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  • 121 number

    [ˈnʌmbə]
    absolute number вчт. неименованное число abstract number вчт. неименованное число account number номер счета account number вчт. учетный номер actual number вчт. фактическое число application number пат. номер заявки arithmetic number вчт. арифметическое число assembly number вчт. шифр комплекта average sample number средний объем выборки base number вчт. основание системы счисления basic number базисная величина number причислять, зачислять; to be numbered with быть причисленным к binary decimal number вчт. двоично-десятичное число binary number вчт. двоичное число binary-coded decimal number вчт. двоично-кодированное десятичное число binary-coded number вчт. двоично-кодированное число block number вчт. номер блока book number учетный номер книги number номер; motorcar's number номер автомашины; call number шифр (книги, пленки и т. п.) call number вызываемый номер call number вчт. вызывающий параметр cardinal number мат. кардинальное число cardinal number количественное числительное catalogue number каталожный номер check number вчт. контрольное число column number вчт. номер столбца commercial register number номер коммерческой фирмы в регистре register: commercial number number (for tax and VAT collection purposes) номер коммерческой фирмы в регистре (для налогообложения и сбора налога на добавленную стоимость) customer account number номер счета клиента cylinder number вчт. номер цилиндра danger number категория риска decimal number десятичное число device number вчт. номер устройства double-precision number вчт. число с двойной точностью error number вчт. номер ошибки extension number добавочный номер file number номер дела file number номер документа file number номер единицы хранения floating-point number вчт. число с плавающей запятой fractional number дробное число generation number вчт. номер версии giro account number номер жиросчета number первоклассный, самый главный; problem No. 1 самая важная проблема; his number goes up он умирает, его песенка спета, ему крышка identity number идентификационный номер identity number личный номер number число, количество; a number of некоторое количество; in number численно, количеством in (great) numbers в большом количестве in (great) numbers значительными силами; out of (или without) number множество, без числа; a number (или numbers) of people много народу index number вчт. индекс index number коэффициент index number числовой показатель insurance number номер страхового договора integer number вчт. целое число inverse number вчт. обратное число invoice number номер счета-фактуры item number номер изделия item number вчт. номер позиции item number вчт. номер элемента journal number номер журнала land register number номер кадастра licence number номерной знак автомобиля line number вчт. номер строки lot number номер лота lot number число изделий в партии magic number вчт. системный код mixed number вчт. смешанное число number номер; motorcar's number номер автомашины; call number шифр (книги, пленки и т. п.) natural number вчт. натуральное число natural number мат. натуральное число negative number вчт. отрицательное число number разг. (что-л.) выделяющееся, могущее служить образцом; number one (или No. number выпуск, номер, экземпляр (журнала и т. п.) number выпуск number зачислять number количество number насчитывать; the population numbers 5000 население составляет 5000 человек number насчитывать number номер (программы) number номер; motorcar's number номер автомашины; call number шифр (книги, пленки и т. п.) number номер number нумеровать number нумеровать number первоклассный, самый главный; problem No. 1 самая важная проблема; his number goes up он умирает, его песенка спета, ему крышка number пересчитывать number показатель number (No.) порядковый номер number предназначать number причислять, зачислять; to be numbered with быть причисленным к number воен. рассчитываться; to number off делать перекличку по номерам number прос. ритм, размер number свое "я"; собственная персона number pl прос. стихи number мат. сумма, число, цифра; science of numbers арифметика number сумма number уст. считать, пересчитывать; his days are numbered его дни сочтены number цифра number числиться, быть в числе (among, in) number грам. число number число, количество; a number of некоторое количество; in number численно, количеством number число number in succession нумеровать по порядку number in system вчт. число в системе number in the queue вчт. длина очереди number число, количество; a number of некоторое количество; in number численно, количеством number of allocation units количество голосов, на основании которых распределяются мандаты в парламенте number of claims число исков number of members число членов number of packages число мест груза in (great) numbers значительными силами; out of (или without) number множество, без числа; a number (или numbers) of people много народу number of persons employed число сотрудников number of respondents число опрошенных number of risks число рисков number of units waiting вчт. длина очереди number of votes число голосов number of years возраст number воен. рассчитываться; to number off делать перекличку по номерам number разг. (что-л.) выделяющееся, могущее служить образцом; number one (или No. odd number нечетное число opposite number лицо, занимающее такую же должность в другом учреждении opposite number партнер по переговорам opposite: number number лицо, занимающее такую же должность в другом учреждении, государстве и т. п.; партнер, коллега order number номер заказа order number порядковый номер ordinal number вчт. порядковый номер ordinal number порядковый номер in (great) numbers значительными силами; out of (или without) number множество, без числа; a number (или numbers) of people много народу packed decimal number вчт. упакованное десятичное число page number вчт. номер страницы page number полигр. номер страницы parcel number номер земельного участка patent number номер патента personal identification number вчт. личный идентификационный номер personal number личный идентификационный номер phone number номер телефона physical block number вчт. физический номер блока policy number номер страхового полиса number насчитывать; the population numbers 5000 население составляет 5000 человек positive number вчт. положительное число precedence number вчт. приоритетный номер prime number простое число prime: number mover тех. первичный двигатель; перен. душа (какого-л.) дела; prime number мат. простое число priority number вчт. показатель приоритета number первоклассный, самый главный; problem No. 1 самая важная проблема; his number goes up он умирает, его песенка спета, ему крышка pseudorandom number псевдослучайное число random number случайное число rational number рациональное число real number вещественное число real number действительное число reciprocal number обратное число reference number номер для ссылок reference number номер документа reference number шифр документа registration number номерной знак registration number регистрационный номер round number округленное число number мат. сумма, число, цифра; science of numbers арифметика securities number номер ценной бумаги sequence number порядковый номер serial number номер в серии serial number порядковый номер serial number регистрационный номер serial number серийный номер serial: number последовательный; serial number порядковый номер share serial number серийный номер акции shelf number doc. регистрационный номер shelf number doc. учетный номер signed number вчт. число со знаком simple number однозначное число special service number специальный служебный номер statement number вчт. номер оператора statistical code number статистический кодовый номер suffix number нижний индекс tag number вчт. кодовая метка tariff number позиция в таможенном тарифе tax identification number регистрационный номер фирмы в налоговом управлении (США) telephone number номер телефона three-figure number трехзначное число three-figure number трехзначный номер title number титульный номер track number вчт. номер дорожки two-digit number двузначное число unit number вчт. номер устройства unlisted number номер телефона, не внесенный в телефонный справочник unobtainable number номер телефона, не помещенный в телефонный справочник и не сообщаемый справочной службой unsigned number вчт. число без знака user identification number вчт. шифр пользователя user number вчт. код пользователя vacant number незанятый абонентский номер vacant number свободный абонентский номер version number вчт. номер версии virtual block number вчт. виртуальный номер блока wave number волновое число

    English-Russian short dictionary > number

  • 122 Consciousness

       Consciousness is what makes the mind-body problem really intractable.
    ... Without consciousness the mind-body problem would be much less interesting. With consciousness it seems hopeless. (T. Nagel, 1979, pp. 165-166)
       This approach to understanding sensory qualia is both theoretically and empirically motivated... [;] it suggests an effective means of expressing the allegedly inexpressible. The "ineffable" pink of one's current visual sensation may be richly and precisely expressed as a 95Hz/80Hz/80Hz "chord" in the relevant triune cortical system. The "unconveyable" taste sensation produced by the fabled Australian health tonic Vegamite might be poignantly conveyed as a 85/80/90/15 "chord" in one's four channeled gustatory system.... And the "indescribably" olfactory sensation produced by a newly opened rose might be quite accurately described as a 95/35/10/80/60/55 "chord" in some six-dimensional space within one's olfactory bulb. (P. M. Churchland, 1989, p. 106)
       One of philosophy's favorite facets of mentality has received scant attention from cognitive psychologists, and that is consciousness itself: fullblown, introspective, inner-world phenomenological consciousness. In fact if one looks in the obvious places... one finds not so much a lack of interest as a deliberate and adroit avoidance of the issue. I think I know why. Consciousness appears to be the last bastion of occult properties, epiphenomena, and immeasurable subjective states-in short, the one area of mind best left to the philosophers, who are welcome to it. Let them make fools of themselves trying to corral the quicksilver of "phenomenology" into a respectable theory. (Dennett, 1978b, p. 149)
       When I am thinking about anything, my consciousness consists of a number of ideas.... But every idea can be resolved into elements... and these elements are sensations. (Titchener, 1910, p. 33)
       A Darwin machine now provides a framework for thinking about thought, indeed one that may be a reasonable first approximation to the actual brain machinery underlying thought. An intracerebral Darwin Machine need not try out one sequence at a time against memory; it may be able to try out dozens, if not hundreds, simultaneously, shape up new generations in milliseconds, and thus initiate insightful actions without overt trial and error. This massively parallel selection among stochastic sequences is more analogous to the ways of darwinian biology than to the "von Neumann" serial computer. Which is why I call it a Darwin Machine instead; it shapes up thoughts in milliseconds rather than millennia, and uses innocuous remembered environments rather than noxious real-life ones. It may well create the uniquely human aspect of our consciousness. (Calvin, 1990, pp. 261-262)
       To suppose the mind to exist in two different states, in the same moment, is a manifest absurdity. To the whole series of states of the mind, then, whatever the individual, momentary successive states may be, I give the name of our consciousness.... There are not sensations, thoughts, passions, and also consciousness, any more than there is quadruped or animal, as a separate being to be added to the wolves, tygers, elephants, and other living creatures.... The fallacy of conceiving consciousness to be something different from the feeling, which is said to be its object, has arisen, in a great measure, from the use of the personal pronoun I. (T. Brown, 1970, p. 336)
       The human capacity for speech is certainly unique. But the gulf between it and the behavior of animals no longer seems unbridgeable.... What does this leave us with, then, which is characteristically human?.... t resides in the human capacity for consciousness and self-consciousness. (Rose, 1976, p. 177)
       [Human consciousness] depends wholly on our seeing the outside world in such categories. And the problems of consciousness arise from putting reconstitution beside internalization, from our also being able to see ourselves as if we were objects in the outside world. That is in the very nature of language; it is impossible to have a symbolic system without it.... The Cartesian dualism between mind and body arises directly from this, and so do all the famous paradoxes, both in mathematics and in linguistics.... (Bronowski, 1978, pp. 38-39)
       It seems to me that there are at least four different viewpoints-or extremes of viewpoint-that one may reasonably hold on the matter [of computation and conscious thinking]:
       A. All thinking is computation; in particular, feelings of conscious awareness are evoked merely by the carrying out of appropriate computations.
       B. Awareness is a feature of the brain's physical action; and whereas any physical action can be simulated computationally, computational simulation cannot by itself evoke awareness.
       C. Appropriate physical action of the brain evokes awareness, but this physical action cannot even be properly simulated computationally.
       D. Awareness cannot be explained by physical, computational, or any other scientific terms. (Penrose, 1994, p. 12)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Consciousness

  • 123 Philosophy

       And what I believe to be more important here is that I find in myself an infinity of ideas of certain things which cannot be assumed to be pure nothingness, even though they may have perhaps no existence outside of my thought. These things are not figments of my imagination, even though it is within my power to think of them or not to think of them; on the contrary, they have their own true and immutable natures. Thus, for example, when I imagine a triangle, even though there may perhaps be no such figure anywhere in the world outside of my thought, nor ever have been, nevertheless the figure cannot help having a certain determinate nature... or essence, which is immutable and eternal, which I have not invented and which does not in any way depend upon my mind. (Descartes, 1951, p. 61)
       Let us console ourselves for not knowing the possible connections between a spider and the rings of Saturn, and continue to examine what is within our reach. (Voltaire, 1961, p. 144)
       As modern physics started with the Newtonian revolution, so modern philosophy starts with what one might call the Cartesian Catastrophe. The catastrophe consisted in the splitting up of the world into the realms of matter and mind, and the identification of "mind" with conscious thinking. The result of this identification was the shallow rationalism of l'esprit Cartesien, and an impoverishment of psychology which it took three centuries to remedy even in part. (Koestler, 1964, p. 148)
       It has been made of late a reproach against natural philosophy that it has struck out on a path of its own, and has separated itself more and more widely from the other sciences which are united by common philological and historical studies. The opposition has, in fact, been long apparent, and seems to me to have grown up mainly under the influence of the Hegelian philosophy, or, at any rate, to have been brought out into more distinct relief by that philosophy.... The sole object of Kant's "Critical Philosophy" was to test the sources and the authority of our knowledge, and to fix a definite scope and standard for the researches of philosophy, as compared with other sciences.... [But Hegel's] "Philosophy of Identity" was bolder. It started with the hypothesis that not only spiritual phenomena, but even the actual world-nature, that is, and man-were the result of an act of thought on the part of a creative mind, similar, it was supposed, in kind to the human mind.... The philosophers accused the scientific men of narrowness; the scientific men retorted that the philosophers were crazy. And so it came about that men of science began to lay some stress on the banishment of all philosophic influences from their work; while some of them, including men of the greatest acuteness, went so far as to condemn philosophy altogether, not merely as useless, but as mischievous dreaming. Thus, it must be confessed, not only were the illegitimate pretensions of the Hegelian system to subordinate to itself all other studies rejected, but no regard was paid to the rightful claims of philosophy, that is, the criticism of the sources of cognition, and the definition of the functions of the intellect. (Helmholz, quoted in Dampier, 1966, pp. 291-292)
       Philosophy remains true to its classical tradition by renouncing it. (Habermas, 1972, p. 317)
       I have not attempted... to put forward any grand view of the nature of philosophy; nor do I have any such grand view to put forth if I would. It will be obvious that I do not agree with those who see philosophy as the history of "howlers" and progress in philosophy as the debunking of howlers. It will also be obvious that I do not agree with those who see philosophy as the enterprise of putting forward a priori truths about the world.... I see philosophy as a field which has certain central questions, for example, the relation between thought and reality.... It seems obvious that in dealing with these questions philosophers have formulated rival research programs, that they have put forward general hypotheses, and that philosophers within each major research program have modified their hypotheses by trial and error, even if they sometimes refuse to admit that that is what they are doing. To that extent philosophy is a "science." To argue about whether philosophy is a science in any more serious sense seems to me to be hardly a useful occupation.... It does not seem to me important to decide whether science is philosophy or philosophy is science as long as one has a conception of both that makes both essential to a responsible view of the world and of man's place in it. (Putnam, 1975, p. xvii)
       What can philosophy contribute to solving the problem of the relation [of] mind to body? Twenty years ago, many English-speaking philosophers would have answered: "Nothing beyond an analysis of the various mental concepts." If we seek knowledge of things, they thought, it is to science that we must turn. Philosophy can only cast light upon our concepts of those things.
       This retreat from things to concepts was not undertaken lightly. Ever since the seventeenth century, the great intellectual fact of our culture has been the incredible expansion of knowledge both in the natural and in the rational sciences (mathematics, logic).
       The success of science created a crisis in philosophy. What was there for philosophy to do? Hume had already perceived the problem in some degree, and so surely did Kant, but it was not until the twentieth century, with the Vienna Circle and with Wittgenstein, that the difficulty began to weigh heavily. Wittgenstein took the view that philosophy could do no more than strive to undo the intellectual knots it itself had tied, so achieving intellectual release, and even a certain illumination, but no knowledge. A little later, and more optimistically, Ryle saw a positive, if reduced role, for philosophy in mapping the "logical geography" of our concepts: how they stood to each other and how they were to be analyzed....
       Since that time, however, philosophers in the "analytic" tradition have swung back from Wittgensteinian and even Rylean pessimism to a more traditional conception of the proper role and tasks of philosophy. Many analytic philosophers now would accept the view that the central task of philosophy is to give an account, or at least play a part in giving an account, of the most general nature of things and of man. (Armstrong, 1990, pp. 37-38)
       8) Philosophy's Evolving Engagement with Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science
       In the beginning, the nature of philosophy's engagement with artificial intelligence and cognitive science was clear enough. The new sciences of the mind were to provide the long-awaited vindication of the most potent dreams of naturalism and materialism. Mind would at last be located firmly within the natural order. We would see in detail how the most perplexing features of the mental realm could be supported by the operations of solely physical laws upon solely physical stuff. Mental causation (the power of, e.g., a belief to cause an action) would emerge as just another species of physical causation. Reasoning would be understood as a kind of automated theorem proving. And the key to both was to be the depiction of the brain as the implementation of multiple higher level programs whose task was to manipulate and transform symbols or representations: inner items with one foot in the physical (they were realized as brain states) and one in the mental (they were bearers of contents, and their physical gymnastics were cleverly designed to respect semantic relationships such as truth preservation). (A. Clark, 1996, p. 1)
       Socrates of Athens famously declared that "the unexamined life is not worth living," and his motto aptly explains the impulse to philosophize. Taking nothing for granted, philosophy probes and questions the fundamental presuppositions of every area of human inquiry.... [P]art of the job of the philosopher is to keep at a certain critical distance from current doctrines, whether in the sciences or the arts, and to examine instead how the various elements in our world-view clash, or fit together. Some philosophers have tried to incorporate the results of these inquiries into a grand synoptic view of the nature of reality and our human relationship to it. Others have mistrusted system-building, and seen their primary role as one of clarifications, or the removal of obstacles along the road to truth. But all have shared the Socratic vision of using the human intellect to challenge comfortable preconceptions, insisting that every aspect of human theory and practice be subjected to continuing critical scrutiny....
       Philosophy is, of course, part of a continuing tradition, and there is much to be gained from seeing how that tradition originated and developed. But the principal object of studying the materials in this book is not to pay homage to past genius, but to enrich one's understanding of central problems that are as pressing today as they have always been-problems about knowledge, truth and reality, the nature of the mind, the basis of right action, and the best way to live. These questions help to mark out the territory of philosophy as an academic discipline, but in a wider sense they define the human predicament itself; they will surely continue to be with us for as long as humanity endures. (Cottingham, 1996, pp. xxi-xxii)
       In his study of ancient Greek culture, The Birth of Tragedy, Nietzsche drew what would become a famous distinction, between the Dionysian spirit, the untamed spirit of art and creativity, and the Apollonian, that of reason and self-control. The story of Greek civilization, and all civilizations, Nietzsche implied, was the gradual victory of Apollonian man, with his desire for control over nature and himself, over Dionysian man, who survives only in myth, poetry, music, and drama. Socrates and Plato had attacked the illusions of art as unreal, and had overturned the delicate cultural balance by valuing only man's critical, rational, and controlling consciousness while denigrating his vital life instincts as irrational and base. The result of this division is "Alexandrian man," the civilized and accomplished Greek citizen of the later ancient world, who is "equipped with the greatest forces of knowledge" but in whom the wellsprings of creativity have dried up. (Herman, 1997, pp. 95-96)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Philosophy

  • 124 time

    n
    1) час, проміжок часу
    - acquisition time - actual airborne time - aero-tow glider flight time - arrival time - astronomical time - block-to-block time - braking time - check-in time - chock-to-chock time - clearance void time - coordinated universal time - departure time - down time - dual instruction time - duty time - engine ground test time - error-free running time - estimated elapsed time - estimated off-block time - estimated time of arrival - estimated time of checkpoint - estimated time of departure - expected approach time - fault time - flight time - flight block time - flight dual instruction time - flight duty time - flotation time - flyover time - full operating time - glider flight time - Greenwich mean time - ground operating time - gust formation time - instrument flight time - instrument ground time - instrument time - key down time - landing gear extension time - lead time - life time - local time - maintenance time - mean solar time - mean time between failures - Newtonian time - observation time - off time - on time - orbit phasing time - out-of-service time - partial operating time - partial rise time - pulse decay time - pulse rise time - recovery time - relay time - release time - repair time - rise time - scheduled departure time - service time - solo flight time - time between failures - time of arrival - time of coincidence - time of flight - time to failure - time to repair - total estimated elapsed time - traffic release time - transfer time - transit time - transponder dead time - trip time - true time - turnaround time - Zebra time

    English-Ukrainian dictionary of aviation terms > time

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