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human+science

  • 121 organización

    f.
    1 organization, hierarchy, array, structure.
    2 institution, entity, organism, foundation.
    3 organizing.
    * * *
    1 organization
    * * *
    noun f.
    * * *
    OPEP
    * * *
    femenino organization

    una organización sindicala labor (AmE) o (BrE) trade union

    * * *
    femenino organization

    una organización sindicala labor (AmE) o (BrE) trade union

    * * *
    organización1
    1 = establishment, organisation [organization, -USA], institution.

    Ex: Since BC adheres closely to the educational and scientific consensus, BC found most favour with libraries in educational establishments.

    Ex: The author of a document is the person or organisation responsible for its creation.
    Ex: The distinction between 'societies' and 'institutions' lies at the heart of the code.
    * Comité de las Organizaciones = Committee of Agricultural Producer Organizations (COPA).
    * comportamiento de las organizaciones = organisational behaviour.
    * comunicación dentro de una organización = organisational communication.
    * conducta de las organizaciones = organisational behaviour.
    * OPEC, la [Organización de Países Exportadores de Petróleo] = OPEC [Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries].
    * organigrama de una organización = organisation chart.
    * organización afiliada = sister organisation.
    * organización agraria = agricultural organisation.
    * organización a la que pertenece = parent organisation.
    * organización benéfica = aid agency, aid organisation.
    * organización cívica = community organisation.
    * Organización Cultural, Científica y Educativa de las Naciones Unidas (UNESCO = UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization).
    * organización de voluntariado = voluntary body, voluntary agency, voluntary organisation.
    * organización empresarial = business organisation.
    * organización intergubernamental (OIG) = intergovernmental organisation (IGO).
    * organización internacional = international organisation.
    * Organización Internacional del Trabajo (OIT) = International Labour Organisation (ILO).
    * Organización Internacional de Normalización = ISO.
    * organización mafiosa = crime syndicate.
    * organización miembro de una asociación = partner organisation.
    * Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) = World Health Organisation (WHO).
    * Organización Mundial para el Comercio = World Trade Organization (WTO).
    * Organización para la Alimentación y la Agricultura (FAO) = FAO (Food and Agriculture Organisation).
    * Organización para la Cooperación y el Desarrollo Económico (OCDE) = Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
    * organización que actúa en representación de otras = umbrella organisation.
    * OTAN (Organización del Tratado del Atlántico Norte) = NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation).
    * una pieza más en la organización = a cog in the wheel, a cog in the machine.
    * uno más de tantos en la organización = a cog in the wheel, a cog in the machine.

    organización2
    2 = logistics, map, mapping, organisational setting, organising [organizing, -USA], setup [set-up], organisation [organization, -USA], work organisation, staging, set-up, structuring, implementation.

    Ex: Donald P Hammer, Executive Secretary of LITA, and Dorothy Butler, the Division's Administrative Secretary, handled all of the administrative details, arrangements, and logistics.

    Ex: A detailed study of a co-citation map, its core documents' citation patterns and the related journal structures, is presented.
    Ex: Recently, proponents of co-citation cluster analysis have claimed that in principle their methodology makes possible the mapping of science using the data in the Science Citation Index.
    Ex: Many students, after working with cases, have testified to the help they received in developing a clearer concept of the dynamics of human relationships in organizational settings.
    Ex: No course on management would be complete without articulating the principles of management (i.e., planning, organizing, staffing, directing, controlling).
    Ex: 'You know,' she had said amiably, 'there might be a better job for you here once things get rolling with this new regional setup'.
    Ex: This article discusses the history of the organisation of readers' camps for students of secondary schools in Slovakia which dates back to 1979.
    Ex: Quality of Work Life (QWL) can be defined as 'the degree to which members of a work organisation are able to satisfy important personal needs through their experiences in the organisation'.
    Ex: The author describes the success of a library in staging a series of music concerts as a public relations exercise.
    Ex: Areas of particular concern are: equipment set-up and use; helping develop search strategies, logon/logoff procedures; and emergency assistance when things go wrong.
    Ex: There are also suggestions for rules for structuring corporate body names.
    Ex: This software is important to the further implementation of the record format, especially in developing countries.
    * conocimientos básicos de búsqueda, recuperación y organización de la informa = information literacy.
    * desorganización = disorganisation [disorganization, -USA].
    * metaorganización = meta-organisation.
    * modelo de organización = organisational scheme.
    * organización bibliográfica = bibliographic organisation.
    * organización bibliotecaria = library organisation.
    * organización del trabajo = workflow [work flow], working arrangement.
    * organización de materias = subject organisation.
    * organización horizontal = flat organisation, horizontal organisation.
    * organización interna = organisational structure.
    * organización laboral = job structuring.
    * reorganización = respacing.
    * una organización de = a pattern of.

    * * *
    1 (acción) organization
    2 (agrupación, institución) organization
    una organización ecologista an ecological organization
    una organización sindical a labor ( AmE) o ( BrE) trade union
    organización de bienestar social welfare organization
    Compuestos:
    Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
    World Intellectual Property Organization
    World Trade Organization
    * * *

     

    organización sustantivo femenino
    organization
    organización sustantivo femenino
    1 organization: la organización del concierto fue un desastre, the concert was disastrously organized
    2 (asociación) organization
    Organización No Gubernamental (ONG), Non-Governmental Organization (NGO)
    ' organización' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    adherirse
    - aparato
    - desactivar
    - endosar
    - entrar
    - escala
    - F.A.O.
    - INTERPOL
    - lucro
    - mafiosa
    - mafioso
    - ONG
    - OTAN
    - OUA
    - sede
    - seno
    - terrorista
    - adhesión
    - articulación
    - barón
    - boda
    - caritativo
    - correr
    - cuadro
    - cúspide
    - depurar
    - disolución
    - disolver
    - emplear
    - entidad
    - funcionario
    - infiltrar
    - ingresar
    - ingreso
    - integrar
    - jerarquía
    - marina
    - miembro
    - obra
    - ONCE
    - ONU
    - permanencia
    - pertenencia
    - programación
    - radio
    - remodelación
    - remodelar
    - renovación
    - renovar
    - representar
    English:
    base
    - charitable
    - charity
    - disband
    - entrance
    - Interpol
    - join
    - lead
    - motto
    - NATO
    - NGO
    - nonprofit
    - organization
    - outfit
    - patron
    - picketing
    - PLO
    - policy
    - reshape
    - service
    - set-up
    - shake up
    - show
    - start
    - superintendent
    - system
    - top-heavy
    - trust
    - umbrella organisation
    - voluntary organization
    - watchdog
    - credit
    - in-house
    - insider
    - second
    - syndicate
    - united
    * * *
    1. [orden] organization
    2. [organismo] organization;
    las organizaciones sindicales the trade o US labor unions
    organización de ayuda humanitaria humanitarian aid organization;
    organización benéfica charity, charitable organization;
    organización de consumidores consumer organization;
    Organización para la Cooperación y el Desarrollo Económico Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development;
    Organización de Estados Americanos Organization of American States;
    Organización Internacional de Normalización International Standards Organization;
    Organización Internacional del Trabajo International Labour Organization;
    Organización para la Liberación de Palestina Palestine Liberation Organization;
    Organización Mundial del Comercio World Trade Organization;
    Organización Mundial de la Salud World Health Organization;
    Organización de las Naciones Unidas United Nations Organization;
    organización no gubernamental non-governmental organization;
    Organización de Países Exportadores de Petróleo Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries;
    Organización para la Seguridad y Cooperación en Europa Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe;
    Organización para la Unidad Africana Organization of African Unity;
    Organización del Tratado del Atlántico Norte North Atlantic Treaty Organization
    * * *
    f organization
    * * *
    organización nf, pl - ciones : organization
    * * *
    organización n organization

    Spanish-English dictionary > organización

  • 122 तत्त्वम् _tattvam

    तत्त्वम् (Sometimes written as तत्वम्)
    1 True state or condition, fact; वयं तत्त्वान्वेषान्मधुकर हतास्त्वं खलु कृती Ś.1. 23.
    -2 Truth, reality; न तु मामभिजानन्ति तत्त्वेनातश्च्यवन्ति ते Bg.9.24.
    -3 True or essential nature; संन्यासस्य महाबाहो तत्त्वमिच्छामि वेदितुम् Bg.18.1;3.28; Ms.1.3;3.96; 5.42.
    -4 The real nature of the human soul or the material world as being identical with the Supreme Spirit pervading the universe.
    -5 A true or first principle.
    -6 An element, a primary substance; तत्त्वान्य- बुद्धाः प्रतनूनि येन, ध्यानं नृपस्तच्छिवमित्यवादीत् Bk.1.18.
    -7 The mind.
    -8 Sum and substance.
    -9 Slow time in music.
    -1 An element or elementary property.
    -11 The Supreme Being.
    -12 A kind of dance.
    -13 The three qualities or constituents of every thing in nature (सत्त्व, रजस् and तमस्).
    -14 The body; तत्त्वाभेदेन यच्छास्त्रं तत्कार्यं नान्यथाविधम् Mb.12.267.9.
    -Comp. -अभियोगः a posi- tive charge or declaration.
    -अभ्यासः The study of the reality; एवं तत्त्वाभ्यासात् Sān. K.64.
    -अर्थः truth, reality, the exact truth, real nature.
    -ज्ञ, -विद् a.
    1 a philoso- pher.
    -2 knowing the true nature of Brahman.
    -3 knowing the true nature of anything; Ms.12.12.
    -4 acquainted with the true principles of science. (
    -ज्ञः) a Brāmaṇa.
    -ज्ञानम् 1 knowledge of the truth.
    -2 a thorough knowledge of the principles of a science.
    -3 philosophy.
    -दर्शिन्, दृश् perceiving truth.
    -निकषग्रावन् m. the touch-stone of truth.
    -न्यासः N. of a ceremony performed in honour of Viṣṇu consisting in the application of mystical letters or other marks to different parts of the body while certain prayers are repeated.
    -भावः true being or nature; Kaṭh.6.
    -शुद्धिः ascertainment of truth; Ks.75.194.
    -संख्यानम् Sāṅkhya philosophy; तत्त्वसंख्यानविज्ञप्त्यै जातं विद्वानजः स्वराट् Bhāg.3.24.1.

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > तत्त्वम् _tattvam

  • 123 ज्योतिस्


    jyótis
    n. light (of the sun, dawn, fire, lightning, etc.; alsoᅠ pl.),

    brightness (of the sky) RV. etc. (trī́ṇijyótīṉshi, light appearing in the 3 worlds, viz. on earth, in the intermediate region, andᅠ in the sky orᅠ heaven <the last being called uttamá VS. XX AV. XVIII ;
    orᅠ úttara I, 9, l ;
    orᅠ tṛitī́ya RV. X, 56, 1 > VS. VIII, 36 AV. IX, 5, 8 MBh. III ;
    alsoᅠ personifled as « fire» on earth, « ether orᅠ air» in the intermediate region, andᅠ « sun» in the sky ṠBr. XI, 5, 8, 2 SāṇkhṠr. XVI, 21, 2, etc.. ;
    « fire, sun andᅠ moon» Bhag. XV, 12);
    fire, flash of lightning Megh. Ṡak. ;
    moonlight RV. III, 34, 4 AV. IV, 18, 1 ;
    (pl.) ṠBr. X and R. I, 35, 16 ;
    eye-light RV. I, 117, 17 ;
    the eye MBh. I, 6853 Ragh. BhP. IX ;
    du. sun andᅠ moon Gobh. III, 3, 18 Ṡatr. I, 28 ;
    pl. the heavenly bodies, planets andᅠ stars Mn. Bhag. etc. - tishāmayana n. course orᅠ movements of the heavenly bodies, science of those movements <= - tisha> Lāṭy. IV, 8, 1 Ṡiksh. ;
    sg. the light of heaven, celestial world RV. VS. AV. ṠBr. XIV, 7, 2 ;
    light as the divine principle of life orᅠ source of intelligence, intelligence RV. VI, 9, 6 VS. XXIV, 3 AV. XVI Bhag. ;
    ( paurushaj- « human intelligence») Sarvad. ;
    (paraj'ñpaurushaj, « highest light orᅠ truth») RāmatUp. and Sarvad. ;
    light as the type of freedom orᅠ bliss orᅠ victory (cf. φάος, φῶς andᅠ Lat. lux)
    RV. AV. VS. ṠBr. XIV Suṡr. ;
    N. of several Ekâhas TS. VII ṠBr. XII. f. etc.. ;
    of certain formularies containing the word jyôtis Lāṭy. I, 8, 13 ;
    a metre of 32 short andᅠ 16 long syllables;
    = - tisha, science of the movements of the heavenly bodies L. ;
    a mystical N. for the letter r RāmatUp. ;
    m. fire L. ;
    the sun L. ;
    Trigonella foenum graecum L. ;
    N. of a Marut Hariv. 11545 ;
    of a son of Manu Svārocisha, 429;
    of a Prajā-pati VP. ;
    cf. dákshiṇā-, ṡukrá-, sa-, híraṇya-, etc.
    - ज्योतिस्तत्त्व
    - ज्योतिस्सात्कृ

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > ज्योतिस्

  • 124 ministerie

    ministry; 〈departement; Groot-Brittannië ook; USA〉 department
    voorbeelden:
    1   ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken Ministry/Department of the Interior; Groot-Brittannië Home Department/ informeel Office
         ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Groot-Brittannië Foreign Office; USA State Department
         ministerie van Defensie Ministry of Defence; USA Department of Defense; informeel (the) Pentagon
         ministerie van Economische Zaken Groot-Brittannië ±Department of Trade and Industry; USA ±Department of Commerce
         ministerie van Financiën Ministry of Finance; Groot-Brittannië Treasury; USA Treasury Department
         ministerie van Justitie Ministry/Department of Justice
         ministerie van Landbouw en Visserij Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries
         ministerie van Onderwijs en Wetenschappen Ministry of Education and Science; Groot-Brittannië ±Department/Ministry of Education and Science; USA ±Department of Education
         ministerie van Ontwikkelingssamenwerking Ministry for Overseas Development
         ministerie van Sociale Zaken en Werkgelegenheid Ministry for Social Affairs and Employment; USA ±Department of Labor
         ministerie van Verkeer en Waterstaat Ministry of Transport and Public Works; Groot-Brittannië Ministry of Transport; USA ±Department of Transportation
         ministerie van Volkshuisvesting, Ruimtelijke Ordening en Milieubeheer Ministry for Housing, Regional Development and the Environment; USA ±Department of Housing and Urban Development
         ministerie van Welzijn, Volksgezondheid en Cultuur Ministry of Welfare, Health and Cultural Affairs; Groot-Brittannië ±Department of Health and Social Security; USA ±Department of Health and Human Services
    ¶   het Openbaar Ministerie the Public Prosecutor

    Van Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > ministerie

  • 125 artificial intelligence

    Gen Mgt
    a branch of computer science concerned with the development of computer systems capable of performing functions that normally require human intelligence, for example, reasoning, problem solving, learning from experience, and speech recognition. Artificial intelligence research combines elements of computer science and cognitive psychology. It is a controversial field because of the difficulty of defining its goals and disagreement over whether these goals are attainable. Much research has been done since World War II, beginning with the theoretical work of Alan Turing during the 1940s. The term became known with the publication in 1961 of the paper Steps Toward Artificial Intelligence by Marvin Minsky, cofounder with John McCarthy of the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Branches of artificial intelligence with applications in business and management include expert systems and robotics.

    The ultimate business dictionary > artificial intelligence

  • 126 Bell, Alexander Graham

    SUBJECT AREA: Telecommunications
    [br]
    b. 3 March 1847 Edinburgh, Scotland
    d. 3 August 1922 Beinn Bhreagh, Baddeck, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada
    [br]
    Scottish/American inventor of the telephone.
    [br]
    Bell's grandfather was a professor of elocution in London and his father an authority on the physiology of the voice and on elocution; Bell was to follow in their footsteps. He was educated in Edinburgh, leaving school at 13. In 1863 he went to Elgin, Morayshire, as a pupil teacher in elocution, with a year's break to study at Edinburgh University; it was in 1865, while still in Elgin, that he first conceived the idea of the electrical transmission of speech. He went as a master to Somersetshire College, Bath (now in Avon), and in 1867 he moved to London to assist his father, who had taken up the grandfather's work in elocution. In the same year, he matriculated at London University, studying anatomy and physiology, and also began teaching the deaf. He continued to pursue the studies that were to lead to the invention of the telephone. At this time he read Helmholtz's The Sensations of Tone, an important work on the theory of sound that was to exert a considerable influence on him.
    In 1870 he accompanied his parents when they emigrated to Canada. His work for the deaf gained fame in both Canada and the USA, and in 1873 he was apponted professor of vocal physiology and the mechanics of speech at Boston University, Massachusetts. There, he continued to work on his theory that sound wave vibrations could be converted into a fluctuating electric current, be sent along a wire and then be converted back into sound waves by means of a receiver. He approached the problem from the background of the theory of sound and voice production rather than from that of electrical science, and by 1875 he had succeeded in constructing a rough model. On 7 March 1876 Bell spoke the famous command to his assistant, "Mr Watson, come here, I want you": this was the first time a human voice had been transmitted along a wire. Only three days earlier, Bell's first patent for the telephone had been granted. Almost simultaneously, but quite independently, Elisha Gray had achieved a similar result. After a period of litigation, the US Supreme Court awarded Bell priority, although Gray's device was technically superior.
    In 1877, three years after becoming a naturalized US citizen, Bell married the deaf daughter of his first backer. In August of that year, they travelled to Europe to combine a honeymoon with promotion of the telephone. Bell's patent was possibly the most valuable ever issued, for it gave birth to what later became the world's largest private service organization, the Bell Telephone Company.
    Bell had other scientific and technological interests: he made improvements in telegraphy and in Edison's gramophone, and he also developed a keen interest in aeronautics, working on Curtiss's flying machine. Bell founded the celebrated periodical Science.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Legion of Honour; Hughes Medal, Royal Society, 1913.
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 7 August 1922, The Times. Dictionary of American Biography.
    R.Burlingame, 1964, Out of Silence into Sound, London: Macmillan.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Bell, Alexander Graham

  • 127 Ignorance

       The more we learn about the world, and the deeper our learning, the more conscious, specific, and articulate will be our knowledge of what we do not know, our knowledge of our ignorance. For this, indeed, is the main source of our ignorance-the fact that our knowledge can be only finite, while our ignorance must necessarily be infinite. (Popper, 1968, p. 28)
       The most sincere account that we can give of the attempt to build a science of human behavior... emphasizes ignorance rather than reliable knowledge. More specifically, however, to make a rational assessment of our ignorance on a particular topic-to identify enigmas and formulate consensible questions-is itself an important scientific activity. (Ziman, 1978, p. 148)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Ignorance

  • 128 Logical Positivism

       There have been many opponents of metaphysics from the Greek sceptics to the empiricists of the nineteenth century. Criticisms of very diverse kinds have been set forth. Many have declared that the doctrine of metaphysics is false, since it contradicts our empirical knowledge. Others have believed it to be uncertain, on the ground that its problems transcend the limits of human knowledge. Many anti-metaphysicians have declared that occupation with metaphysical questions is sterile. Whether or not these questions can be answered, it is at any rate unnecessary to worry about them; let us devote ourselves entirely to the practical tasks which confront active men every day of their lives!
       The development of modern logic has made it possible to give a new and sharper answer to the question of the validity and justification of metaphysics. The researchers of applied logic or the theory of knowledge, which aim at clarifying the cognitive content of scientific statements and thereby the meanings of the terms that occur in the statements, by means of logical analysis, lead to a positive and to a negative result. The positive result is worked out in the domain of empirical science; the various concepts of the various branches of science are clarified; their formal, logical and epistemological connections are made explicit.
       In the domain of metaphysics, including all philosophy of value and normative theory, logical analysis yields the negative result that the al leged statements in this domain are entirely meaningless. Therewith a radical elimination of metaphysics is attained, which was not yet possible from the earlier anti-metaphysical standpoints. (Carnap, 1959, p. 60)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Logical Positivism

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