查看原文
其他

BBC英文|6 Minute English: Why do we take risks?

小芳老师 2020-09-18

提示:点击↑上方"小芳老师"免费关注哦

Some people actively embrace risk by jumping out of aeroplanes, scuba-diving or motor-racing. But we all face risks every day by eating, drinking, walking and driving – simply going about our daily lives carries all sorts of unseen threats. And yet for some reason we don’t judge these risks accurately. Follow Alice and Finn's discussion and learn new words.

This week's question

What are your chances of being knocked off your bicycle and killed during a one-mile journey (and this is the same as your chances of winning the national lottery)? Is it… 

a) 1 in 4 million? 

b) 1 in 14 million? 

c) 1 in 400 million?

You can hear the right answer at the end of the programme.



Transcript

Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript

Alice
Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Alice…

Finn
… and I'm Finn. Hello.

Alice
Hello, Finn. You're off on holiday tomorrow, aren't you?

Finn
I am and you know, and I'm dreading it. I hate flying!

Alice
Do you? I didn't know you had a phobia – and that means a strong and unreasonable fear of something.  

Finn
Well, I don't think this is a phobia because it isn't unreasonable. Flying thousands of feet up in the sky in a tin can, you know, that's not safe!

Alice
Flying is safer than you think, Finn. It's much riskier to drive or cycle to work. And, actually, risk taking is the subject of today's show! Risk means the chances of something bad happening. For example, did you know that your chance of being knocked off your bicycle and killed during a one-mile journey is the same as your chances of winning the lottery?

Finn
You know Alice, I didn't know that.

Alice
And this leads me on to our quiz question for today: What are the odds … what are the chances of either of these two things happening? Is it…
a) 1 in 4 million?
b) 1 in 14 million?
Or c) 1 in 400 million?

Finn
I have no idea. I'll go with the big number: 1 in 400 million, c).

Alice OK. So we'll find out later if you're right or wrong later on. Now let's listen to Andreas Wilkey, a psychologist at Clarkson University in New York, talking about why we're bad at assessing risk.

INSERT Andreas Wilkey, Psychologist, Clarkson University, Potsdam, New York
People typically fear anything which is small probability but it's extremely catastrophic if it were to happen… Think about dying in a plane crash, think about a nuclear meltdown from the nearby power plant. Recently we have another increase in these birds' virus outbreaks in South Korea. People read about that. And they may pay a lot of attention to that in the news but they may forget to get their flu shot.

Finn
That was Andreas Wilkey from Clarkson University. And we heard that a small probabilityof something happening means it's unlikely to happen. But we worry about big or catastrophic events such as catching bird flu or dying in a plane crash because we have a gut reaction to them– in other words, we react emotionally. A catastrophic event is something that causes a huge amount of damage and suffering.

Alice
And it's often because of media coverage – for example, watching the news and reading the newspapers – that it can be difficult for us to understand how likely certain things are to happen. Catastrophic events feel like very real threats, while we tend to forget about the small but chronic risks that become more likely over time.

Finn
We do. Chronic means something that lasts for a long time. So for example, what if there was a cigarette that killed you as soon as you smoked it? Nobody would do that, would they?

Alice
No, they wouldn't.

Finn
But plenty of people are happy to smoke for years, and put off worrying about the health risks for the future.

Alice
Yes, that's a good point, Finn! People feel they are in control of risks that stretch over time. You know, they think, 'I could stop tomorrow' or 'I could smoke less'. But what about people who enjoy taking big risks – those thrill seekers out there?

Finn
People who enjoy extreme sports actually seek out danger – it gives them extreme pleasure! So let's listen to Karina Hollekim from Norway. She's a base jumper – that's a person with a parachute who leaps from tall buildings or cliffs – and she's talking about what she feels about risk.

INSERT Karina Hollekim, base jumper
You need to measure the pleasure. Is it going to be worth it for you? So if the risk is really high, it means that the pleasure needs to be equally high. Or hopefully even higher… You can't measure it on a scale or anything. For me, it's a stomach feeling. It's the value within me, and I'm the only one who can tell what value it has to me.

Alice
Yes. It must be a magical feeling to step off a cliff, mustn't it, Finn?

Finn
'It's a stomach feeling', you know – my stomach would definitely be saying, 'oh no, no, no!' So why not change the subject and give me the answer to today's quiz question?

Alice
I asked: What are your chances of being knocked off your bicycle and killed during a one-mile journey and this is the same as your chances of winning the national lottery? So is it… a) 1 in 4 million? b) 1 in 14 million? Or c) 1 in 400 million?

Finn
I said c) 1 in 400 million.

Alice
Yes. And you were wrong, Finn.

Finn
Alright. Really? OK.

Alice
Yes. The odds are actually 1 in 14 million. You are as likely to win the national lottery from a single ticket as you are to be knocked off your bicycle and killed during a one-mile journey. This statistic comes from the Professor David Spiegelhalter, who is Winton Professor of the Public Understanding of Risk in the Statistical Laboratory at the University of Cambridge in the UK. So I think he really knows his stuff.

Finn
That's a very long title, yes, I'm sure he does.

Alice
Yeah.

Finn
So let's hear today's words again, Alice?

Alice
Here they are:
phobia
risk
probability
gut reaction
catastrophic
media coverage
chronic
thrill seekers
base jumper
And that brings us to the end of today's 6 Minute English. We hope you were thrilled by today's programme. Please join us again soon.

Both
Bye.

 


Vocabulary

phobia
a strong and unreasonable fear of something

risk
the chances of something bad happening

probability
how likely something is to happen

gut reaction
an instinctive emotional response

catastrophic
something which causes a huge amount of damage and suffering

media coverage
reports about something in the News, newspapers, and the internet

chronic
something that lasts for a long time

thrill seekers
people who enjoy taking part in extreme sports and other activities involving physical risk

base jumper
a person with a parachute who leaps from tall buildings or cliffs


合集收藏


语音教学:美语发音视频教程 英音发音视频教程

新闻英语:VOA标准 & VOA慢速 BBC新闻 BBC地道英语

歌曲TED:  听歌学英语 & TED合集 & 18年歌曲合集

美文故事:  双语美文30篇 & 有声双语48篇 听名著学英语

哈利波特魔法石 & 密室 & 阿兹卡班的囚徒 & 火焰杯

英文名字:男生版 & 女生版 & 搞笑版 & 命运版

觉得不错,一定点赞呢!!!

    您可能也对以下帖子感兴趣

    文章有问题?点此查看未经处理的缓存