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IELTS Reading practice - Assessing the risk
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IELTS Reading practice - Assessing the risk

Cùng SOL IELTS luyện đề IELTS Reading Assessing the risk - nằm trong kho đề thi thật quý 3 năm 2024. Assessing the risk IELTS Reading questions and answers. 
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    Reading passage

    Assessing the risk 

    A. As a title for a supposedly unprejudiced debate on scientific progress, “Panic attack:  interrogating our obsession with risk” did not bode well. Held last week at the Royal  Institution in London, the event brought together scientists from across the world to ask why  society is so obsessed with risk and to call for a “more rational ” approach. “We seem to be  organising society around the grandmotherly maxim of ‘better safe than sorry’,” exclaimed Spiked, the online publication that organised the event. “What are the consequences of this  overbearing concern with risks?” 

    B. The debate was preceded by a survey of 40 scientists who were invited to describe how  awful our lives would be if the “precautionary principle” had been allowed to prevail in the  past. Their response was: no heart surgery or antibiotics, and hardly any drugs at all; no  aeroplanes, bicycles or high-voltage power grids; no pasteurisation, pesticides or  biotechnology; no quantum mechanics; no wheel; no “discovery” of America. In short, their  message was: no risk, no gain. 

    C. They have absolutely missed the point. The precautionary principle is a subtle idea. It has  various forms, but all of them generally include some notion of cost-effectiveness. Thus the  point is not simply to ban things that are not known to be absolutely safe. Rather, it says: “Of  course you can make no progress without risk. But if there is no obvious gain from taking the  risk, then don’t take it.” 

    D. Clearly, all the technologies listed by the 40 well-chosen savants were innately risky at  their inception, as all technologies are. But all of them would have received the green light  under the precautionary principle because they all had the potential to offer tremendous  benefits – the solutions to very big problems – if only the snags could be overcome. 

    E If the precautionary principle had been in place, the scientists tell us, we would not have  antibiotics. But of course, we would – if the version of the principle that sensible people now  understand had been applied. When penicillin was discovered in the 1920s, infective bacteria  were laying waste to the world. Children died from diphtheria and whooping cough, every open-drain brought the threat of typhoid, and any wound could lead to septicaemia and even  gangrene. 

    F. Penicillin was turned into a practical drug during the Second World War when the many  pestilences that result from were threatened to kill more people than the bombs. Of course  antibiotics were a priority. Of course, the risks, such as they could be perceived, were worth  taking. 

    G. And so with the other items on the scientists’ list: electric light bulbs, blood transfusions.  CAT scans, knives, the measles vaccine – the precautionary principle would have prevented  all of them, they tell us. But this is just plain wrong. If the precautionary principle had been applied properly, all these creations would have passed muster, because all offered  incomparable advantages compared to the risks perceived at the time.

    H. Another issue is at stake here. Statistics are not the only concept people use when  weighing up risk. Human beings, subtle and evolved creatures that we are, do not survive to  three-score years and ten simply by thinking like pocket calculators. A crucial issue is the  consumer’s choice. In deciding whether to pursue the development of new technology, the  consumer’s right to choose should be considered alongside considerations of risk and benefit. Clearly, skiing is more dangerous than genetically modified tomatoes. But people who ski  choose to do so; they do not have skiing thrust upon them by portentous experts of the kind  who now feel they have the right to reconstruct our crops. Even with skiing, there is the  matter of cost-effectiveness to consider: skiing, I am told, is exhilarating. Where is the  exhilaration in GM soya? 

    I. Indeed, in contrast to all the other items on Spiked’s list, GM crops stand out as an example  of a technology whose benefits are far from clear. Some of the risks can at least be defined.  But in the present economic climate, the benefits that might accrue from them seem dubious.  Promoters of GM crops believe that the future population of the world cannot be fed without  them. That is untrue. The crops that really matter are wheat and rice, and there is no GM research in the pipeline that will seriously affect the yield of either. GM is used to make  production cheaper and hence more profitable, which is an extremely questionable ambition. 

    J. The precautionary principle provides the world with a very important safeguard. If it had  been in place in the past it might, for example, have prevented insouciant miners from  polluting major rivers with mercury. We have come to a sorry pass when scientists, who  should above all be dispassionate scholars, feel they should misrepresent such a principle for  the purposes of commercial and political propaganda. People at large continue to mistrust science and the high technologies it produces partly because they doubt the wisdom of  scientists. On such evidence as this, these doubts are fully justified.

    Questions

    1. Questions 27-32 

    Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading 3 Passage? In boxes 27-32 on your answer sheet, write 

    TRUE if the statement is true 

    FALSE if the statement is false 

    NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage 

     27. The title of the debate is not unbiased. 

     28. All the scientists invited to the debate were from the field of medicine. 

     29. The message those scientists who conducted the survey were sending was people shouldn’t  take risks. 

     30. All the 40 listed technologies are riskier than other technologies. 

     31. It was worth taking the risks to invent antibiotics. 

     32. All the other inventions on the list were also judged by the precautionary principle.

    2. Questions 33-39 

    Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage 1 Using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the Reading Passage for each answer.

    Write your answers in boxes 33-39 on your answer sheet. 

    When applying the precautionary principle to decide whether to invent a new technology,  people should also the consideration of the 33............... , along with the usual consideration of  34............... . For example, though risky and dangerous enough, people still enjoy 35...............  for the excitement it provides. On the other hand, experts believe that future population desperately needs 36............... in spite of their undefined risks. However, the researchers  conducted so far have not been directed towards increasing the yield of 37............... , but to  reduce the cost of 38............... and to bring more profit out of it. In the end, such selfish use of  the precautionary principle for business and political gain has often led people to 39...............  science for they believe scientists are not to be trusted. 

    3. Question 40 

    Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D. 

    Write your answers in boxes 40 on your answer sheet. 

    40. What is the main theme of the passage? 

    A. People have the right to doubt science and technologies 

    B. The precautionary principle could have prevented the development of science and technology 

    C. There are not enough people who truly understand the precautionary principle 

    D. The precautionary principle bids us take risks at all costs

    Answer keys

    1. TRUE    

    2. NOT GIVEN    

    3. FALSE    

    4. NOT GIVEN    

    5. TRUE    

    6. NOT GIVEN    

    7. consumer’s right    

    8. risk and benefit

    9. Skiing

    10. GM crops

    11. wheat and rice

    12. production

    13. mistrust

    14. A

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