since this relaxation forbids the biological fight, laughter may be a signal of trust in ones companions-a ritual(程序,仪式) disarming(消除敌意的), in effect. This would explain why sudden en
16、counters with old friends might prompt (引发)laughter designed to(旨在) reaffirm(重申) the social bond.John Morreall说人类发现首次笑可以追溯到原古时代,作为一个在危险过去时人们发出共同的如释重负时的标志出现的。John Morreall是佛罗里达南部一所大学的生物学家,他在工作的地方开办研究幽默的研究班。他指出,“笑是我们可以放松的信号”。当人们笑时,身体的全部肌肉确实会放松。大部分的人知道笑的厉害,他们会抓住一些东西以防止笑得摔倒。由于这种肌肉的放松使身体不可能发生戒备,笑是对同伴信任的标
17、志,是解除戒备的仪式。这要以解释为什么陌生人的逗乐不能使 人发笑。为什么与老朋友的偶遇往往会引发旨在增强社会联系的笑。8 Politicians and other public speakers understand the power of laughter to break down barriers(消除隔阂) and forge a connection with (建立联系) their audience. A large part of President John Kennedys charm came from his ability to make jokes at his
18、 own expense, says Morreall. By inviting the audience to join him in laughter, Kennedy bridged much of the social gap(消除隔阂)between his wealthy ,noble(尊贵的) status and ordinary voters. Almost every atter-dinner speaker opens with a joks for similar reason.政治家和演讲者知道笑的力量能消除隔阂并和观众建立联系。Morreall说肯尼迪总统很大部分魅
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