Secrecy in Industry

工业中的秘密

新概念英语第四册 流利英语 英音

语言学习

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第 15 集

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  • Lesson 15

  • Secrecy in industry

  • Why is secrecy particularly important in the chemical industries?

  • Two factors weigh heavily against the effectiveness of scientific research in industry.

  • One is the general atmosphere of secrecy in which it is carried out,

  • the other the lack of freedom of the individual research worker.

  • In so far as any inquiry is a secret one,

  • it naturally limits all those engaged in carrying it out from effective contact with their fellow scientists either in other countries or in universities,

  • or even, often enough, in other departments of the same firm.

  • The degree of secrecy naturally varies considerably.

  • Some of the bigger firms are engaged in researches which are of such general and fundamental nature

  • that it is a positive advantage to them not to keep them secret.

  • Yet a great many processes depending on such research are sought for with complete secrecy until the stage at which patents can be taken out.

  • Even more processes are never patented at all but kept as secret processes.

  • This applies particularly to chemical industries,

  • where chance discoveries play a much larger part than they do in physical and mechanical industries.

  • Sometimes the secrecy goes to such an extent that the whole nature of the research cannot be mentioned.

  • Many firms, for instance have great difficulty in obtaining technical or scientific books from libraries

  • because they are unwilling to have their names entered as having taken out such and such a book,

  • for fear the agents of other firms should be able to trace the kind of research they are likely to be undertaking.