单项选择题
Perhaps more than any other profession, science places a premium on being correct. Of course, most scientists make plenty of mistakes
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the way. Yet not all errors are created equal. Historians have
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a number of instances in which an incorrect idea proved far more
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than thousands of others that were trivially mistaken or
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correct. These are the productive mistakes: errors that
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on deep, fundamental features of the world around us and
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further research that leads to major
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. Mistakes they certainly are. But science would be far worse off without them.
Niels Bohr, for example, created a
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of the atom that was wrong in nearly every way, yet it
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the quantum-mechanical revolution.
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enormous skepticism, Alfred Wegener argued
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centrifugal forces make the continents move (or "drift") along the surface of the earth. He had the right phenomenon, albeit the wrong
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. And Enrico Fermi thought that he had created nuclei heavier than uranium, rather than (as we now know) having stumbled
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nuclear fission.
Two other instances of productive mistakes, one from physics in the 1970"s and one from biology in the 1940"s illustrate this
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dramatically. The authors of the mistakes were not hapless bumblers who
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, in retrospect, to get lucky.
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they steadfastly asked questions that
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of their colleagues broached and
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ideas that not many at the time had considered. In the process, they
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the critical groundwork for today"s burgeoning fields of biotechnology and quantum information science. They were
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, and the world should be thankful for their errors.
A.laidB.made
C.paved
D.offered
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