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1 Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani? (At the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice these words, which is, being interpreted, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Mk:15:34)
Религия: Элои! Элои! ламма савахфани?Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani? (At the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice these words, which is, being interpreted, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Mk:15:34)
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2 Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?
Религия: Боже Мой! Боже Мой! для чего Ты Меня оставил?, (At the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice these words, which is, being interpreted, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Mk:15:34) Элои! Элои! ламма савахфани?Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?
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3 snub
Adj1. चिपटा\snubहुआMy friends nose something snub from the front.--------N1. झिड़की/ड़ाँट/अपमानHis remarks in the T.V. interview are being interpreted as a deliberate snub to the president.--------V1. डपटना/झिड़कनाOur football players have consistantly snobbed the tournament because of the poor prize money. -
4 read
1. transitive verb,1) lesenread somebody something, read something to somebody — jemandem etwas vorlesen; see also academic.ru/73191/take">take 1. 31)
2) (show a reading of) anzeigen3) (interpret) deutenread somebody's hand — jemandem aus der Hand lesen
read somebody's mind or thoughts — jemandes Gedanken lesen
read something into something — etwas in etwas (Akk.) hineinlesen
4) (Brit. Univ.): (study) studieren2. intransitive verb,1) lesen2) (convey meaning) lautenthe contract reads as follows — der Vertrag hat folgenden Wortlaut
3) (affect reader) sich lesen3. noun1)have a quiet read — in Ruhe lesen
2) (Brit. coll.): (reading matter)4.be a good read — sich gut lesen
[red] adjectivewidely or deeply read — sehr belesen [Person]
the most widely read book/author — das meistgelesene Buch/der meistgelesene Autor
Phrasal Verbs:- read off- read out- read up* * *[red]past tense, past participle; = read* * *read1[ri:d]good/bad \read spannende/langweilige Lektüreto be a good \read sich akk gut lesen [lassen]II. vt<read, read>1. (understand written material)to \read sth avidly etw leidenschaftlich gern lesento \read sth voraciously etw geradezu verschlingento \read a map eine Karte lesen2. MUSto \read music Noten lesen3. (speak aloud)to \read sth aloud [or out loud] etw laut vorlesen4. (discern)to \read an emotion ein Gefühl erratento \read sb's face in jds Gesicht lesento \read sth in sb's face jdm etw vom Gesicht ablesen5. (interpret) interpretieren, deutenif I've \read the situation aright,... wenn ich die Situation richtig verstehe,...6. (substitute)▪ to \read sth for sth:on page 19, for Blitish, please \read British auf Seite 19 muss es statt Blitish British heißen7. (proof-read)▪ to \read sth etw Korrektur lesento \read a proof Korrektur lesen8. POL, LAWto \read a bill/measure eine Gesetzesvorlage/gesetzliche Verfügung lesen9. (inspect and record)▪ to \read sth etw ablesento \read a meter einen Zählerstand ablesen10. (show information)▪ to \read sth etw anzeigenthe thermometer is \reading 40°C in the shade das Thermometer zeigt 40°C im Schatten an▪ to \read sth chemistry, English, history etw studieren12. COMPUTto \read a card eine Karte [ein]lesento \read data Daten lesen\read/write head Lese-/Schreibkopf\read only nur zum Lesen\read-only memory Festwertspeicher m13. RADIO, TELECdo you \read me? — loud and clear können Sie mich verstehen? — laut und deutlichI don't \read you ich verstehe nicht, was du meinst14. (prophesy)to \read sb's palm jdm aus der Hand lesento \read the tea leaves aus dem Kaffeesatz lesento \read sth in the cards etw in den Karten lesen15.▶ to \read sb like a book in jdm lesen können wie in einem [offenen] Buch▶ \read my lips! hör [mal] ganz genau zu!▶ to \read sb's lips jdm von den Lippen lesen▶ to \read sb's mind [or thoughts] jds Gedanken lesenIII. vi<read, read>1. (understand written material) lesento \read avidly leidenschaftlich gern lesento \read voraciously Bücher geradezu verschlingen▪ to \read about [or of] sb/sth über jdn/etw lesento \read aloud [or out loud] [to sb] [jdm] laut vorlesen3. (create impression)4. (have wording) lautenthere was a sign \reading “No Smoking” auf einem Schild stand „Rauchen verboten“5. THEAT, FILM▪ to \read for sth etw studierento \read for the Bar Jura [o ÖSTERR Jus] studieren7. (be interpreted as)8.▶ to \read between the lines zwischen den Zeilen lesenread2[red]II. adj▶ to take sth as \read etw als selbstverständlich voraussetzenwe will take the minutes as \read wir setzen das Protokoll als bekannt voraus* * *I [riːd] vb: pret, ptp read [red]1. vt1) (ALSO COMPUT) lesen; (to sb) vorlesen (to +dat)I read him to sleep — ich las ihm vor, bis er einschlief
for "meet" read "met" — anstelle or an Stelle von "meet" soll "met" stehen
to read sb's thoughts/mind — jds Gedanken lesen
to read the tea leaves —
3) (Brit UNIV form = study) studieren4) thermometer, barometer etc sehen auf (+acc), ablesenthe thermometer reads 37° — das Thermometer steht auf or zeigt 37°
do you read me? (Telec) — können Sie mich verstehen?; (fig) haben Sie mich verstanden?
2. vito +dat)she reads well — sie liest gut; (learner, beginner) sie kann schon gut lesen
will you read to me, Mummy? — Mutti, liest du mir etwas vor?
2)(= convey impression when read)
this paragraph reads/doesn't read well — dieser Abschnitt liest sich gut/nicht gutthis reads like an official report/a translation — das klingt wie ein offizieller Bericht/eine Übersetzung
that's how it reads to me — so verstehe ich das
3) (= have wording) lautenthe letter reads as follows — der Brief geht so or lautet folgendermaßen
4) (Brit UNIV form= study)
to read for an examination — sich auf eine Prüfung vorbereitenSee:→ bar3. nII [red] pret, ptp of read Iadjhe is well/not very well read — er ist sehr/wenig belesen
* * *read1 [riːd]A sa) Lesen n:can I have a read in your paper? kann ich mal in deine Zeitung schauen?;give sth a careful read etwas sorgfältig durchlesenb) Lektüre f:it is a good read es liest sich gutB v/t prät und pperf read [red]1. a) allg lesen:for “Jean” read “John” statt „Jean“ lies „John“;take sth as read etwas als selbstverständlich voraussetzen;we can take it as read that … wir können davon ausgehen, dass …;d) einen Text Korrektur lesene) eine Vorlesung, einen Vortrag haltenf) eine Erklärung etc verlesen:read sth into etwas in einen Text hineinlesen;b) etwas nachlesen2. Funkverkehr: verstehen:do you read me?a) können Sie mich verstehen?,b) fig haben Sie mich verstanden?the bill was read for the third time die Gesetzesvorlage wurde in dritter Lesung behandeltread music Noten lesen6. ein Rätsel lösen7. jemandes Charakter etc durchschauen:read sb like a book in jemandem lesen wie in einem Buch;read sb’s face in jemandes Gesicht lesen; → thought1 18. einen Satz etc auslegen, auffassen, deuten, verstehen9. a) (an)zeigen:the thermometer reads 20°10. COMPUT lesen, abfühlen:read in einlesen, -geben;read out auslesen, -geben ( → B 1)11. besonders Br studieren, hören: → law1 5C v/i1. lesen:he has no time to read er hat keine Zeit zum Lesen;2. (vor)lesen:read to sb jemandem vorlesen ( from aus)3. eine (Vor)Lesung oder einen Vortrag halten5. sich gut etc lesen (lassen):it reads like a translation es liest sich oder klingt wie eine Übersetzung6. lauten:7. sich auslegen lassen:read2 [red]A prät und pperf von read1B adj1. gelesen:the most-read book das meistgelesene Buch* * *1. transitive verb,1) lesenread somebody something, read something to somebody — jemandem etwas vorlesen; see also take 1. 31)
2) (show a reading of) anzeigen3) (interpret) deutenread somebody's mind or thoughts — jemandes Gedanken lesen
read something into something — etwas in etwas (Akk.) hineinlesen
4) (Brit. Univ.): (study) studieren2. intransitive verb,1) lesen2) (convey meaning) lauten3) (affect reader) sich lesen3. noun1)2) (Brit. coll.): (reading matter)4.[red] adjectivewidely or deeply read — sehr belesen [Person]
the most widely read book/author — das meistgelesene Buch/der meistgelesene Autor
Phrasal Verbs:- read off- read out- read up* * *p.p.gelesen p.p. v.(§ p.,p.p.: read)= eingeben v.einlesen v.lesen v.(§ p.,pp.: las, gelesen) -
5 HAPPY
valin (LT1:272 also gives valimo, but adjectives ending in -o do not occur in LotR-style Quenya), HAPPINESS vald- (so in LT1:272; nom. sg. must be either *val or *valdë) (blessedness) It is highly questionable whether these words from early material quoted in LT1:272 are conceptually "valid" in LotR-style Quenya: Originally, they were meant to be related to the noun Valar, the Gods being termed the "Happy Ones", but Tolkien later re-interpreted Valar as meaning the "Powers". For "happiness" it may be better to use the noun alassë "joy", and for "happy" or "joyful, joyous" many writers have used the neologism *alassëa. -
6 STAR
elen (normal pl eleni, but occasionally †eldi in verse; allative elenna and pl ablative elenillor are attested), †él (pl. éli is mentioned), tinwë (properly = sparkle), ílë. (Note: in Etym elen is said to be poetic, but Tolkien later concluded that elen was "the normal word for a star on the actual firmanent", the poetic word being él instead. According to MR:388, a tinwë was one of the "apparent stars" on Varda's simulacrum covering Valinor, also called nillë or "silver glint". Etym mentions the words ellen and elena without glossing them, but according to Silm:431 elena is an adjective meaning "of the stars".) TWINKLING STAR tingilya, tingilindë, HAVING MANY STARS lintitinwë; STARLIKE elvëa (pl. elvië is attested); STARWARDS elenna (Elenna or Elennanórë, "the land named Starwards", a name of Númenor); STARLIGHT silmë (light of Silpion); STARCROWNED, CROWNED WITH STARS (a name of Taniquetil) Elerrína (so in Silm:42; Etym has Elerína); STAR-QUEEN (=Varda), STARLIT DUSK, STARRY TWILIGHT tindómë; FLASHING OR [?STARRY] LIGHT élë See also *STELLAR. The word Tintánië is glossed STARMAKER as another title of Varda, but it is also interpreted as an abstract STARMAKING. –EL, Silm:313, MC:222 cf. 215, TIN, WJ:362, UT:317, LotR:1157, LT1:269, MC:223, Silm:42, DOMO, Silm:438, VT45:12, TAN/VT46:17 -
7 sign
sign [saɪn]signe ⇒ 1 (a), 1 (b), 1 (e)-(g) symbole ⇒ 1 (a) geste ⇒ 1 (b) signal ⇒ 1 (c) panneau ⇒ 1 (d) écriteau ⇒ 1 (d) enseigne ⇒ 1 (d) signer ⇒ 2 (a), 3 (a) engager ⇒ 2 (b) signer un contrat ⇒ 3 (b)1 noun∎ this sign means "real leather" ce symbole signifie "cuir véritable";∎ plus/minus sign signe m plus/moins(b) (gesture, motion) signe m;∎ to make a sign to sb faire signe à qn;∎ to make a rude sign faire un geste grossier;∎ she made a sign for me to enter elle m'a fait signe d'entrer;∎ the chief made signs for me to follow him le chef m'a fait signe de le suivre;∎ to make the sign of the cross faire le signe de croix;∎ wait until the policeman gives the sign to cross attendez que le policier vous fasse signe de traverser;∎ the victory sign le signe de la victoire(c) (arranged signal) signal m;∎ a lighted lamp in the window is the sign that it's safe une lampe allumée à la fenêtre signifie qu'il n'y a pas de danger;∎ when I give the sign, run à mon signal, courez(d) (written notice → gen) panneau m; (→ smaller) écriteau m; (→ on shop, bar, cinema etc) enseigne f;∎ the signs are all in Arabic tous les panneaux sont en arabe;∎ follow the signs for Manchester suivre les panneaux indiquant Manchester;∎ I didn't see the stop sign je n'ai pas vu le stop;∎ traffic signs panneaux mpl de signalisation;∎ a 'for sale' sign un écriteau 'à vendre'∎ his speech was interpreted as a sign of goodwill on a interprété son discours comme un signe de bonne volonté;∎ as a sign of respect en témoignage ou en signe de respect;∎ they wear red as a sign of mourning ils portent le rouge en signe de deuil;∎ a distended belly is a sign of malnutrition un ventre dilaté est un signe de sous-alimentation;∎ a red sunset is a sign of fair weather un coucher de soleil rouge est signe qu'il fera beau;∎ it's a sign of the times c'est un signe des temps;∎ it's a good sign if he's making jokes c'est bon signe s'il fait des plaisanteries;∎ at the first sign of trouble, he goes to pieces au premier petit problème, il craque;∎ it's a sure sign that… à n'en pas douter, c'est le signe que…+ indicative;∎ were there any signs of a struggle? y avait-il des traces de lutte?;∎ all the signs are that the economy is improving tout laisse à penser que l'économie s'améliore;∎ the room showed signs of having been recently occupied il était clair que la pièce avait récemment été occupée;∎ there's no sign of her changing her mind rien n'indique qu'elle va changer d'avis;∎ there's no sign of the file anywhere on ne trouve trace du dossier nulle part;∎ he gave no sign of having heard me il n'a pas eu l'air de m'avoir entendu;∎ is there any sign of Amy yet? - not a sign est-ce qu'on a eu des nouvelles de Amy? - pas la moindre nouvelle;∎ is there any sign of the missing child? est-ce qu'il y a une trace de l'enfant disparu?;∎ since then, he's given no sign of life depuis lors, il n'a pas donné signe de vie;∎ there is little sign of progress in the negotiations les négociations ne semblent pas avancer∎ what sign are you? de quel signe êtes-vous?∎ a sign from God un signe de Dieu(a) (document, book) signer;∎ sign your name here signez ici;∎ here are the letters to be signed voici les lettres à signer;∎ a signed Picasso lithograph une lithographie signée par Picasso;∎ he gave me a signed photo of himself il m'a donné une photo dédicacée;∎ American do you want to sign this to your room? je le mets sur votre note?;∎ she signs herself A.M. Hall elle signe A.M. Hall;∎ to sign a deal passer un marché;∎ the deal will be signed and sealed tomorrow l'affaire sera définitivement conclue demain;∎ Law signed, sealed and delivered in the presence of… fait et signé en présence de…;∎ figurative you're signing your own death warrant vous signez votre arrêt de mort(b) (footballer, musician, band) engager;∎ he's been signed for next season il a été engagé pour la saison prochaine(c) (provide with signs) signaliser;∎ the museum is not very well signed la signalisation du musée n'est pas très bonne∎ to sign assent faire signe que oui;∎ to sign sb to do sth faire signe à qn de faire qch(a) (write name) signer;∎ he signed with an X il a signé d'une croix;∎ to sign on the dotted line signer à l'endroit indiqué; figurative s'engager(b) (footballer, musician, band) signer un contrat;∎ he signed for United il a signé avec United∎ to sign to sb to do sth faire signe à qn de faire qch(d) (know sign language) connaître la langue des signes; (use sign language) communiquer en langue des signes ou par signes;∎ they were signing to each other ils se parlaient par signes►► sign language (UNCOUNT) langue f des signes;∎ to speak in sign language parler par signes;∎ using sign language, he managed to ask for food (en s'exprimant) par signes, il s'est débrouillé pour demander à manger;∎ I felt I was signing away my freedom j'avais l'impression qu'en signant je renonçais à ma liberté;∎ you're signing your life away c'est comme si tu signais ton arrêt de mort∎ to sign for a delivery/a registered letter signer un bon de livraison/le récépissé d'une lettre recommandée;∎ the files have to be signed for il faut signer pour retirer les dossiers∎ she's signed for another series elle s'est engagée à faire un autre feuilleton➲ sign in∎ I'm a member, so I can sign you in je suis membre, donc je peux vous faire entrer;∎ guests must be signed in les visiteurs doivent se faire inscrire dès leur arrivée(b) (file, book) rendre, retourner∎ it's time to sign off for today il est l'heure de nous quitter pour aujourd'hui∎ I'll sign off now je vais conclure ici➲ sign on(a) (register as unemployed) s'inscrire au chômage;∎ you have to sign on every two weeks il faut pointer (au chômage) toutes les deux semaines∎ she signed on for an evening class elle s'est inscrite à des cours du soir➲ sign out∎ the keys are signed out to Mr Hill c'est M. Hill qui a signé pour retirer les clés(b) (hospital patient) autoriser le départ de;∎ he signed himself out il est parti sous sa propre responsabilitétransférer;∎ she signed the property over to her son elle a transféré la propriété au nom de son fils;∎ the house is being signed over to its new owners tomorrow les nouveaux propriétaires entrent en possession de la maison demain➲ sign up(b) (student, participant) inscrire∎ he signed up as a crew member il s'est fait embaucher comme membre d'équipage∎ to sign up for the Marines s'engager dans les marines∎ she signed up for an evening class elle s'est inscrite à des cours du soir -
8 Curr, John
[br]b. 1756 Kyo, near Lanchester, or in Greenside, near Ryton-on-Tyne, Durham, Englandd. 27 January 1823 Sheffield, England[br]English coal-mine manager and engineer, inventor of flanged, cast-iron plate rails.[br]The son of a "coal viewer", Curr was brought up in the West Durham colliery district. In 1777 he went to the Duke of Norfolk's collieries at Sheffield, where in 1880 he was appointed Superintendent. There coal was conveyed underground in baskets on sledges: Curr replaced the wicker sledges with wheeled corves, i.e. small four-wheeled wooden wagons, running on "rail-roads" with cast-iron rails and hauled from the coal-face to the shaft bottom by horses. The rails employed hitherto had usually consisted of plates of iron, the flange being on the wheels of the wagon. Curr's new design involved flanges on the rails which guided the vehicles, the wheels of which were unflanged and could run on any hard surface. He appears to have left no precise record of the date that he did this, and surviving records have been interpreted as implying various dates between 1776 and 1787. In 1787 John Buddle paid tribute to the efficiency of the rails of Curr's type, which were first used for surface transport by Joseph Butler in 1788 at his iron furnace at Wingerworth near Chesterfield: their use was then promoted widely by Benjamin Outram, and they were adopted in many other English mines. They proved serviceable until the advent of locomotives demanded different rails.In 1788 Curr also developed a system for drawing a full corve up a mine shaft while lowering an empty one, with guides to separate them. At the surface the corves were automatically emptied by tipplers. Four years later he was awarded a patent for using double ropes for lifting heavier loads. As the weight of the rope itself became a considerable problem with the increasing depth of the shafts, Curr invented the flat hemp rope, patented in 1798, which consisted of several small round ropes stitched together and lapped upon itself in winding. It acted as a counterbalance and led to a reduction in the time and cost of hoisting: at the beginning of a run the loaded rope began to coil upon a small diameter, gradually increasing, while the unloaded rope began to coil off a large diameter, gradually decreasing.Curr's book The Coal Viewer (1797) is the earliest-known engineering work on railway track and it also contains the most elaborate description of a Newcomen pumping engine, at the highest state of its development. He became an acknowledged expert on construction of Newcomen-type atmospheric engines, and in 1792 he established a foundry to make parts for railways and engines.Because of the poor financial results of the Duke of Norfolk's collieries at the end of the century, Curr was dismissed in 1801 despite numerous inventions and improvements which he had introduced. After his dismissal, six more of his patents were concerned with rope-making: the one he gained in 1813 referred to the application of flat ropes to horse-gins and perpendicular drum-shafts of steam engines. Curr also introduced the use of inclined planes, where a descending train of full corves pulled up an empty one, and he was one of the pioneers employing fixed steam engines for hauling. He may have resided in France for some time before his death.[br]Bibliography1788. British patent no. 1,660 (guides in mine shafts).1789. An Account of tin Improved Method of Drawing Coals and Extracting Ores, etc., from Mines, Newcastle upon Tyne.1797. The Coal Viewer and Engine Builder's Practical Companion; reprinted with five plates and an introduction by Charles E.Lee, 1970, London: Frank Cass, and New York: Augustus M.Kelley.1798. British patent no. 2,270 (flat hemp ropes).Further ReadingF.Bland, 1930–1, "John Curr, originator of iron tram roads", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 11:121–30.R.A.Mott, 1969, Tramroads of the eighteenth century and their originator: John Curr', Transactions of the Newcomen Society 42:1–23 (includes corrections to Fred Bland's earlier paper).Charles E.Lee, 1970, introduction to John Curr, The Coal Viewer and Engine Builder's Practical Companion, London: Frank Cass, pp. 1–4; orig. pub. 1797, Sheffield (contains the most comprehensive biographical information).R.Galloway, 1898, Annals of Coalmining, Vol. I, London; reprinted 1971, London (provides a detailed account of Curr's technological alterations).WK / PJGR -
9 Animal Intelligence
We can... distinguish sharply between the kind of behavior which from the very beginning arises out of a consideration of the structure of a situation, and one that does not. Only in the former case do we speak of insight, and only that behavior of animals definitely appears to us intelligent which takes account from the beginning of the lay of the land, and proceeds to deal with it in a single, continuous, and definite course. Hence follows this criterion of insight: the appearance of a complete solution with reference to the whole lay- out of the field. (KoЁhler, 1927, pp. 169-170)Signs, in [Edward] Tolman's theory, occasion in the rat realization, or cognition, or judgment, or hypotheses, or abstraction, but they do not occasion action. In his concern with what goes on in the rat's mind, Tolman has neglected to predict what the rat will do. So far as the theory is concerned the rat is left buried in thought: if he gets to the food-box at the end that is his concern, not the concern of the theory. (Guthrie, 1972, p. 172)3) A New Insight Consists of a Recombination of Pre-existent Mediating PropertiesThe insightful act is an excellent example of something that is not learned, but still depends on learning. It is not learned, since it can be adequately performed on its first occurrence; it is not perfected through practice in the first place, but appears all at once in recognizable form (further practice, however, may still improve it). On the other hand, the situation must not be completely strange; the animal must have had prior experience with the component parts of the situation, or with other situations that have some similarity to it.... All our evidence thus points to the conclusion that a new insight consists of a recombination of pre existent mediating processes, not the sudden appearance of a wholly new process. (Hebb, 1958, pp. 204-205)In Morgan's own words, the principle is, "In no case may we interpret an action as the outcome of the exercise of a higher psychical faculty, if it can be interpreted as the outcome of the exercise of one which stands lower in the psychological scale." Behaviorists universally adopted this idea as their own, interpreting it as meaning that crediting consciousness to animals can't be justified if the animal's behavior can be explained in any other way, because consciousness is certainly a "higher psychical faculty." Actually, their interpretation is wrong, since Morgan was perfectly happy with the idea of animal consciousness: he even gives examples of it directly taken from dog behavior. Thus in The Limits of Animal Intelligence, he describes a dog returning from a walk "tired" and "hungry" and going down into the kitchen and "looking up wistfully" at the cook. Says Morgan about this, "I, for one, would not feel disposed to question that he has in his mind's eye a more or less definite idea of a bone."Morgan's Canon really applies to situations where the level of intelligence credited to an animal's behavior goes well beyond what is really needed for simple and sensible explanation. Thus application of Morgan's Canon would prevent us from presuming that, when a dog finds its way home after being lost for a day, it must have the ability to read a map, or that, if a dog always begins to act hungry and pace around the kitchen at 6 P.M. and is always fed at 6:30 P.M., this must indicate that it has learned how to tell time. These conclusions involve levels of intelligence that are simply not needed to explain the behaviors. (Coren, 1994, pp. 72-73)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Animal Intelligence
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10 Insight
In October 1838 that is, fifteen months after I had begun my systematic enquiry, I happened to read for amusement "Malthus on Population," and being well prepared to appreciate the struggle for existence which everywhere goes on from long-continued observation of the habits of animals and plants, it at once struck me that under these circumstances favorable variations would tend to be preserved, and unfavorable ones to be destroyed. (Darwin, 1911, p. 68)The insight of the chimpanzee shows itself to be principally determined by his optical apprehension of the situation. (KoЁhler, 1925, p. 267)Then I turned my attention to the study of some arithmetical questions apparently without much success and without a suspicion of any connection with my preceding researches. Disgusted with my failure, I went to spend a few days at the seaside, and thought of something else. One morning, walking on the bluff, the idea came to me, with just the same characteristics of brevity, suddenness and immediate certainty, that the arithmetic transformations of indeterminate ternary quadratic forms were identical with those of non-Euclidean geometry. (Poincareґ, 1929, p. 388)The direct awareness of determination... may also be called insight. When I once used this expression in a description of the intelligent behavior of apes, an unfortunate misunderstanding was, it seems, not entirely prevented.... Apparently, some readers interpreted this formulation as though it referred to a mysterious mental agent or faculty which was made responsible for the apes' behavior. Actually, nothing of this sort was intended... the concept is used in a strictly descriptive fashion. (KoЁhler, 1947, pp. 341-342)The task must be neither so easy that the animal solves the problem at once, thus not allowing one to analyze the solution; nor so hard that the animal fails to solve it except by rote learning in a long series of trials. With a problem of such borderline difficulty, the solution may appear out of a blue sky. There is a period first of fruitless effort in one direction, or perhaps a series of attempted solutions. Then suddenly there is a complete change in the direction of effort, and a cleancut solution of the task. This then is the first criterion of the occurrence of insight. The behavior cannot be described as a gradual accretion of learning; it is evident that something has happened in the animal at the moment of solution. (What happens is another matter.) (Hebb, 1949, p. 160)If the subject had not spontaneously solved the problem [of how to catch hold at the same time of two strings hung from the ceiling so wide apart that he or she could only get hold of one at a time, when the only available tool was a pair of pliers, by tying the pliers to one string and setting it into pendular motion] within ten minutes, Maier supplied him with a hint; he would "accidentally" brush against one of the strings, causing it to swing gently. Of those who solved the problem after this hint, the average interval between hint and solution was only forty-two seconds.... Most of those subjects who solved the problem immediately after the hint did so without any realization that they had been given one. The "idea" of making a pendulum with pliers seemed to arise spontaneously. (Osgood, 1960, p. 633)There seems to be very little reason to believe that solutions to novel problems come about in flashes of insight, independently of past experience.... People create solutions to new problems by starting with what they know and later modifying it to meet the specific problem at hand. (Weisberg, 1986, p. 50)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Insight
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