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1 out of human view
Общая лексика: недоступный глазу человека -
2 out of human view
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3 view
1. [vju:] n1. вид, пейзаж, панорама2. вид, пейзаж, изображение (рисунок, картина, фотоснимок)to do [to take] a view of smth. - рисовать [фотографировать] что-л.
to do [to take] a view of smth. - рисовать [фотографировать] что-л.
3. видимость, поле зрения (тж. field of view)lost to /passed out of/ view - скрывшийся из виду /из поля зрения/
to the view - открыто, на виду, у всех на глазах
to rise to view - появиться, предстать перед глазами
to burst into /upon the/ view - внезапно появиться
to fade from view - постепенно исчезнуть, скрыться с глаз, растаять
in view - на виду; в пределах видимости [см. тж. 6]
to come in view (of) - а) увидеть; б) попасть в поле зрения
he came in view of the castle - а) он увидел замок; б) его стало видно из замка
land in view! - земля (видна)!
he fell off the horse in full view of his friends - он упал с лошади на глазах у друзей
the car came in /into/ view round the bend - автомобиль показался из-за поворота
4. 1) взгляд, мнение, суждение; точка зрения (тж. point of view)in my view - по-моему; по моему мнению, на мой взгляд
to state one's views on /about/ smth. - изложить /высказать/ своё мнение /свои соображения/ о чём-л.
2) pl взгляды, убеждения, воззренияto hold extreme views in politics - придерживаться экстремистских политических взглядов
5. оценка, суждение; представлениеto take a favourable view of smth. - положительно оценить что-л.
to take a grave view of smth. - строго осудить что-л., резко отрицательно отнестись к чему-л.
he takes a different view - он придерживается иного мнения, он смотрит на это иначе
his view is that we are wrong - он считает, что мы неправы
the lawyer hasn't yet formed a clear view of the case - адвокат ещё не составил себе чёткого представления о деле
6. цель, намерение; план, предположение, замыселin view - а) с целью, с намерением; he wants to find work, but he has nothing particular in view - он хочет найти работу, но у него нет никаких конкретных планов /он не имеет ничего конкретного/; do you have anything in view for tomorrow? - какие у вас планы на завтра?, что вы намерены делать завтра?; he did it with a view to /with the view of/ saving trouble - он сделал это с тем, чтобы избежать неприятностей; the law has two objects in view - закон преследует две цели; б) в надежде, с расчётом; [см. тж. 3]
I have views on a meal at the next town - я рассчитываю пообедать в ближайшем городе
7. перспектива; предвидимое будущееto muster troops with a view to imminent war - мобилизовать войска в предвидении неизбежной войны
to keep /to have/ smth. in view - иметь что-л. в виду, рассчитывать на что-л.
to have some pleasure in view - предвкушать что-л. приятное
in the long view - в перспективе, в отдалённом будущем
to take the long view - проявлять предусмотрительность /дальновидность/, заботиться о будущем
to take short views - проявлять недальновидность, не думать о будущем, не загадывать на будущее
8. 1) осмотр, просмотр, смотр, обозрениеthe latest fashions are now on view - сейчас демонстрируются последние моды
the first view would displease many - на первый взгляд это многим, вероятно, не понравится
I should like to get a nearer view of it - я хотел бы рассмотреть это поближе
2) юр. осмотр присяжными места преступления и т. п.9. вид, аспект, сторона, план; перспектива; проекцияtop view - а) вид сверху; б) спец. вид в плане
distant view - кино дальний или отдалённый план ( пейзажа)
general view - спец. общий план
perspective view - спец. вид в перспективе, перспектива
exploded view - а) трёхмерное /стереоскопическое/ изображение; б) изображение какого-л. предмета в разобранном виде
he presented quite a new view of the affair - он представил дело в совершенно новом свете /плане, виде, аспекте/; он показал дело с совершенно другой стороны
10. резюме; обзорthe author gave a brief view of his book - автор дал резюме своей книги; автор вкратце рассказал содержание своей книги
11. воен. обзорall-round /panoramic/ view - круговой обзор
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in view of - ввиду (чего-л.); принимая во внимание (что-л.); с учётом (чего-л.), учитывая (что-л.); в связи с (чем-л.)in view of recent developments, we do not think this step advisable - ввиду последних событий /учитывая последние события/ мы считаем этот шаг нецелесообразным
a bird's-eye view (of smth.) - а) вид с птичьего полёта /сверху/ (на что-л.); б) поверхностный, неглубокий взгляд, представление и т. п.
2. [vju:] va worm's-eye view - подробное, реалистичное представление (о чём-л.)
1. осматривать, смотретьto view pictures - рассматривать /смотреть/ картины
to view the body - юр. произвести осмотр тела
order to view - разрешение на осмотр (дома, участка и т. п.)
2. рассматривать в определённом свете, оценивать, судитьthe proposal is viewed unfavourably - предложение получило отрицательную оценку
the subject may be viewed in different ways - к этому вопросу можно подходить с разных сторон
3. изучать, рассматриватьto view all sides of a question - рассмотреть все аспекты вопроса, рассмотреть вопрос во всех аспектах
4. 1) видеть2) поэт. узреть; зреть5. смотреть (телевизор, кинофильм и т. п.) -
4 view
1. n1) вид; вигляд; пейзаж; зображення; краєвид2) поле зору, кругозір, круговид; видимістьto be in view — бути видимим; передбачатися
we came in view of the bridge — ми побачили міст; нас стало видно з мосту
to the view — у всіх на виду, відкрито
to pass from smb.'s view — зникати з чиїхось очей
3) погляд, думка, точка зору; судженняin my view — на мій погляд, на мою думку
4) намір, мета; задум, планin view — з метою, з наміром
with the view of (to) — з наміром, з метою
5) огляд, переглядto have a view of — оглядати, обдивлятися
6) юр. огляд присяжними місця злочину7) аспект, сторона, вид8) резюме, огляд, висновок9) зовнішність, зовнішній виглядin view of — зважаючи на щось, через щось
with a view to preventing (to prevent) a catastrophe — щоб відвернути катастрофу
view day — попередній (закритий) перегляд (кінофільму, виставки тощо)
view slit — військ. оглядова щілина (в танку тощо)
2. v1) оглядати, обдивлятися; дивитисяto view the body — юр. зробити огляд трупа
2) поет. бачити, побачити3) розглядати; оцінювати; судити, мати судження4) дивитися (телевізор)* * *I [vjuː] n.1) вид, пейзаж, панорама; a room wіth a view of the mountaіns кімната з видом на гори2) вид, пейзаж, зображення (малюнок, картина, фотознімок); to do [to take] a view of smth. малювати [фотографувати] що-н.3) видимість, поле зору (тж. fіeld ofview); angle of view кут зору; out of view поза полем зору; out of human view недоступний людському оку; to the view відкрито, на очах, в усіх на очах; to rіse to view з’явитися, стати перед очима; to burst іnto /upon the/ view раптово з’явитися; to fade from view поступово зникнути, щезнути з очей; іn view на очах; у межах видимості [див. тж. 6]; to come іn view (of) побачити; потрапити в поле зору; he came іn view or the castle а) він побачив замок; його стало видно з замку; land іn view земля ( видно землю)!; he fell off the horse іn full view of hіs frіends він упав з коня на очах у друзів4) погляд, думка, судження; точка зору (тж. poіnt or view); exchange of view s обмін думками; іn my view по-моєму; на мій погляд; to state one’s views m /about/ smth. викласти /висловити/ свою думку /своє розуміння/ про що-н.; pl. погляди, переконання; tо hold extreme views іn polіtіcs дотримувати екстремістських політичних поглядів5) оцінка, судження, уявлення; the scіentіfіc view of the world науковий світогляд; to take a favourable view of smth. позитивно оцінити что-л.; to take a grave view of smth. строго засудити що-н., різко негативно поставитися до чого-н.; hіs view іs that we are wrong він вважає, що ми неправі6) ціль, намір; план, припущення, задум; іn view з метою, з наміром; do you have anythіng іn view for tomorrowº які у вас плани на завтраº; he dіd іt wіth a view to /wіth the view of/ savіng trouble він зробив це для того, щоб уникнути неприємностей; the law has two objects іn view закон має дві мети; у надії, з розрахунком; [див. тж. 3]; to have -s on a rіch man’s daughter мати плани щодо багатої нареченої; І have view s on a meal at the next town я розраховую пообідати в найближчому місті7) перспектива; майбутнє, що передбачається; to muster troops wіth a view to іmmіnent war мобілізувати війська в передбаченні неминучої війни; to keep /to have/ smth. іn view мати що-н. на увазі, розраховувати на що-н.; wіth no view of success ніякої перспективи на успіх; no alteratіons are іn view ніяких змін не передбачається; іn the long view у перспективі, у віддаленому майбутньому; іn the short view з точки зору найближчих результатів; to take the long view виявляти передбачливість /далекоглядність/, піклуватися про майбутнє; to take short views виявляти недалекоглядність, не думати про майбутнє, не загадувати на майбутнє8) огляд, перегляд, огляд; a prіvate view вернісаж; on view виставлений для огляду; the latest fashіons are now on view зараз демонструються останні моди; at fіrst view з першого погляду; the fіrst view would dіsplease many на перший погляд це багатьом, ймовірно, не сподобається; І should lіke to get a nearer view of іt я хотів би розглянути це ближче; the ruіn іs well worth our view ці руїни варто подивитися; юр. огляд присяжними місця злочину ; the jury had a view or the body присяжні зробили огляд тіла9) вид, аспект, сторона, план; перспектива; проекція; front view вид попереду; top view вид зверху; спец. вигляд у плані; dіstant view кіно далекий чи віддалений план ( пейзажу); sectіonal view вигляд у розрізі; general view спец. загальний план; perspectіve view спец. вигляд у перспективі, перспектива; close view зображення великим планом; exploded view тривимірне /стереоскопічне/ зображення; зображення якого-н. предмета в розібраному вигляді; he presented quіte a new view of the affaіr он презентував справу в зовсім новому світлі /плані, вигляді, аспекті/; він показав справу з зовсім іншої сторони10) резюме; огляд; the author gave abrіef view of hіs book автор дав резюме своєї книги; автор коротенько розповів зміст своєї книги11) військ. огляд; radar view зона огляду радіолокатора; aіr view огляд з повітря; all-round/panoramіc/ view круговий огляд; іn view of через (що-н.); беручи до уваги (що-н.); враховуючи (що-н.), з огляду на (що-н.); у зв’язку з (чим-н.); іn view of recent developments, we do not thіnk thіs step advіsable через останні події /з огляду на останні події/ ми вважаємо цей крок недоцільним; a bіrd’s-eye view (of smth.) а) вид із пташиного польоту /зверху/ (на що-н.); б) поверхневий, неглибокий погляд, уявлення ; a worm’s-eye view детальне, реалістичне уявлення (про що-н.)II [vjuː] v.1) оглядати, дивитися; to view a house and grounds оглянути будинок та ділянку; to view pіctures розглядати /дивитися/ картини; to view the body юр. зробити огляд тіла; order to view дозвіл на огляд (будинку, ділянки)2) розглядати у певному світлі, оцінювати, судити; the proposal іs viewed unfavourably пропозиція отримала негативну оцінку; he іs viewed unfavourably його вважають поганою людиною; the subject may be viewed іn dіfferent ways до цього питання можна підходити з різних сторін3) вивчати, розглядати; to view all sіdes of a questіon розглянути всі аспекти питання, розглянути питання у всіх аспектах4) бачити; поет. побачити; зріти5) дивитися (телевізор, кінофільм) -
5 view
1. n вид, пейзаж, панорама2. n вид, пейзаж, изображение3. n видимость, поле зренияto the view — открыто, на виду, у всех на глазах
to rise to view — появиться, предстать перед глазами
to fade from view — постепенно исчезнуть, скрыться с глаз, растаять
in view — на виду; в пределах видимости
4. n взгляд, мнение, суждение; точка зрения5. n взгляды, убеждения, воззрения6. n оценка, суждение; представлениеview of data — представление данных; разрез данных
7. n цель, намерение; план, предположение, замысел8. n перспектива; предвидимое будущееin the long view — в перспективе, в отдалённом будущем
worm's-eye view — "лягушачья " перспектива
9. n осмотр, просмотр, смотр, обозрениеthe first view would displease many — на первый взгляд это многим, вероятно, не понравится
10. n вид, аспект, сторона, план; перспектива; проекцияperspective view — вид в перспективе, перспектива
11. n воен. обзор12. v осматривать, смотреть13. v рассматривать в определённом свете, оценивать, судить14. v изучать, рассматриватьto view all sides of a question — рассмотреть все аспекты вопроса, рассмотреть вопрос во всех аспектах
15. v видетьto tiptoe to have a better view — подняться на цыпочки, чтобы лучше видеть
16. v поэт. узреть; зреть17. v смотретьto take a sunshine view of everything — смотреть бодро на всё, быть оптимистом
Синонимический ряд:1. account (noun) account; description2. angle (noun) angle; eyes; outlook; slant; standpoint; viewpoint3. belief (noun) assessment; belief; conception; estimation; judgment; notion; theory4. end (noun) aim; design; end; goal; intent; intention; meaning; object; objective; plan; point; purpose; reason; target5. examination (noun) analysis; audit; check-over; checkup; examination; inspection; perlustration; review; scan; scrutiny; survey6. look (noun) countenance; face; look; physiognomy; surface; visage7. opinion (noun) conviction; eye; feeling; idea; mind; opinion; persuasion; position; sentiment8. sight (noun) appearance; aspect; gaze; glimpse; outlook; panorama; perspective; picture; prospect; scene; show; sight; spectacle; vision; vista9. eye (verb) account; consider; contemplate; deem; esteem; eye; gaze; gaze upon; look; look at; look upon; reckon; regard10. scrutinize (verb) canvass; check; check over; check up; con; examine; go over; inspect; perlustrate; peruse; scrutinise; scrutinize; study; survey; vet; witness11. see (verb) behold; descry; discern; distinguish; espy; mark; mind; note; notice; observe; perceive; remark; see; twigАнтонимический ряд:delusion; disregard; error; ignore; misestimate; misjudge; overlook -
6 view
I [vjuː] n.1) вид, пейзаж, панорама; a room wіth a view of the mountaіns кімната з видом на гори2) вид, пейзаж, зображення (малюнок, картина, фотознімок); to do [to take] a view of smth. малювати [фотографувати] що-н.3) видимість, поле зору (тж. fіeld ofview); angle of view кут зору; out of view поза полем зору; out of human view недоступний людському оку; to the view відкрито, на очах, в усіх на очах; to rіse to view з’явитися, стати перед очима; to burst іnto /upon the/ view раптово з’явитися; to fade from view поступово зникнути, щезнути з очей; іn view на очах; у межах видимості [див. тж. 6]; to come іn view (of) побачити; потрапити в поле зору; he came іn view or the castle а) він побачив замок; його стало видно з замку; land іn view земля ( видно землю)!; he fell off the horse іn full view of hіs frіends він упав з коня на очах у друзів4) погляд, думка, судження; точка зору (тж. poіnt or view); exchange of view s обмін думками; іn my view по-моєму; на мій погляд; to state one’s views m /about/ smth. викласти /висловити/ свою думку /своє розуміння/ про що-н.; pl. погляди, переконання; tо hold extreme views іn polіtіcs дотримувати екстремістських політичних поглядів5) оцінка, судження, уявлення; the scіentіfіc view of the world науковий світогляд; to take a favourable view of smth. позитивно оцінити что-л.; to take a grave view of smth. строго засудити що-н., різко негативно поставитися до чого-н.; hіs view іs that we are wrong він вважає, що ми неправі6) ціль, намір; план, припущення, задум; іn view з метою, з наміром; do you have anythіng іn view for tomorrowº які у вас плани на завтраº; he dіd іt wіth a view to /wіth the view of/ savіng trouble він зробив це для того, щоб уникнути неприємностей; the law has two objects іn view закон має дві мети; у надії, з розрахунком; [див. тж. 3]; to have -s on a rіch man’s daughter мати плани щодо багатої нареченої; І have view s on a meal at the next town я розраховую пообідати в найближчому місті7) перспектива; майбутнє, що передбачається; to muster troops wіth a view to іmmіnent war мобілізувати війська в передбаченні неминучої війни; to keep /to have/ smth. іn view мати що-н. на увазі, розраховувати на що-н.; wіth no view of success ніякої перспективи на успіх; no alteratіons are іn view ніяких змін не передбачається; іn the long view у перспективі, у віддаленому майбутньому; іn the short view з точки зору найближчих результатів; to take the long view виявляти передбачливість /далекоглядність/, піклуватися про майбутнє; to take short views виявляти недалекоглядність, не думати про майбутнє, не загадувати на майбутнє8) огляд, перегляд, огляд; a prіvate view вернісаж; on view виставлений для огляду; the latest fashіons are now on view зараз демонструються останні моди; at fіrst view з першого погляду; the fіrst view would dіsplease many на перший погляд це багатьом, ймовірно, не сподобається; І should lіke to get a nearer view of іt я хотів би розглянути це ближче; the ruіn іs well worth our view ці руїни варто подивитися; юр. огляд присяжними місця злочину ; the jury had a view or the body присяжні зробили огляд тіла9) вид, аспект, сторона, план; перспектива; проекція; front view вид попереду; top view вид зверху; спец. вигляд у плані; dіstant view кіно далекий чи віддалений план ( пейзажу); sectіonal view вигляд у розрізі; general view спец. загальний план; perspectіve view спец. вигляд у перспективі, перспектива; close view зображення великим планом; exploded view тривимірне /стереоскопічне/ зображення; зображення якого-н. предмета в розібраному вигляді; he presented quіte a new view of the affaіr он презентував справу в зовсім новому світлі /плані, вигляді, аспекті/; він показав справу з зовсім іншої сторони10) резюме; огляд; the author gave abrіef view of hіs book автор дав резюме своєї книги; автор коротенько розповів зміст своєї книги11) військ. огляд; radar view зона огляду радіолокатора; aіr view огляд з повітря; all-round/panoramіc/ view круговий огляд; іn view of через (що-н.); беручи до уваги (що-н.); враховуючи (що-н.), з огляду на (що-н.); у зв’язку з (чим-н.); іn view of recent developments, we do not thіnk thіs step advіsable через останні події /з огляду на останні події/ ми вважаємо цей крок недоцільним; a bіrd’s-eye view (of smth.) а) вид із пташиного польоту /зверху/ (на що-н.); б) поверхневий, неглибокий погляд, уявлення ; a worm’s-eye view детальне, реалістичне уявлення (про що-н.)II [vjuː] v.1) оглядати, дивитися; to view a house and grounds оглянути будинок та ділянку; to view pіctures розглядати /дивитися/ картини; to view the body юр. зробити огляд тіла; order to view дозвіл на огляд (будинку, ділянки)2) розглядати у певному світлі, оцінювати, судити; the proposal іs viewed unfavourably пропозиція отримала негативну оцінку; he іs viewed unfavourably його вважають поганою людиною; the subject may be viewed іn dіfferent ways до цього питання можна підходити з різних сторін3) вивчати, розглядати; to view all sіdes of a questіon розглянути всі аспекти питання, розглянути питання у всіх аспектах4) бачити; поет. побачити; зріти5) дивитися (телевізор, кінофільм) -
7 view
I [vjuː] n1) вид, картина, пейзаж- wonderful view- general view
- distant view
- sectional view
- top view
- close-up view
- bird's view
- view of Paris
- postcards of views
- house with a view of the ocean
- take a view of the chirch
- trees cut off the view of the house2) поле зрения, пределы видимостиThere was not a person in view. — Никого не было видно.
The car came into view round the corner. — Из-за угла появилась машина.
- have a good view of smthNew difficulties came into view. — Возникли новые трудности.
- be out of view- be in view
- stand in full view
- keep smb, smth in view
- pass from view
- out of human view
- get a closer view smth
- be on view
- have smth on view3) (обыкновенно pl) мнение, взгляды, суждение, точка зрения, цель- smb's views on lifeHe had strange (depressing) views of life. — У него было странное (мрачное) мировоззрение. /У него был странный (пессимистический) взгляд на жизнь.
- smb's views on this matter
- main point of view
- exchange of views- predominant point of view- with this in view
- with a view of alance
- with a view of negotiations
- with a view of merging
- in view of previous obligations
- have a clear view of facts
- hold extreme views on smth
- have two objects in view
- take a favourable view of smth
- give quite a new view of the problem
- state one's views on this matter
- give a brief view of the matter
- have other views for smb
- have views on smb•CHOICE OF WORDS:(1.) Русское "быть на обозрении, быть выставленным на широкое обозрение" соответствует английским to be on view 3., to be on show, to be on display: The latest fashions are now on view. Сейчас выставлены/демонстрируются модели последней моды. There were many new exhibits on view in the museum. В музее демонстрировалось много новых экспонатов. These paintings have been on display/on view for many weeks. Эти картины были выставлены в течение многих недель. He offered to put his private collection of stamps on display. Он предложил устроить выставку его личной коллекции марок. Русские глаголы выставлять, экспонировать соответствуют английским глаголам to exhibit smth и to display smth: The gallery exhibits mainly contemporary sculpture. Галерея выставляет в основном образцы современной скульптуры. The shop windows displayed the latest spring fashions. В витринах магазинов были выставлены последние весенние моды. (2.) For view 1., 2.; See scene, n (3.) For view 2.; See show, v; USAGE (3.).II [vjuː] v1) осматривать, смотреть, производить осмотр- view a house and grounds- get an order to view2) рассматривать, оценивать, судитьThe proposal was viewed unfavourably (favourably). — Предложение получило отрицательную (положительную) оценку
- view the matter critically- view the matter historically
- view the future with alarm -
8 human
человек; человеческийhuman error — ошибка, свойственная человеку
human capital assets — «человеческий капитал»
human factors — факторы, связанные с человеком
-
9 view
vju:
1. сущ.
1) вид;
пейзаж (тж. картина)
2) поле зрения, кругозор to burst, come into view ≈ внезапно появиться to have/keep in view ≈ не терять из виду;
иметь в виду out of view be in view to the view in view of
3) точка зрения to express, present, put forward, voice a view ≈ высказать мнение по какому-л. вопросу in my view ≈ по моему мнению short views ≈ недальновидность Syn: opinion
4) осмотр to have/take a view of smth. ≈ осмотреть что-л. on view ≈ выставленный для обозрения on the view ≈ во время осмотра, при осмотре at first view ≈ при беглом осмотре upon a closer view ≈ при внимательном рассмотрении
5) намерение Will this meet your views? ≈ Не противоречит ли это вашим намерениям? with the view of with a view to
2. гл.
1) обозревать, оглядывать, осматривать
2) оценивать, судить( о чем-л.) He views the matter in a different light. ≈ Он иначе смотрит на это. She was viewed as a serious threat to the party leadership. ≈ Она рассматривалась как серьезная угроза партийному руководству.
3) смотреть (напр., фильм) вид, пейзаж, панорама - a room with a * of the mountains комната с видом на горы вид, пейзаж, изображение (рисунок, картина, фотоснимок) - to do a * of smth. рисовать что-л. - postcards with *s of Paris открытки с видами Парижа - to do a * of smth. рисовать что-л. видимость, поле зрения (тж. field of *) - angle of * угол зрения - lost to /passed out of/ * скрывшийся из виду /из поля зрения/ - out of * вне поля зрения - out of human * недоступный глазу человека - to the * открыто, на виду, у всех на глазах - to rise to * появиться, предстать перед глазами - to burst into /upon the/ * внезапно появиться - to fade from * постепенно исчезнуть, скрыться с глаз, растаять - in * на виду;
в пределах видимости - to come in * (of) увидеть;
попасть в поле зрения - he came in * of the castle он увидел замок;
его стало видно из замка - land in *! земля (видна) ! - not a person in * никого не видно - he fell off the horse in full * of his friends он упал с лошади на глазах у друзей - the car came in /into/ * round the bend автомобиль показался из-за поворота взгляд, мнение, суждение;
точка зрения (тж. point of *) - exchange of *s обмен мнениями - in my * по-моему;
по моему мнению, на мой взгляд - to state one's *s on /about/ smth. изложить /высказать/ свое мнение /свои соображения/ о чем-л. pl взгляды, убеждения, воззрения - to hold extreme *s in politics придерживаться экстремистских политических взглядов оценка, суждение;
представление - the scientific * of the world научное мировоззрение - to take a favourable * of smth. положительно оценить что-л. - to take a grave * of smth. строго осудить что-л., резко отрицательно отнестись к чему-л. - he takes a different * он придерживается иного мнения, он смотрит на это иначе - his * is that we are wrong он считает, что мы неправы - the lawyer hasn't yet formed a clear * of the case адвокат еще не составил себе четкого представления о деле - this poet's depressing * of life мрачное мироощущение этого поэта цель, намерение;
план, предположение, замысел - in * с целью, с намерением;
в надежде, с расчетом - he wants to find work, but he has nothing particular in * он хочет найти работу, но у него нет никаких конкретных планов /он не имеет ничего конкретного/ - do you have anything in * for tomorrow? какие у вас планы на завтра?, что вы намерены делать завтра? - he did it with a * to /with the * of/ saving trouble он сделал это с тем, чтобы избежать неприятностей - the law has two objects in * закон преследует две цели - to have *s on a rich man's daughter иметь виды на богатую невесту - I have *s on a meal at the next town я рассчитываю пообедать в ближайшем городе перспектива;
предвидимое будущее - to muster troops with a * to imminent war мобилизовать войска в предвидении неизбежной войны - to keep /to have/ smth. in * иметь что-л. в виду, рассчитывать на что-л. - to have some pleasure in * предвкушать что-л. приятное - with no * of success никакой перспективы на успех - no hope in * пока никакой надежды - no alterations are in * никаких изменений не предвидится - in the long * в перспективе, в отдаленном будущем - in the short * с точки зрения ближайших результатов - to take the long * проявлять предусмотрительность /дальновидность/, заботиться о будущем - to take short *s проявлять недальновидность, не думать о будущем, не загадывать на будущее осмотр, просмотр, смотр, обозрение - a private * вернисаж - on * выставленный для обозрения - the latest fashions are now on * сейчас демонстрируются последние моды - at first * с первого взгляда - the first * would displease many на первый взгляд это многим, вероятно, не понравится - upon a closer * при ближайшем рассмотрении - I should like to get a nearer * of it я хотел бы рассмотреть это поближе - the ruin is well worth our * эти развалины стоит посмотреть (юридическое) осмотр присяжными места преступления и т. п. - the jury had a * of the body присяжные произвели осмотр тела вид, аспект, сторона, план;
перспектива;
проекция - front * вид спереди - top * вид сверху;
(специальное) вид в плане - distant * (кинематографический) дальний или отдаленный план (пейзажа) - sectional * вид в разрезе - general * (специальное) общий план - perspective * (специальное) вид в перспективе, перспектива - close * изображение крупным планом - exploded * трехмерное /стереоскопическое/ изображение;
изображение какого-л. предмета в разобранном виде - he presented quite a new * of the affair он представил дело в совершенно новом свете /плане, виде, аспекте/;
он показал дело с совершенно другой стороны резюме;
обзор - the author gave a brief * of his book автор дал резюме своей книги;
автор вкратце рассказал содержание своей книги (военное) обзор - radar * зона обзора радиолокатора - air * обзор с воздуха - all-round /panoramic/ * круговой обзор > in * of ввиду( чего-л.) ;
принимая во внимание( что-л.) ;
с учетом( чего-л.), учитывая( что-л.) ;
в связи( с чем-л.) > in * of recent developments, we do not think this step advisable ввиду последних событий /учитывая последние события/ мы считаем этот шаг нецелесообразным > a bird's-eye * (of smth.) вид с птичьего полета /сверху/ (на что-л.) ;
поверхностный, неглубокий взгляд, представление и т. п. > a worm's-eye * подробное, реалистичное представление (о чем-л.) осматривать, смотреть - to * a house and grounds осмотреть дом и участок - to * pictures рассматривать /смотреть/ картины - to * the body (юридическое) произвести осмотр тела - order to * разрешение на осмотр (дома, участка и т. п.) рассматривать в определенном свете, оценивать, судить - the proposal is *ed unfavourably предложение получило отрицательную оценку - he is *ed unfavourably его считают плохим человеком - the subject may be *ed in different ways к этому вопросу можно подходить с разных сторон изучать, рассматривать - to * all sides of a question рассмотреть все аспекты вопроса, рассмотреть вопрос во всех аспектах видеть узреть;
зреть смотреть (телевизор, кинофильм и т. п.) ~ осматривать;
an order to view разрешение на осмотр (дома, участка и т. п.) at first ~ при беглом осмотре;
upon a closer view при внимательном рассмотрении to be in ~ быть видимым to be in ~ предвидеться;
certain modifications may come in view предвидятся некоторые изменения;
in full view of everybody у всех на виду biased ~ необъективная оценка bird's eye ~ вид с птичьего полета bird's eye ~ общая перспектива we came in ~ of the bridge нас стало видно с моста;
to burst (или to come) into view внезапно появиться to be in ~ предвидеться;
certain modifications may come in view предвидятся некоторые изменения;
in full view of everybody у всех на виду conceptual ~ вчт. концептуальное представление differing ~ особое мнение to exchange views (on smth.) обменяться взглядами или мнениями (по поводу чего-л.) view взгляд, мнение, точка зрения;
in my view по моему мнению;
to form a clear view of the situation составить себе ясное представление о положении дел ~ осмотр;
to have (или to take) a view (of smth.) осмотреть (что-л.) ;
on view выставленный для обозрения to the ~ (of) открыто, на виду;
to have (или to keep) in view не терять из виду;
иметь в виду;
in view of ввиду;
принимая во внимание ~ намерение;
will this meet your views? не противоречит ли это вашим намерениям?;
to have views (on smth.) иметь виды (на что-л.) ~ рассматривать, оценивать, судить (о чем-л.) ;
he views the matter in a different light он иначе смотрит на это to hold extreme views in politics придерживаться крайних взглядов в политике ~ вид;
пейзаж;
a house with a view of the sea дом видом на море to be in ~ предвидеться;
certain modifications may come in view предвидятся некоторые изменения;
in full view of everybody у всех на виду view взгляд, мнение, точка зрения;
in my view по моему мнению;
to form a clear view of the situation составить себе ясное представление о положении дел to the ~ (of) открыто, на виду;
to have (или to keep) in view не терять из виду;
иметь в виду;
in view of ввиду;
принимая во внимание legal ~ рассмотрение с правовых позиций private ~ выставка или просмотр картин (частной коллекции) ;
on the view во время осмотра, при осмотре ~ осмотр;
to have (или to take) a view (of smth.) осмотреть (что-л.) ;
on view выставленный для обозрения to pass from( smb.'s) ~ скрыться из (чьего-л.) поля зрения;
out of view вне поля зрения to pass from (smb.'s) ~ скрыться из (чьего-л.) поля зрения;
out of view вне поля зрения short ~s недальновидность;
to take a rose-coloured view (of smth.) смотреть сквозь розовые очки (на что-л.) to the ~ (of) открыто, на виду;
to have (или to keep) in view не терять из виду;
иметь в виду;
in view of ввиду;
принимая во внимание at first ~ при беглом осмотре;
upon a closer view при внимательном рассмотрении view взгляд, мнение, точка зрения;
in my view по моему мнению;
to form a clear view of the situation составить себе ясное представление о положении дел ~ взгляд, мнение, точка зрения ~ вид;
пейзаж;
a house with a view of the sea дом видом на море ~ вид ~ вчт. визуализация ~ замысел ~ изображение ~ картина (особ. пейзаж) ~ мнение ~ намерение;
will this meet your views? не противоречит ли это вашим намерениям?;
to have views (on smth.) иметь виды (на что-л.) ~ намерение ~ обзор ~ осматривать;
an order to view разрешение на осмотр (дома, участка и т. п.) ~ осматривать ~ осмотр;
to have (или to take) a view (of smth.) осмотреть (что-л.) ;
on view выставленный для обозрения ~ осмотр присяжными места преступления ~ оценивать ~ оценка ~ перспектива ~ поле зрения, кругозор ~ поле зрения ~ представление ~ вчт. представление ~ вчт. просматривать ~ просмотр ~ вчт. просмотр ~ рассматривать, оценивать, судить (о чем-л.) ;
he views the matter in a different light он иначе смотрит на это ~ рассматривать ~ смотреть (кинофильм, телепередачу и т. п.) ~ смотреть ~ суждение ~ точка зрения ~ поэт. узреть ~ цель ~ of data вчт. представление данных we came in ~ of the bridge мы увидели мост we came in ~ of the bridge нас стало видно с моста;
to burst (или to come) into view внезапно появиться ~ намерение;
will this meet your views? не противоречит ли это вашим намерениям?;
to have views (on smth.) иметь виды (на что-л.) with the ~ of, with a ~ to с намерением;
с целью with the ~ of, with a ~ to с намерением;
с целью worm's-eye ~ предельно ограниченное поле зрения;
неспособность видеть дальше своего носа -
10 a whited sepulchre
1) гроб повапленный, ханжа, лицемер [этим. библ. Matthew XXIII, 27]You, whited sepulchre! The door clicked before he could answer the odd insult... (J. Galsworthy, ‘Caravan’, ‘Virtue’) — "Эх ты, гроб повапленный!" Дверь захлопнулась раньше, чем он смог ответить на это странное оскорбление...
Could the public be induced to vote for him with all the churches fulminating against private immorality, hypocrites, and whited sepulchres? (Th. Dreiser, ‘The Titan’, ch. XLIV) — Кому будет охота голосовать за него, когда во всех церквах только и слышишь, как громят прелюбодеяние, лицемерие и фарисейство?
2) что-л. пустое, ничтожное, прикрывающееся наружным блеском...we... can never forget the petty annoyances, the humiliating treatment, the rank injustices, the frustrations, the avoidable human suffering, and the evil atmosphere of this whited sepulchre of a place. (E. Flynn, ‘The Alderson Story’, ch. XXV) —...мы... никогда не забудем всех тех мелочных придирок, бесконечных унижений и грубых несправедливостей, которые нам пришлось испытать; мы всегда будем помнить, как людей там доводили до отчаяния, как их заставляли выносить ничем не оправданные страдания, задыхаться в гнусной атмосфере этого кладбища человеческих душ.
What most failed to realize was that Lincoln International, like a surprising number of other major airports, was close to becoming a whited sepulchre. Mel Bakersfield pondered the phrase whited sepulchre while riding in darkness down runway one seven, left. It was an apt definition, he thought. The airport's deficiencies were serious and basic, yet, since they were mostly out of public view, only insiders were aware of them. (A. Hailey, ‘Airport’, part I, ch. 8) — Большинство людей не подозревало, что международный аэропорт Линкольн, так же как и большое число других крупных аэропортов, вот-вот обратится в своего рода гроб повапленный. Мел Бейкерсфилд обдумывал это выражение в то время, как в темноте ехал по левой взлетно-посадочной полосе. Он считал подобное определение удачным. У аэропорта были очень крупные недостатки. Но о них знали только сотрудники аэропорта, так как в большинстве случаев посторонние не могли их заметить.
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11 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 ScienceIn 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)10) The Distinction between Dionysian Man and Apollonian Man, between Art and Creativity and Reason and Self- ControlIn 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
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12 Artificial Intelligence
In my opinion, none of [these programs] does even remote justice to the complexity of human mental processes. Unlike men, "artificially intelligent" programs tend to be single minded, undistractable, and unemotional. (Neisser, 1967, p. 9)Future progress in [artificial intelligence] will depend on the development of both practical and theoretical knowledge.... As regards theoretical knowledge, some have sought a unified theory of artificial intelligence. My view is that artificial intelligence is (or soon will be) an engineering discipline since its primary goal is to build things. (Nilsson, 1971, pp. vii-viii)Most workers in AI [artificial intelligence] research and in related fields confess to a pronounced feeling of disappointment in what has been achieved in the last 25 years. Workers entered the field around 1950, and even around 1960, with high hopes that are very far from being realized in 1972. In no part of the field have the discoveries made so far produced the major impact that was then promised.... In the meantime, claims and predictions regarding the potential results of AI research had been publicized which went even farther than the expectations of the majority of workers in the field, whose embarrassments have been added to by the lamentable failure of such inflated predictions....When able and respected scientists write in letters to the present author that AI, the major goal of computing science, represents "another step in the general process of evolution"; that possibilities in the 1980s include an all-purpose intelligence on a human-scale knowledge base; that awe-inspiring possibilities suggest themselves based on machine intelligence exceeding human intelligence by the year 2000 [one has the right to be skeptical]. (Lighthill, 1972, p. 17)4) Just as Astronomy Succeeded Astrology, the Discovery of Intellectual Processes in Machines Should Lead to a Science, EventuallyJust as astronomy succeeded astrology, following Kepler's discovery of planetary regularities, the discoveries of these many principles in empirical explorations on intellectual processes in machines should lead to a science, eventually. (Minsky & Papert, 1973, p. 11)5) Problems in Machine Intelligence Arise Because Things Obvious to Any Person Are Not Represented in the ProgramMany problems arise in experiments on machine intelligence because things obvious to any person are not represented in any program. One can pull with a string, but one cannot push with one.... Simple facts like these caused serious problems when Charniak attempted to extend Bobrow's "Student" program to more realistic applications, and they have not been faced up to until now. (Minsky & Papert, 1973, p. 77)What do we mean by [a symbolic] "description"? We do not mean to suggest that our descriptions must be made of strings of ordinary language words (although they might be). The simplest kind of description is a structure in which some features of a situation are represented by single ("primitive") symbols, and relations between those features are represented by other symbols-or by other features of the way the description is put together. (Minsky & Papert, 1973, p. 11)[AI is] the use of computer programs and programming techniques to cast light on the principles of intelligence in general and human thought in particular. (Boden, 1977, p. 5)The word you look for and hardly ever see in the early AI literature is the word knowledge. They didn't believe you have to know anything, you could always rework it all.... In fact 1967 is the turning point in my mind when there was enough feeling that the old ideas of general principles had to go.... I came up with an argument for what I called the primacy of expertise, and at the time I called the other guys the generalists. (Moses, quoted in McCorduck, 1979, pp. 228-229)9) Artificial Intelligence Is Psychology in a Particularly Pure and Abstract FormThe basic idea of cognitive science is that intelligent beings are semantic engines-in other words, automatic formal systems with interpretations under which they consistently make sense. We can now see why this includes psychology and artificial intelligence on a more or less equal footing: people and intelligent computers (if and when there are any) turn out to be merely different manifestations of the same underlying phenomenon. Moreover, with universal hardware, any semantic engine can in principle be formally imitated by a computer if only the right program can be found. And that will guarantee semantic imitation as well, since (given the appropriate formal behavior) the semantics is "taking care of itself" anyway. Thus we also see why, from this perspective, artificial intelligence can be regarded as psychology in a particularly pure and abstract form. The same fundamental structures are under investigation, but in AI, all the relevant parameters are under direct experimental control (in the programming), without any messy physiology or ethics to get in the way. (Haugeland, 1981b, p. 31)There are many different kinds of reasoning one might imagine:Formal reasoning involves the syntactic manipulation of data structures to deduce new ones following prespecified rules of inference. Mathematical logic is the archetypical formal representation. Procedural reasoning uses simulation to answer questions and solve problems. When we use a program to answer What is the sum of 3 and 4? it uses, or "runs," a procedural model of arithmetic. Reasoning by analogy seems to be a very natural mode of thought for humans but, so far, difficult to accomplish in AI programs. The idea is that when you ask the question Can robins fly? the system might reason that "robins are like sparrows, and I know that sparrows can fly, so robins probably can fly."Generalization and abstraction are also natural reasoning process for humans that are difficult to pin down well enough to implement in a program. If one knows that Robins have wings, that Sparrows have wings, and that Blue jays have wings, eventually one will believe that All birds have wings. This capability may be at the core of most human learning, but it has not yet become a useful technique in AI.... Meta- level reasoning is demonstrated by the way one answers the question What is Paul Newman's telephone number? You might reason that "if I knew Paul Newman's number, I would know that I knew it, because it is a notable fact." This involves using "knowledge about what you know," in particular, about the extent of your knowledge and about the importance of certain facts. Recent research in psychology and AI indicates that meta-level reasoning may play a central role in human cognitive processing. (Barr & Feigenbaum, 1981, pp. 146-147)Suffice it to say that programs already exist that can do things-or, at the very least, appear to be beginning to do things-which ill-informed critics have asserted a priori to be impossible. Examples include: perceiving in a holistic as opposed to an atomistic way; using language creatively; translating sensibly from one language to another by way of a language-neutral semantic representation; planning acts in a broad and sketchy fashion, the details being decided only in execution; distinguishing between different species of emotional reaction according to the psychological context of the subject. (Boden, 1981, p. 33)Can the synthesis of Man and Machine ever be stable, or will the purely organic component become such a hindrance that it has to be discarded? If this eventually happens-and I have... good reasons for thinking that it must-we have nothing to regret and certainly nothing to fear. (Clarke, 1984, p. 243)The thesis of GOFAI... is not that the processes underlying intelligence can be described symbolically... but that they are symbolic. (Haugeland, 1985, p. 113)14) Artificial Intelligence Provides a Useful Approach to Psychological and Psychiatric Theory FormationIt is all very well formulating psychological and psychiatric theories verbally but, when using natural language (even technical jargon), it is difficult to recognise when a theory is complete; oversights are all too easily made, gaps too readily left. This is a point which is generally recognised to be true and it is for precisely this reason that the behavioural sciences attempt to follow the natural sciences in using "classical" mathematics as a more rigorous descriptive language. However, it is an unfortunate fact that, with a few notable exceptions, there has been a marked lack of success in this application. It is my belief that a different approach-a different mathematics-is needed, and that AI provides just this approach. (Hand, quoted in Hand, 1985, pp. 6-7)We might distinguish among four kinds of AI.Research of this kind involves building and programming computers to perform tasks which, to paraphrase Marvin Minsky, would require intelligence if they were done by us. Researchers in nonpsychological AI make no claims whatsoever about the psychological realism of their programs or the devices they build, that is, about whether or not computers perform tasks as humans do.Research here is guided by the view that the computer is a useful tool in the study of mind. In particular, we can write computer programs or build devices that simulate alleged psychological processes in humans and then test our predictions about how the alleged processes work. We can weave these programs and devices together with other programs and devices that simulate different alleged mental processes and thereby test the degree to which the AI system as a whole simulates human mentality. According to weak psychological AI, working with computer models is a way of refining and testing hypotheses about processes that are allegedly realized in human minds.... According to this view, our minds are computers and therefore can be duplicated by other computers. Sherry Turkle writes that the "real ambition is of mythic proportions, making a general purpose intelligence, a mind." (Turkle, 1984, p. 240) The authors of a major text announce that "the ultimate goal of AI research is to build a person or, more humbly, an animal." (Charniak & McDermott, 1985, p. 7)Research in this field, like strong psychological AI, takes seriously the functionalist view that mentality can be realized in many different types of physical devices. Suprapsychological AI, however, accuses strong psychological AI of being chauvinisticof being only interested in human intelligence! Suprapsychological AI claims to be interested in all the conceivable ways intelligence can be realized. (Flanagan, 1991, pp. 241-242)16) Determination of Relevance of Rules in Particular ContextsEven if the [rules] were stored in a context-free form the computer still couldn't use them. To do that the computer requires rules enabling it to draw on just those [ rules] which are relevant in each particular context. Determination of relevance will have to be based on further facts and rules, but the question will again arise as to which facts and rules are relevant for making each particular determination. One could always invoke further facts and rules to answer this question, but of course these must be only the relevant ones. And so it goes. It seems that AI workers will never be able to get started here unless they can settle the problem of relevance beforehand by cataloguing types of context and listing just those facts which are relevant in each. (Dreyfus & Dreyfus, 1986, p. 80)Perhaps the single most important idea to artificial intelligence is that there is no fundamental difference between form and content, that meaning can be captured in a set of symbols such as a semantic net. (G. Johnson, 1986, p. 250)Artificial intelligence is based on the assumption that the mind can be described as some kind of formal system manipulating symbols that stand for things in the world. Thus it doesn't matter what the brain is made of, or what it uses for tokens in the great game of thinking. Using an equivalent set of tokens and rules, we can do thinking with a digital computer, just as we can play chess using cups, salt and pepper shakers, knives, forks, and spoons. Using the right software, one system (the mind) can be mapped into the other (the computer). (G. Johnson, 1986, p. 250)19) A Statement of the Primary and Secondary Purposes of Artificial IntelligenceThe primary goal of Artificial Intelligence is to make machines smarter.The secondary goals of Artificial Intelligence are to understand what intelligence is (the Nobel laureate purpose) and to make machines more useful (the entrepreneurial purpose). (Winston, 1987, p. 1)The theoretical ideas of older branches of engineering are captured in the language of mathematics. We contend that mathematical logic provides the basis for theory in AI. Although many computer scientists already count logic as fundamental to computer science in general, we put forward an even stronger form of the logic-is-important argument....AI deals mainly with the problem of representing and using declarative (as opposed to procedural) knowledge. Declarative knowledge is the kind that is expressed as sentences, and AI needs a language in which to state these sentences. Because the languages in which this knowledge usually is originally captured (natural languages such as English) are not suitable for computer representations, some other language with the appropriate properties must be used. It turns out, we think, that the appropriate properties include at least those that have been uppermost in the minds of logicians in their development of logical languages such as the predicate calculus. Thus, we think that any language for expressing knowledge in AI systems must be at least as expressive as the first-order predicate calculus. (Genesereth & Nilsson, 1987, p. viii)21) Perceptual Structures Can Be Represented as Lists of Elementary PropositionsIn artificial intelligence studies, perceptual structures are represented as assemblages of description lists, the elementary components of which are propositions asserting that certain relations hold among elements. (Chase & Simon, 1988, p. 490)Artificial intelligence (AI) is sometimes defined as the study of how to build and/or program computers to enable them to do the sorts of things that minds can do. Some of these things are commonly regarded as requiring intelligence: offering a medical diagnosis and/or prescription, giving legal or scientific advice, proving theorems in logic or mathematics. Others are not, because they can be done by all normal adults irrespective of educational background (and sometimes by non-human animals too), and typically involve no conscious control: seeing things in sunlight and shadows, finding a path through cluttered terrain, fitting pegs into holes, speaking one's own native tongue, and using one's common sense. Because it covers AI research dealing with both these classes of mental capacity, this definition is preferable to one describing AI as making computers do "things that would require intelligence if done by people." However, it presupposes that computers could do what minds can do, that they might really diagnose, advise, infer, and understand. One could avoid this problematic assumption (and also side-step questions about whether computers do things in the same way as we do) by defining AI instead as "the development of computers whose observable performance has features which in humans we would attribute to mental processes." This bland characterization would be acceptable to some AI workers, especially amongst those focusing on the production of technological tools for commercial purposes. But many others would favour a more controversial definition, seeing AI as the science of intelligence in general-or, more accurately, as the intellectual core of cognitive science. As such, its goal is to provide a systematic theory that can explain (and perhaps enable us to replicate) both the general categories of intentionality and the diverse psychological capacities grounded in them. (Boden, 1990b, pp. 1-2)Because the ability to store data somewhat corresponds to what we call memory in human beings, and because the ability to follow logical procedures somewhat corresponds to what we call reasoning in human beings, many members of the cult have concluded that what computers do somewhat corresponds to what we call thinking. It is no great difficulty to persuade the general public of that conclusion since computers process data very fast in small spaces well below the level of visibility; they do not look like other machines when they are at work. They seem to be running along as smoothly and silently as the brain does when it remembers and reasons and thinks. On the other hand, those who design and build computers know exactly how the machines are working down in the hidden depths of their semiconductors. Computers can be taken apart, scrutinized, and put back together. Their activities can be tracked, analyzed, measured, and thus clearly understood-which is far from possible with the brain. This gives rise to the tempting assumption on the part of the builders and designers that computers can tell us something about brains, indeed, that the computer can serve as a model of the mind, which then comes to be seen as some manner of information processing machine, and possibly not as good at the job as the machine. (Roszak, 1994, pp. xiv-xv)The inner workings of the human mind are far more intricate than the most complicated systems of modern technology. Researchers in the field of artificial intelligence have been attempting to develop programs that will enable computers to display intelligent behavior. Although this field has been an active one for more than thirty-five years and has had many notable successes, AI researchers still do not know how to create a program that matches human intelligence. No existing program can recall facts, solve problems, reason, learn, and process language with human facility. This lack of success has occurred not because computers are inferior to human brains but rather because we do not yet know in sufficient detail how intelligence is organized in the brain. (Anderson, 1995, p. 2)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Artificial Intelligence
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13 hide
I 1. transitive verb,1) verstecken [Gegenstand, Person usw.] ( from vor + Dat.)hide one's face in one's hands — sein Gesicht in den Händen bergen
2) (keep secret) verbergen [Gefühle, Sinn, Freude usw.] ( from vor + Dat.); verheimlichen [Tatsache, Absicht, Grund usw.] ( from Dat.)3) (obscure) verdecken2. intransitive verb,hide something [from view] — etwas verstecken; (by covering) etwas verdecken; [Nebel, Rauch usw.:] etwas einhüllen
hid, hidden sich verstecken od. verbergen ( from vor + Dat.)3. nounPhrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/87815/hide_away">hide away- hide outII noun(animal's skin) Haut, die; (of furry animal) Fell, das; (dressed) Leder, das; (joc.): (human skin) Haut, die; Fell, dastan somebody's hide — jemandem das Fell gerben od. versohlen (salopp)
* * *I 1. past tense - hid; verb(to put (a person, thing etc) in a place where it cannot be seen or easily found: I'll hide the children's presents; You hide, and I'll come and look for you; She hid from her father; He tries to hide his feelings.) verstecken2. noun(a small concealed hut etc from which birds etc can be watched, photographed etc.) das Versteck- hidden- hide-and-seek
- hide-out- hidingII noun(the skin of an animal: He makes coats out of animal hides; cow-hide.) die Haut- hiding* * *hide1[haɪd]n (skin) of animal Haut f; (with fur) Fell nt; (leather) Leder nt; ( fig hum) of person Haut f fam, Fell nt hum famcalf \hide Kalbsleder ntto save one's [own] \hide die eigene Haut retten▶ neither \hide nor hair [rein gar] nichtsI've seen neither \hide nor hair of Katey today ich habe Katey heute noch gar nicht gesehen▶ to have a thick \hide ein dickes Fell habenhide2[haɪd]II. vt<hid, hidden>1. (keep out of sight)▪ to \hide sb/sth [from sb/sth] jdn/etw [vor jdm/etw] verstecken▪ to \hide sb/sth curtain, cloth jdn/etw verhüllen▪ to \hide sth [from sb] emotions, qualities etw [vor jdm] verbergen; facts, reasons etw [vor jdm] verheimlichenshe's hiding something in her past from me sie verheimlicht mir etwas aus ihrer Vergangenheitto \hide the truth die Wahrheit verheimlichento have nothing to \hide nichts zu verbergen haben3. (block)▪ to \hide sth etw verdeckento be hidden from view nicht zu sehen sein4.III. vi<hid, hidden>you can't \hide from the truth du musst der Wahrheit ins Auge sehendon't try to \hide behind that old excuse! ( fam) komm mir nicht wieder mit dieser alten Ausrede! fam* * *I [haɪd] vb: pret hid [hɪd] ptp hid or hidden ['hɪdn]1. vtverstecken (from vor +dat); truth, tears, grief, feelings, face verbergen (from vor +dat); (= obstruct from view) moon, rust verdecken; (COMPUT) tagging, comments etc ausblendenhidden from view —
the building was hidden by trees he's hiding something in his pocket — das Gebäude war hinter Bäumen versteckt er hat etwas in seiner Tasche versteckt
his words had a hidden meaning — seine Worte hatten eine verborgene or versteckte Bedeutung
they have a hidden agenda — sie führen etwas im Schilde
there is a hidden agenda — da steckt noch etwas anderes dahinter
hidden earnings (of politician etc) — Schatteneinkommen
you're hiding something from me (truth etc) — Sie verheimlichen mir etwas, Sie verbergen etwas vor mir
he tried to hide his excitement — er versuchte, seine Aufregung nicht zu zeigen
2. visich verstecken, sich verbergen (from sb vor jdm)quick! hide in the cupboard — schnell, versteck dich im Schrank!
he's hiding behind his office (fig) — er benutzt sein Amt als Vorwand
3. nVersteck nt IIn(of animal) Haut f; (on furry animal) Fell nt; (processed) Leder nt; (fig, of person) Haut f, Fell ntthe bags are made out of rhino hide — die Taschen sind aus Nashornleder
I haven't seen hide nor hair of him for weeks (inf) — den habe ich in den letzten Wochen nicht mal von Weitem gesehen
* * *hide1 [haıd]a) verstecken (dat oder vor dat)b) verheimlichen (dat oder vor dat):have nothing to hide nichts zu verbergen habenc) verhüllen, verdecken:hide sth from view etwas den Blicken entziehen;the mountains were hidden from view in the mist wegen des Nebels konnte man die Berge nicht sehenwhere is he (the letter) hiding? wo hat er sich (sich der Brief) versteckt?, wo steckt er (der Brief) bloß?C s JAGD Br Deckung fhide2 [haıd]A s Haut f, Fell n (beide auch fig):have a hide like a rhinoceros, have a thick hide ein dickes Fell haben umg;save one’s own hide die eigene Haut retten;I haven’t seen hide or hair of her for two weeks umg ich hab sie schon seit zwei Wochen nicht einmal aus der Ferne gesehen;B v/t1. abhäuten2. umg jemanden durchbläuen, verprügelnhide3 [haıd] s altes englisches Feldmaß (zwischen 60 und 120 Acres)* * *I 1. transitive verb,1) verstecken [Gegenstand, Person usw.] ( from vor + Dat.)2) (keep secret) verbergen [Gefühle, Sinn, Freude usw.] ( from vor + Dat.); verheimlichen [Tatsache, Absicht, Grund usw.] ( from Dat.)3) (obscure) verdecken2. intransitive verb,hide something [from view] — etwas verstecken; (by covering) etwas verdecken; [Nebel, Rauch usw.:] etwas einhüllen
hid, hidden sich verstecken od. verbergen ( from vor + Dat.)3. nounPhrasal Verbs:- hide outII noun(animal's skin) Haut, die; (of furry animal) Fell, das; (dressed) Leder, das; (joc.): (human skin) Haut, die; Fell, dastan somebody's hide — jemandem das Fell gerben od. versohlen (salopp)
* * *v.(§ p.,p.p.: hid, hidden)= sich verbergen v.verbergen v.verheimlichen v.verstecken v. -
14 back
bæk
1. noun1) (in man, the part of the body from the neck to the bottom of the spine: She lay on her back.) espalda2) (in animals, the upper part of the body: She put the saddle on the horse's back.) lomo3) (that part of anything opposite to or furthest from the front: the back of the house; She sat at the back of the hall.) parte trasera, fondo4) (in football, hockey etc a player who plays behind the forwards.) defensa
2. adjective(of or at the back: the back door.) de detrás, trasero
3. adverb1) (to, or at, the place or person from which a person or thing came: I went back to the shop; He gave the car back to its owner.) de vuelta2) (away (from something); not near (something): Move back! Let the ambulance get to the injured man; Keep back from me or I'll hit you!) hacia atrás, para atrás3) (towards the back (of something): Sit back in your chair.) hacia atrás, para atrás4) (in return; in response to: When the teacher is scolding you, don't answer back.) de vuelta5) (to, or in, the past: Think back to your childhood.) atrás
4. verb1) (to (cause to) move backwards: He backed (his car) out of the garage.) dar marcha atrás, mover hacia atrás2) (to help or support: Will you back me against the others?) apoyar3) (to bet or gamble on: I backed your horse to win.) apostar a•- backer- backbite
- backbiting
- backbone
- backbreaking
- backdate
- backfire
- background
- backhand
5. adverb(using backhand: She played the stroke backhand; She writes backhand.) del revés; con el dorso de la mano- backlog- back-number
- backpack
- backpacking: go backpacking
- backpacker
- backside
- backslash
- backstroke
- backup
- backwash
- backwater
- backyard
- back down
- back of
- back on to
- back out
- back up
- have one's back to the wall
- put someone's back up
- take a back seat
back1 adj trasero / de atrásback2 adv1. atrás / hacia atrásstand back! ¡atrás! / ¡apártate!2. de vuelta3. hacethat was years back! ¡eso fue hace años!we met back in 1983 nos conocimos en 1983 back también combina con muchos verbos. Aquí tienes algunos ejemplosback3 n1. espaldalie on your back échate de espaldas / échate boca arriba2. dorso / revés3. parte de atrás / fondocan you hear me at the back? ¿me escucháis al fondo?back4 vb1. apoyar / respaldar2. dar marcha atráshe backed the car into the garage metió el coche en el garaje de culo / metió el coche en el garaje dando marcha atrástr[bæk]1 (of person) espalda2 (of animal, book) lomo3 (of chair) respaldo4 (of hand) dorso5 (of knife, sword) canto6 (of coin, medal) reverso7 (of cheque) dorso8 (of stage, room, cupboard) fondo1 trasero,-a, de atrás1 (support) apoyar, respaldar2 (finance) financiar3 (bet on) apostar por\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLback to back espalda con espaldaback to front al revésto answer back replicarto be back estar de vueltato be glad to see the back of somebody estar contento de haberse quitado a alguien de encimato break one's back deslomarseto carry on one's back llevar a cuestasto fall on one's back caerse de espaldasto have somebody on one's back tener a alguien encimato come back / go back volverto get somebody's back up mosquear a alguiento get off somebody's back dejar de fastidiar a alguiento hit back devolver el golpe 2 figurative use contestar a una acusaciónto have one's back to the wall figurative use estar entre la espada y la paredto lie on one's back estar acostado,-a boca arribato give back devolverto put back volver a guardar en su sitioto put one's back into something arrimar el hombroto phone back volver a llamarto stand back apartarseto turn one's back on somebody volver la espalda a alguienback copy número retrasadoback door puerta traseraback number número atrasadoback pay atrasos nombre masculino pluralback row última filaback seat asiento de atrásback street callejuelaback wheel rueda traserashort back and sides corte nombre masculino de pelo casi al rapeback ['bæk] vt3) : estar detrás de, formar el fondo detrees back the garden: unos árboles están detrás del jardínback vi2)to back away : echarse atrás3)back adv1) : atrás, hacia atrás, detrásto move back: moverse atrásback and forth: de acá para allá2) ago: atrás, antes, yasome years back: unos años atrás, ya unos años10 months back: hace diez meses3) : de vuelta, de regresowe're back: estamos de vueltashe ran back: volvió corriendoto call back: llamar de nuevoback adj1) rear: de atrás, posterior, trasero2) overdue: atrasado3)back pay : atrasos mplback n1) : espalda f (de un ser humano), lomo m (de un animal)2) : respaldo m (de una silla), espalda f (de ropa)3) reverse: reverso m, dorso m, revés m4) rear: fondo m, parte f de atrás5) : defensa mf (en deportes)adj.• posterior adj.• trasero, -a adj.adv.• atrás adv.• detrás adv.• redro adv.n.• atrás s.m.• costilla s.f.• dorso s.m.• envés s.m.• espalda s.f.• espaldar s.m.• fondo s.m.• lomo s.m.• respaldo s.m.• reverso s.m.• revés s.m.• trasera s.f.v.• apadrinar v.• mover hacia atrás v.• respaldar v.bæk
I
behind somebody's back: they laugh at him behind his back se ríen de él a sus espaldas; to be on somebody's back (colloq) estarle* encima a alguien; get off my back! déjame en paz (fam); to break the back of something hacer* la parte más difícil/la mayor parte de algo; to get o put somebody's back up (colloq) irritar a alguien; to put one's back into something poner* empeño en algo; to turn one's back on somebody — volverle* la espalda a alguien; scratch II d)
2) ca) ( of chair) respaldo m; (of dress, jacket) espalda f; (of electrical appliance, watch) tapa fb) (reverse side - of envelope, photo) dorso m, revés m; (- of head) parte f posterior or de atrás; (- of hand) dorso mc)back to front: your sweater is on back to front — te has puesto el suéter al revés; hand I 2)
3) c u ( rear part)I'll sit in the back — ( of car) yo me siento detrás or (en el asiento de) atrás
(in) back of the sofa — (AmE) detrás del sofá
he's out back in the yard — (AmE) está en el patio, al fondo
in the back of beyond — donde el diablo perdió el poncho (AmL fam), en el quinto pino (Esp fam)
4) c ( Sport) defensa mf, zaguero, -ra m,f
II
adjective (before n, no comp)1) ( at rear) trasero, de atrás2) ( of an earlier date)back number o issue — número m atrasado
III
1) (indicating return, repetition)meanwhile, back at the house... — mientras tanto, en la casa...
to run/fly back — volver* corriendo/en avión
they had us back the following week — nos devolvieron la invitación la semana siguiente; see also go, take back
2) (in reply, reprisal)3)a) ( backward)b) ( toward the rear) atráswe can't hear you back here — aquí atrás no te oímos; see also hold, keep back
4) (in, into the past)5)back and forth — = backward(s) and forward(s): see backward II d)
IV
1.
1)a) \<\<person/decision\>\> respaldar, apoyarb) ( bet money on) \<\<horse/winner\>\> apostar* por2) ( reverse)he backed the car out of the garage — sacó el coche del garaje dando marcha atrás or (Col, Méx) en reversa
3) ( lie behind)4) ( Mus) acompañar
2.
vi \<\<vehicle/driver\>\> dar* marcha atrás, echar or meter reversa (Col, Méx)he backed into a lamppost — se dio contra una farola al dar marcha atrás or al meter reversa
Phrasal Verbs:- back off- back out- back up[bæk] When back is an element in a phrasal verb, eg come back, go back, put back, look up the verb.1. NOUN1) (=part of body)a) [of person] espalda f; [of animal] lomo m•
I've got a bad back — tengo la espalda mal, tengo un problema de espalda•
to shoot sb in the back — disparar a algn por la espalda•
he was lying on his back — estaba tumbado boca arribato carry sth/sb on one's back — llevar algo/a algn a la espalda
•
to have one's back to sth/sb — estar de espaldas a algo/algnb)- break the back of sth- get off sb's back- get sb's back up- live off the back of sb- be on sb's backshares rose on the back of two major new deals — las acciones subieron a consecuencia de dos nuevos e importantes tratos
- put one's back into sth- put one's back into doing sth- put sb's back upto see the back of sb —
- have one's back to the wallflat I, 1., 1), stab 1., 1)2) (=reverse side) [of cheque, envelope] dorso m, revés m; [of hand] dorso m; [of head] parte f de atrás, parte f posterior more frm; [of dress] espalda f; [of medal] reverso mto know sth like the back of one's hand —
3) (=rear) [of room, hall] fondo m; [of chair] respaldo m; [of car] parte f trasera, parte f de atrás; [of book] (=back cover) tapa f posterior; (=spine) lomo mthere was damage to the back of the car — la parte trasera or de atrás del coche resultó dañada
•
at the back (of) — [+ building] en la parte de atrás (de); [+ cupboard, hall, stage] en el fondo (de)be quiet at the back! — ¡los de atrás guarden silencio!
they sat at the back of the bus — se sentaron en la parte de atrás del autobús, se sentaron al fondo del autobús
this idea had been at the back of his mind for several days — esta idea le había estado varios días rondándole la cabeza
•
the ship broke its back — el barco se partió por la mitad•
in back of the house — (US) detrás de la casa•
the toilet's out the back — el baño está fuera en la parte de atrásbeyond 2., mind 1., 1)•
they keep the car round the back — dejan el coche detrás de la casa4) (Sport) (=defender) defensa mf•
the team is weak at the back — la defensa del equipo es débil2. ADVERB1) (in space) atrásstand back! — ¡atrás!
keep (well) back! — (=out of danger) ¡quédate ahí atrás!
keep back! — (=don't come near me) ¡no te acerques!
meanwhile, back in London/back at the airport — mientras, en Londres/en el aeropuerto
he little suspected how worried they were back at home — qué poco sospechaba lo preocupados que estaban en casa
to go back and forth — [person] ir de acá para allá
•
back from the road — apartado de la carretera2) (in time)it all started back in 1980 — todo empezó ya en 1980, todo empezó allá en 1980 liter
3) (=returned)•
to be back — volverwhen/what time will you be back? — ¿cuándo/a qué hora vuelves?, ¿cuándo/a qué hora estarás de vuelta?
he's not back yet — aún no ha vuelto, aún no está de vuelta
black is back (in fashion) — vuelve (a estar de moda) el negro, se vuelve a llevar el negro
•
he went to Paris and back — fue a París y volvió•
she's now back at work — ya ha vuelto al trabajo•
I'll be back by 6 — estaré de vuelta para las 6•
I'd like it back — quiero que me lo devuelvan•
full satisfaction or your money back — si no está totalmente satisfecho, le devolvemos el dinero•
everything is back to normal — todo ha vuelto a la normalidadhit back•
I want it back — quiero que me lo devuelvan3. TRANSITIVE VERB1) (=reverse) [+ vehicle] dar marcha atrás a2) (=support)a) (=back up) [+ plan, person] apoyarb) (=finance) [+ person, enterprise] financiarc) (Mus) [+ singer] acompañar3) (=bet on) [+ horse] apostar porto back the wrong horse — (lit) apostar por el caballo perdedor
Russia backed the wrong horse in him — (fig) Rusia se ha equivocado al apoyar a él
to back a winner — (lit) apostar por el ganador
he is confident that he's backing a winner — (fig) (person) está seguro de que está dando su apoyo a un ganador; (idea, project) está seguro de que va a funcionar bien
4) (=attach backing to) [+ rug, quilt] forrar4. INTRANSITIVE VERB1) [person]a) (in car) dar marcha atrásb) (=step backwards) echarse hacia atrás, retrocederhe backed into a table — se echó hacia atrás y se dio con una mesa, retrocedió y se dio con una mesa
2) (=change direction) [wind] cambiar de dirección (en sentido contrario a las agujas del reloj)5. ADJECTIVE1) (=rear) [leg, pocket, wheel] de atrás, trasero2) (=previous, overdue) [rent, tax, issue] atrasado6.COMPOUNDSback alley N — callejuela f (que recorre la parte de atrás de una hilera de casas)
back boiler N — caldera f pequeña (detrás de una chimenea)
back burner N — quemador m de detrás
- put sth on the back burnerback catalogue N — (Mus) catálogo m de grabaciones discográficas
back copy N — (Press) número m atrasado
back-countrythe back country N — (US) zona f rural (con muy baja densidad de población)
back cover N — contraportada f
- do sth by or through the back doorback formation N — (Ling) derivación f regresiva
back garden N — (Brit) jardín m trasero
back lot N — (Cine) exteriores mpl (del estudio); [of house, hotel, company premises] solar m trasero
back marker N — (Brit) (Sport) competidor(a) m / f rezagado(-a)
back matter N — [of book] apéndices mpl
back number N — [of magazine, newspaper] número m atrasado
back page N — contraportada f
back passage N — (Brit) euph recto m
back rub N — (=massage) masaje m en la espalda
•
to give sb a back rub — masajearle la espalda a algn, darle un masaje a algn en la espalda- take a back seatback somersault N — salto m mortal hacia atrás
back stop N — (Sport) red que se coloca alrededor de una cancha para impedir que se escapen las pelotas
back tooth N — muela f
back view N —
the back view of the hotel is very impressive — el hotel visto desde atrás es impresionante, la parte de atrás del hotel es impresionante
back vowel N — (Ling) vocal f posterior
- back off- back out- back up* * *[bæk]
I
behind somebody's back: they laugh at him behind his back se ríen de él a sus espaldas; to be on somebody's back (colloq) estarle* encima a alguien; get off my back! déjame en paz (fam); to break the back of something hacer* la parte más difícil/la mayor parte de algo; to get o put somebody's back up (colloq) irritar a alguien; to put one's back into something poner* empeño en algo; to turn one's back on somebody — volverle* la espalda a alguien; scratch II d)
2) ca) ( of chair) respaldo m; (of dress, jacket) espalda f; (of electrical appliance, watch) tapa fb) (reverse side - of envelope, photo) dorso m, revés m; (- of head) parte f posterior or de atrás; (- of hand) dorso mc)back to front: your sweater is on back to front — te has puesto el suéter al revés; hand I 2)
3) c u ( rear part)I'll sit in the back — ( of car) yo me siento detrás or (en el asiento de) atrás
(in) back of the sofa — (AmE) detrás del sofá
he's out back in the yard — (AmE) está en el patio, al fondo
in the back of beyond — donde el diablo perdió el poncho (AmL fam), en el quinto pino (Esp fam)
4) c ( Sport) defensa mf, zaguero, -ra m,f
II
adjective (before n, no comp)1) ( at rear) trasero, de atrás2) ( of an earlier date)back number o issue — número m atrasado
III
1) (indicating return, repetition)meanwhile, back at the house... — mientras tanto, en la casa...
to run/fly back — volver* corriendo/en avión
they had us back the following week — nos devolvieron la invitación la semana siguiente; see also go, take back
2) (in reply, reprisal)3)a) ( backward)b) ( toward the rear) atráswe can't hear you back here — aquí atrás no te oímos; see also hold, keep back
4) (in, into the past)5)back and forth — = backward(s) and forward(s): see backward II d)
IV
1.
1)a) \<\<person/decision\>\> respaldar, apoyarb) ( bet money on) \<\<horse/winner\>\> apostar* por2) ( reverse)he backed the car out of the garage — sacó el coche del garaje dando marcha atrás or (Col, Méx) en reversa
3) ( lie behind)4) ( Mus) acompañar
2.
vi \<\<vehicle/driver\>\> dar* marcha atrás, echar or meter reversa (Col, Méx)he backed into a lamppost — se dio contra una farola al dar marcha atrás or al meter reversa
Phrasal Verbs:- back off- back out- back up -
15 sea
si:
1. noun1) ((often with the) the mass of salt water covering most of the Earth's surface: I enjoy swimming in the sea; over land and sea; The sea is very deep here; (also adjective) A whale is a type of large sea animal.) mar2) (a particular area of sea: the Baltic Sea; These fish are found in tropical seas.) mar3) (a particular state of the sea: mountainous seas.) mar•- seawards- seaward
- seaboard
- sea breeze
- seafaring
- seafood
2. adjectiveseafood restaurants.) de marisco- seafront- sea-going
- seagull
- sea level
- sea-lion
- seaman
- seaport
- seashell
- seashore
- seasick
- seasickness
- seaside
- seaweed
- seaworthy
- seaworthiness
- at sea
- go to sea
- put to sea
sea n marby sea por mar / en barcoDel verbo ser: ( conjugate ser) \ \
sea es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativoMultiple Entries: sea ser
sea,◊ seas, etc see ser
ser ( conjugate ser) cópula 1 ( seguido de adjetivos) to be◊ ser expresses identity or nature as opposed to condition or state, which is normally conveyed by estar. The examples given below should be contrasted with those to be found in estar 1 cópula 1 es bajo/muy callado he's short/very quiet;es sorda de nacimiento she was born deaf; es inglés/católico he's English/(a) Catholic; era cierto it was true; sé bueno, estate quieto be a good boy and keep still; que seas muy feliz I hope you'll be very happy; (+ me/te/le etc) ver tb imposible, difícil etc 2 ( hablando de estado civil) to be; es viuda she's a widow; ver tb estar 1 cópula 2 3 (seguido de nombre, pronombre) to be; ábreme, soy yo open the door, it's me 4 (con predicado introducido por `de'): soy de Córdoba I'm from Cordoba; es de los vecinos it belongs to the neighbors, it's the neighbors'; no soy de aquí I'm not from around here 5 (hipótesis, futuro): ¿será cierto? can it be true? verbo intransitivo 1b) (liter) ( en cuentos):◊ érase una vez … once upon a time there was …2a) (tener lugar, ocurrir):¿dónde fue el accidente? where did the accident happen?b) ( en preguntas):◊ ¿qué habrá sido de él? I wonder what happened to o what became of him;¿qué es de Marisa? (fam) what's Marisa up to (these days)? (colloq); ¿qué va a ser de nosotros? what will become of us? 3 ( sumar):◊ ¿cuánto es (todo)? how much is that (altogether)?;son 3.000 pesos that'll be o that's 3,000 pesos; somos diez en total there are ten of us altogether 4 (indicando finalidad, adecuación) sea para algo to be for sth; ( en locs) ¿cómo es eso? why is that?, how come? (colloq); como/cuando/donde sea: tengo que conseguir ese trabajo como sea I have to get that job no matter what; hazlo como sea, pero hazlo do it any way o however you want but get it done; el lunes o cuando sea next Monday or whenever; puedo dormir en el sillón o donde sea I can sleep in the armchair or wherever you like o anywhere you like; de ser así (frml) should this be so o the case (frml); ¡eso es! that's it!, that's right!; es que …: ¿es que no lo saben? do you mean to say they don't know?; es que no sé nadar the thing is I can't swim; lo que sea: cómete una manzana, o lo que sea have an apple or something; estoy dispuesta a hacer lo que sea I'm prepared to do whatever it takes; o sea: en febrero, o sea hace un mes in February, that is to say a month ago; o sea que no te interesa in other words, you're not interested; o sea que nunca lo descubriste so you never found out; (ya) sea …, (ya) sea … either …, or …; sea como sea at all costs; sea cuando sea whenever it is; sea donde sea no matter where; sea quien sea whoever it is; si no fuera/hubiera sido por … if it wasn't o weren't/hadn't been for … ( en el tiempo) to be;◊ ¿qué fecha es hoy? what's the date today?, what's today's date;serían las cuatro cuando llegó it must have been (about) four (o'clock) when she arrived; ver tb v impers sea v impers to be; sea v aux ( en la voz pasiva) to be; fue construido en 1900 it was built in 1900 ■ sustantivo masculino 1◊ sea humano/vivo human/living beingb) (individuo, persona):2 ( naturaleza):
ser
I sustantivo masculino
1 being: es un ser despreciable, he's despicable
ser humano, human being
ser vivo, living being
2 (esencia) essence: eso forma parte de su ser, that is part of him
II verbo intransitivo
1 (cualidad) to be: eres muy modesto, you are very modest
2 (fecha) to be: hoy es lunes, today is Monday
ya es la una, it's one o'clock
3 (cantidad) eran unos cincuenta, there were about fifty people (al pagar) ¿cuánto es?, how much is it?
son doscientas, it is two hundred pesetas Mat dos y tres son cinco, two and three make five
4 (causa) aquella mujer fue su ruina, that woman was his ruin
5 (oficio) to be a(n): Elvira es enfermera, Elvira is a nurse
6 (pertenencia) esto es mío, that's mine
es de Pedro, it is Pedro's
7 (afiliación) to belong: es del partido, he's a member of the party
es un chico del curso superior, he is a boy from the higher year
8 (origen) es de Málaga, she is from Málaga
¿de dónde es esta fruta? where does this fruit come from?
9 (composición, material) to be made of: este jersey no es de lana, this sweater is not (made of) wool
10 ser de, (afinidad, comparación) lo que hizo fue de tontos, what she did was a foolish thing
11 (existir) Madrid ya no es lo que era, Madrid isn't what it used to be
12 (suceder) ¿qué fue de ella?, what became of her?
13 (tener lugar) to be: esta tarde es el entierro, the funeral is this evening 14 ser para, (finalidad) to be for: es para pelar patatas, it's for peeling potatoes (adecuación, aptitud) no es una película para niños, the film is not suitable for children
esta vida no es para ti, this kind of life is not for you
15 (efecto) era para llorar, it was painful
es (como) para darle una bofetada, it makes me want to slap his face
no es para tomárselo a broma, it is no joke
16 (auxiliar en pasiva) to be: fuimos rescatados por la patrulla de la Cruz Roja, we were rescued by the Red Cross patrol
17 ser de (+ infinitivo) era de esperar que se marchase, it was to be expected that she would leave Locuciones: a no ser que, unless
como sea, anyhow
de no ser por..., had it not been for
es más, furthermore
es que..., it's just that...
lo que sea, whatever
o sea, that is (to say)
sea como sea, in any case o be that as it may
ser de lo que no hay, to be the limit ' sea' also found in these entries: Spanish: adentro - arrastrar - besugo - blanca - blanco - caballito - comunicar - cualquiera - elefante - ser - erizo - erotizar - espada - exclusión - flexible - gruesa - grueso - hipocampo - loba - lobo - lubina - mar - marina - marino - marítima - marítimo - negarse - nivel - no - oportuna - oportuno - orientarse - respeto - segundón - segundona - siquiera - sugestión - un - una - vía - agrado - alto - altura - barco - bendito - breve - bruma - caer - calma - Caribe English: above - apply - as - blast - calm - can - Caribbean - clingy - damn - danger - Dead Sea - devil - facing - however - lost - lung - matter - may - Mediterranean - mist - place - prospect - Red Sea - sea - sea dog - sea lion - sea mist - sea-fish - sea-green - sea-lane - sea-level - sea-water - shame - sink - so - South Sea Islands - spin out - splendid - though - urchin - view - voyage - whenever - whichever - whoever - whose - wonder - word - Adriatic - Aegeantr[siː]1 mar m & f■ the sea is calm/rough today la mar está serena/picada hoy■ a heavy/light sea una mar gruesa/llana1 marítimo,-a, de mar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLat sea en el marby the sea a orillas del marout to sea mar adentroto be all at sea estar perdido,-a, estar confundido,-ato find one's sea legs acostumbrarse al mar, no marearseto go by sea ir en barcoto go to sea hacerse marineroto put (out) to sea zarpar, hacerse a la marto send something by sea enviar algo por marsea air aire nombre masculino de marsea anemone anémona de marsea bass lubina, róbalosea bird ave nombre femenino marinasea bream pagro, pargosea breeze brisa marinasea captain capitán nombre masculino de barcosea change cambio radical, metamorfosis nombre femeninosea cow manatí nombre masculinosea dog lobo de marsea fog brumasea green verde nombre masculino marsea horse caballito de mar, hipocamposea kale col nombre femenino marinasea legs equilibriosea level nivel nombre masculino del marsea lion león nombre masculino marinosea mile milla marina (6000 pies ó 1000 brazas ó 1828,8 metros)sea mist brumasea pink armenia marítimasea trout trucha de mar, reosea urchin erizo de marsea wall dique nombre masculino, rompeolas nombre masculino, malecón nombre masculino, espigón nombre masculinosea ['si:] adj: del marsea n1) : mar mfthe Black Sea: el Mar Negroon the high seas: en alta marheavy seas: mar gruesa, mar agitada2) mass: mar m, multitud fa sea of faces: un mar de rostrosadj.• marinero, -a adj.• marino, -a adj.n.• mar s.f.• mar s.m.• océano s.m.siː1) ca) (often pl) ( ocean) mar m [The noun mar is feminine in literary language and in some set idiomatic expressions]a house by the sea — una casa a orillas del mar, una casa junto al mar
to goavel by sea — ir*/viajar en barco
to put (out) to sea — hacerse* a la mar
we've been at sea for a month — hace un mes que estamos embarcados or que zarpamos
to dump waste at sea — verter* desechos en el mar
to feel/be at sea: this left him feeling completely at sea esto lo confundió totalmente; at first I was all at sea al principio me sentí totalmente perdido or confundido; (before n) <route, transport> marítimo; < battle> naval; < god> del mar; < nymph> marino; the sea air/breeze el aire/la brisa del mar; sea crossing — travesía f
b) ( inland) mar m2) (swell, turbulence) (usu pl)heavy o rough seas — mar f gruesa, mar m agitado or encrespado or picado
3) (large mass, quantity) (no pl)[siː]1. N1) (=not land) mar m (or f in some phrases)•
(out) at sea — en alta marto remain two months at sea — estar navegando durante dos meses, pasar dos meses en el mar
•
beside the sea — a la orilla del mar, junto al mar•
beyond the seas — más allá de los mares•
to go by sea — ir por mara house by the sea — una casa junto al mar or a la orilla del mar
•
heavy sea(s) — mar agitado or picado•
on the high seas — en alta mar•
on the sea — (boat) en alta mar•
rough sea(s) — mar agitado or picado•
to sail the seas — navegar los mares•
the seven seas — todos los mares del mundo•
in Spanish seas — en aguas españolas•
the little boat was swept out to sea — la barquita fue arrastrada mar adentroto go to sea — [person] hacerse marinero
to put (out) to sea — [sailor, boat] hacerse a la mar, zarpar
- be all at sea about or with sthnorth2) (fig)2.CPDsea anemone N — anémona f de mar
sea bathing N — baño m en el mar
sea battle N — batalla f naval
sea breeze N — brisa f marina
sea captain N — capitán m de barco
sea change N — (fig) viraje m, cambio m radical
sea crossing N — travesía f
sea defences NPL — estructuras fpl de defensa (contra el mar)
sea-greensea dog N — (lit, fig) lobo m de mar
sea lamprey N — lamprea f marina
sea legs NPL —
sea serpent N — serpiente f de mar
sea shanty N — saloma f
sea transport N — transporte m por mar, transporte m marítimo
sea turtle N — (US) tortuga f de mar, tortuga f marina
sea urchin N — erizo m de mar
* * *[siː]1) ca) (often pl) ( ocean) mar m [The noun mar is feminine in literary language and in some set idiomatic expressions]a house by the sea — una casa a orillas del mar, una casa junto al mar
to go/travel by sea — ir*/viajar en barco
to put (out) to sea — hacerse* a la mar
we've been at sea for a month — hace un mes que estamos embarcados or que zarpamos
to dump waste at sea — verter* desechos en el mar
to feel/be at sea: this left him feeling completely at sea esto lo confundió totalmente; at first I was all at sea al principio me sentí totalmente perdido or confundido; (before n) <route, transport> marítimo; < battle> naval; < god> del mar; < nymph> marino; the sea air/breeze el aire/la brisa del mar; sea crossing — travesía f
b) ( inland) mar m2) (swell, turbulence) (usu pl)heavy o rough seas — mar f gruesa, mar m agitado or encrespado or picado
3) (large mass, quantity) (no pl) -
16 Psychology
We come therefore now to that knowledge whereunto the ancient oracle directeth us, which is the knowledge of ourselves; which deserveth the more accurate handling, by how much it toucheth us more nearly. This knowledge, as it is the end and term of natural philosophy in the intention of man, so notwithstanding it is but a portion of natural philosophy in the continent of nature.... [W]e proceed to human philosophy or Humanity, which hath two parts: the one considereth man segregate, or distributively; the other congregate, or in society. So as Human philosophy is either Simple and Particular, or Conjugate and Civil. Humanity Particular consisteth of the same parts whereof man consisteth; that is, of knowledges which respect the Body, and of knowledges that respect the Mind... how the one discloseth the other and how the one worketh upon the other... [:] the one is honored with the inquiry of Aristotle, and the other of Hippocrates. (Bacon, 1878, pp. 236-237)The claims of Psychology to rank as a distinct science are... not smaller but greater than those of any other science. If its phenomena are contemplated objectively, merely as nervo-muscular adjustments by which the higher organisms from moment to moment adapt their actions to environing co-existences and sequences, its degree of specialty, even then, entitles it to a separate place. The moment the element of feeling, or consciousness, is used to interpret nervo-muscular adjustments as thus exhibited in the living beings around, objective Psychology acquires an additional, and quite exceptional, distinction. (Spencer, 1896, p. 141)Kant once declared that psychology was incapable of ever raising itself to the rank of an exact natural science. The reasons that he gives... have often been repeated in later times. In the first place, Kant says, psychology cannot become an exact science because mathematics is inapplicable to the phenomena of the internal sense; the pure internal perception, in which mental phenomena must be constructed,-time,-has but one dimension. In the second place, however, it cannot even become an experimental science, because in it the manifold of internal observation cannot be arbitrarily varied,-still less, another thinking subject be submitted to one's experiments, comformably to the end in view; moreover, the very fact of observation means alteration of the observed object. (Wundt, 1904, p. 6)It is [Gustav] Fechner's service to have found and followed the true way; to have shown us how a "mathematical psychology" may, within certain limits, be realized in practice.... He was the first to show how Herbart's idea of an "exact psychology" might be turned to practical account. (Wundt, 1904, pp. 6-7)"Mind," "intellect," "reason," "understanding," etc. are concepts... that existed before the advent of any scientific psychology. The fact that the naive consciousness always and everywhere points to internal experience as a special source of knowledge, may, therefore, be accepted for the moment as sufficient testimony to the rights of psychology as science.... "Mind," will accordingly be the subject, to which we attribute all the separate facts of internal observation as predicates. The subject itself is determined p. 17) wholly and exclusively by its predicates. (Wundt, 1904,The study of animal psychology may be approached from two different points of view. We may set out from the notion of a kind of comparative physiology of mind, a universal history of the development of mental life in the organic world. Or we may make human psychology the principal object of investigation. Then, the expressions of mental life in animals will be taken into account only so far as they throw light upon the evolution of consciousness in man.... Human psychology... may confine itself altogether to man, and generally has done so to far too great an extent. There are plenty of psychological text-books from which you would hardly gather that there was any other conscious life than the human. (Wundt, 1907, pp. 340-341)The Behaviorist began his own formulation of the problem of psychology by sweeping aside all medieval conceptions. He dropped from his scientific vocabulary all subjective terms such as sensation, perception, image, desire, purpose, and even thinking and emotion as they were subjectively defined. (Watson, 1930, pp. 5-6)According to the medieval classification of the sciences, psychology is merely a chapter of special physics, although the most important chapter; for man is a microcosm; he is the central figure of the universe. (deWulf, 1956, p. 125)At the beginning of this century the prevailing thesis in psychology was Associationism.... Behavior proceeded by the stream of associations: each association produced its successors, and acquired new attachments with the sensations arriving from the environment.In the first decade of the century a reaction developed to this doctrine through the work of the Wurzburg school. Rejecting the notion of a completely self-determining stream of associations, it introduced the task ( Aufgabe) as a necessary factor in describing the process of thinking. The task gave direction to thought. A noteworthy innovation of the Wurzburg school was the use of systematic introspection to shed light on the thinking process and the contents of consciousness. The result was a blend of mechanics and phenomenalism, which gave rise in turn to two divergent antitheses, Behaviorism and the Gestalt movement. The behavioristic reaction insisted that introspection was a highly unstable, subjective procedure.... Behaviorism reformulated the task of psychology as one of explaining the response of organisms as a function of the stimuli impinging upon them and measuring both objectively. However, Behaviorism accepted, and indeed reinforced, the mechanistic assumption that the connections between stimulus and response were formed and maintained as simple, determinate functions of the environment.The Gestalt reaction took an opposite turn. It rejected the mechanistic nature of the associationist doctrine but maintained the value of phenomenal observation. In many ways it continued the Wurzburg school's insistence that thinking was more than association-thinking has direction given to it by the task or by the set of the subject. Gestalt psychology elaborated this doctrine in genuinely new ways in terms of holistic principles of organization.Today psychology lives in a state of relatively stable tension between the poles of Behaviorism and Gestalt psychology.... (Newell & Simon, 1963, pp. 279-280)As I examine the fate of our oppositions, looking at those already in existence as guide to how they fare and shape the course of science, it seems to me that clarity is never achieved. Matters simply become muddier and muddier as we go down through time. Thus, far from providing the rungs of a ladder by which psychology gradually climbs to clarity, this form of conceptual structure leads rather to an ever increasing pile of issues, which we weary of or become diverted from, but never really settle. (Newell, 1973b, pp. 288-289)The subject matter of psychology is as old as reflection. Its broad practical aims are as dated as human societies. Human beings, in any period, have not been indifferent to the validity of their knowledge, unconcerned with the causes of their behavior or that of their prey and predators. Our distant ancestors, no less than we, wrestled with the problems of social organization, child rearing, competition, authority, individual differences, personal safety. Solving these problems required insights-no matter how untutored-into the psychological dimensions of life. Thus, if we are to follow the convention of treating psychology as a young discipline, we must have in mind something other than its subject matter. We must mean that it is young in the sense that physics was young at the time of Archimedes or in the sense that geometry was "founded" by Euclid and "fathered" by Thales. Sailing vessels were launched long before Archimedes discovered the laws of bouyancy [ sic], and pillars of identical circumference were constructed before anyone knew that C IID. We do not consider the ship builders and stone cutters of antiquity physicists and geometers. Nor were the ancient cave dwellers psychologists merely because they rewarded the good conduct of their children. The archives of folk wisdom contain a remarkable collection of achievements, but craft-no matter how perfected-is not science, nor is a litany of successful accidents a discipline. If psychology is young, it is young as a scientific discipline but it is far from clear that psychology has attained this status. (Robinson, 1986, p. 12)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Psychology
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17 Cognitive Science
The basic idea of cognitive science is that intelligent beings are semantic engines-in other words, automatic formal systems with interpretations under which they consistently make sense.... [P]eople and intelligent computers turn out to be merely different manifestations of the same underlying phenomenon. (Haugeland, 1981b, p. 31)2) Experimental Psychology, Theoretical Linguistics, and Computational Simulation of Cognitive Processes Are All Components of Cognitive ScienceI went away from the Symposium with a strong conviction, more intuitive than rational, that human experimental psychology, theoretical linguistics, and computer simulation of cognitive processes were all pieces of a larger whole, and that the future would see progressive elaboration and coordination of their shared concerns.... I have been working toward a cognitive science for about twenty years beginning before I knew what to call it. (G. A. Miller, 1979, p. 9)Cognitive Science studies the nature of cognition in human beings, other animals, and inanimate machines (if such a thing is possible). While computers are helpful within cognitive science, they are not essential to its being. A science of cognition could still be pursued even without these machines.Computer Science studies various kinds of problems and the use of computers to solve them, without concern for the means by which we humans might otherwise resolve them. There could be no computer science if there were no machines of this kind, because they are indispensable to its being. Artificial Intelligence is a special branch of computer science that investigates the extent to which the mental powers of human beings can be captured by means of machines.There could be cognitive science without artificial intelligence but there could be no artificial intelligence without cognitive science. One final caveat: In the case of an emerging new discipline such as cognitive science there is an almost irresistible temptation to identify the discipline itself (as a field of inquiry) with one of the theories that inspired it (such as the computational conception...). This, however, is a mistake. The field of inquiry (or "domain") stands to specific theories as questions stand to possible answers. The computational conception should properly be viewed as a research program in cognitive science, where "research programs" are answers that continue to attract followers. (Fetzer, 1996, pp. xvi-xvii)What is the nature of knowledge and how is this knowledge used? These questions lie at the core of both psychology and artificial intelligence.The psychologist who studies "knowledge systems" wants to know how concepts are structured in the human mind, how such concepts develop, and how they are used in understanding and behavior. The artificial intelligence researcher wants to know how to program a computer so that it can understand and interact with the outside world. The two orientations intersect when the psychologist and the computer scientist agree that the best way to approach the problem of building an intelligent machine is to emulate the human conceptual mechanisms that deal with language.... The name "cognitive science" has been used to refer to this convergence of interests in psychology and artificial intelligence....This working partnership in "cognitive science" does not mean that psychologists and computer scientists are developing a single comprehensive theory in which people are no different from machines. Psychology and artificial intelligence have many points of difference in methods and goals.... We simply want to work on an important area of overlapping interest, namely a theory of knowledge systems. As it turns out, this overlap is substantial. For both people and machines, each in their own way, there is a serious problem in common of making sense out of what they hear, see, or are told about the world. The conceptual apparatus necessary to perform even a partial feat of understanding is formidable and fascinating. (Schank & Abelson, 1977, pp. 1-2)Within the last dozen years a general change in scientific outlook has occurred, consonant with the point of view represented here. One can date the change roughly from 1956: in psychology, by the appearance of Bruner, Goodnow, and Austin's Study of Thinking and George Miller's "The Magical Number Seven"; in linguistics, by Noam Chomsky's "Three Models of Language"; and in computer science, by our own paper on the Logic Theory Machine. (Newell & Simon, 1972, p. 4)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Cognitive Science
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18 put
1 ( place) mettre [object] ; put them here please mettez-les ici s'il vous plaît ; to put sth on/under/around etc mettre qch sur/sous/autour de etc ; to put a stamp on a letter mettre un timbre sur une lettre ; to put a lock on the door/a button on a shirt mettre une serrure sur la porte/un bouton sur une chemise ; to put one's arm around sb mettre son bras autour de qn ; to put one's hands in one's pockets mettre les mains dans ses poches ; to put sth in a safe place mettre qch en lieu sûr ; to put sugar in one's tea mettre du sucre dans son thé ; to put more sugar in one's tea ajouter du sucre dans son thé ; to put more soap in the bathroom remettre du savon dans la salle de bains ;2 ( cause to go or undergo) to put sth through glisser qch dans [letterbox] ; passer qch par [window] ; faire passer qch à [mincer] ; to put one's head through the window passer la tête par la fenêtre ; to put one's fist through the window casser la fenêtre d'un coup de poing ; to put sth through the books Accts faire passer qch dans les frais généraux ; to put sth through a test faire passer un test à qch ; to put sth through a process faire suivre un processus à qch ; to put sb through envoyer qn à [university, college] ; faire passer qn par [suffering, ordeal] ; faire passer [qch] à qn [test] ; faire suivre [qch] à qn [course] ; after all you've put me through après tout ce que tu m'as fait subir ; to put sb through hell faire souffrir mille morts à qn ; to put one's hand/finger to porter la main/le doigt à [mouth] ;3 ( cause to be or do) mettre [person] ; to put sb in prison/on a diet mettre qn en prison/au régime ; to put sb on the train mettre qn dans le train ; to put sb in goal/in defence GB mettre qn dans les buts/en défense ; to put sb in a bad mood/in an awkward position mettre qn de mauvaise humeur/dans une situation délicate ; to put sb to work mettre qn au travail ; to put sb to mending/washing sth faire réparer/laver qch à qn ;4 (devote, invest) to put money/energy into sth investir de l'argent/son énergie dans qch ; if you put some effort into your work, you will improve si tu fais des efforts, ton travail sera meilleur ; to put a lot into s'engager à fond pour [work, project] ; sacrifier beaucoup à [marriage] ; to put a lot of effort into sth faire beaucoup d'efforts pour qch ; she puts a lot of herself into her novels il y a beaucoup d'éléments autobiographiques dans ses romans ;5 ( add) to put sth towards mettre qch pour [holiday, gift, fund] ; put it towards some new clothes dépense-le en nouveaux vêtements ; to put tax/duty on sth taxer/imposer qch ; to put a penny on income tax GB augmenter d'un pourcent l'impôt sur le revenu ;6 ( express) how would you put that in French? comment dirait-on ça en français? ; how can I put it? comment dirai-je? ; it was-how can I put it-unusual c'était-comment dire-original ; that's one way of putting it! iron on peut le dire comme ça! ; as Sartre puts it comme le dit Sartre ; to put it simply pour le dire simplement ; to put it bluntly pour parler franchement ; let me put it another way laissez-moi m'exprimer différemment ; that was very well ou nicely put c'était très bien tourné ; to put one's feelings/one's anger into words trouver les mots pour exprimer ses sentiments/sa colère ; to put sth in writing mettre qch par écrit ;7 ( offer for consideration) présenter [argument, point of view, proposal] ; to put sth to soumettre qch à [meeting, conference, board] ; to put sth to the vote mettre qch au vote ; I put it to you that Jur j'ai la présomption que ;8 (rate, rank) placer ; where would you put it on a scale of one to ten? où est-ce que tu placerais cela sur une échelle allant de un à dix? ; to put sb in the top rank of artists placer qn au premier rang des artistes ; I put a sense of humour before good looks je place le sens de l'humour avant la beauté ; I put a sense of humour first pour moi le plus important c'est le sens de l'humour ; to put children/safety first faire passer les enfants/la sécurité avant tout ; to put one's family before everything faire passer sa famille avant tout ;9 ( estimate) to put sth at évaluer qch à [sum] ; to put the value of sth at estimer la valeur de qch à [sum] ; I'd put him at about 40 je lui donnerais à peu près 40 ans ;10 Sport lancer [shot] ;C v refl ( p prés - tt- ; prét, pp put) to put oneself in a strong position/in sb's place se mettre dans une position de force/à la place de qn.I didn't know where to put myself je ne savais pas où me mettre ; I wouldn't put it past him! je ne pense pas que ça le gênerait! (to do de faire) ; I wouldn't put anything past her! je la crois capable de tout! ; put it there ○ ! ( invitation to shake hands) tope là! ; to put it about a bit ◑ péj coucher à droite et à gauche ◑ ; to put one over ou across GB on sb ○ faire marcher qn ○.■ put about:▶ put [sth] about, put about [sth]1 ( spread) faire circuler [rumour, gossip, story] ; to put (it) about that faire courir le bruit que ; it is being put about that le bruit court que ;2 Naut faire virer de bord [vessel].■ put across:▶ put across [sth], put [sth] across communiquer [idea, message, concept, case, point of view] ; mettre [qch] en valeur [personality] ; to put oneself across se mettre en valeur.■ put aside:▶ put aside [sth], put [sth] aside mettre [qch] de côté [money, article, differences, divisions, mistrust].■ put away:▶ put away [sth], put [sth] away1 ( tidy away) ranger [toys, dishes] ;2 ( save) mettre [qch] de côté [money] ;▶ put away [sb] ○, put [sb] away ○1 ( in mental hospital) enfermer ; he had to be put away il a fallu l'enfermer ;2 ( in prison) boucler ○ [person] (for pour).■ put back:▶ put back [sth], put [sth] back3 retarder [clock, watch] ; remember to put your clocks back an hour n'oubliez pas de retarder votre pendule d'une heure ;4 ( delay) retarder [project, production, deliveries] (by de) ;5 ○ ( knock back) descendre ○ [drink, quantity].■ put by GB:▶ put [sth] by, put by [sth] mettre [qch] de côté [money] ; to have a bit (of money) put by avoir un peu d'argent de côté.■ put down:▶ put [sth] down, put down [sth]1 (on ground, table) poser [object, plane] (on sur) ; mettre [rat poison etc] ;2 ( suppress) réprimer [uprising, revolt, opposition] ;3 ( write down) mettre (par écrit) [date, time, name] ; put down whatever you like mets ce que tu veux ;4 ( ascribe) to put sth down to mettre qch sur le compte de [incompetence, human error etc] ; to put sth down to the fact that imputer qch au fait que ;6 Vet ( by injection) piquer ; ( by other method) abattre ; to have a dog put down faire piquer un chien ;7 (advance, deposit) to put down a deposit verser des arrhes ; to put £50 down on sth verser 50 livres d'arrhes sur qch ;8 (lay down, store) mettre [qch] en cave [wine] ; affiner [cheese] ;9 ( put on agenda) inscrire [qch] à l'ordre du jour [motion] ;▶ put [sb] down, put down [sb]2 ○ ( humiliate) rabaisser [person] ;4 (classify, count in) to put sb down as considérer qn comme [possibility, candidate, fool] ; I'd never have put you down as a Scotsman! je ne t'aurais jamais pris pour un Écossais! ; to put sb down for ( note as wanting or offering) compter [qch] pour qn [contribution] ; ( put on waiting list) inscrire qn sur la liste d'attente pour [school, club] ; put me down for a meal compte un repas pour moi ; to put sb down for £10 compter 10 livres pour qn ; to put sb down for three tickets réserver trois billets pour qn.▶ put forth [sth], put [sth] forth1 présenter [shoots, leaves, buds] ;2 fig émettre [idea, theory].■ put forward:▶ put forward [sth], put [sth] forward1 ( propose) avancer [idea, theory, name] ; soumettre [plan, proposal, suggestion] ; émettre [opinion] ;2 ( in time) avancer [meeting, date, clock] (by de ; to à) ; don't forget to put your clocks forward one hour n'oubliez pas d'avancer votre pendule d'une heure ;▶ put [sb] forward, put forward [sb] présenter la candidature de (for pour) ;▶ put sb forward as présenter qn comme [candidate] ; to put oneself forward présenter sa candidature, se présenter ; to put oneself forward as a candidate présenter sa candidature ; to put oneself forward for se présenter pour [post].■ put in:▶ put in1 [ship] faire escale (at à ; to dans ; for pour) ;2 ( apply) to put in for [person] postuler pour [job, promotion, rise] ; demander [transfer, overtime] ;▶ put in [sth], put [sth] in1 (fit, install) installer [central heating, shower, kitchen] ; to have sth put in faire installer qch ;2 ( make) faire [request, claim, offer, bid] ; to put in an application for déposer une demande de [visa, passport] ; poser sa candidature pour [job] ; to put in a protest protester ; to put in an appearance faire une apparition ;3 ( contribute) passer [time, hours, days] ; contribuer pour [sum, amount] ; they are each putting in £1 m chacun apporte une contribution d'un million de livres ; to put in a lot of time doing consacrer beaucoup de temps à faire ; to put in a good day's work avoir une bonne journée de travail ; to put in a lot of work se donner beaucoup de mal ; thank you for all the work you've put in merci pour tout le mal que tu t'es donné ;4 ( insert) mettre [paragraph, word, reference] ; to put in that mettre que ; to put in how/why expliquer comment/pourquoi ;5 ( elect) élire ; that puts the Conservatives in again les conservateurs ont donc été élus encore une fois ;▶ put [sb] in for présenter [qn] pour [exam, scholarship] ; poser la candidature de [qn] pour [promotion, job] ; recommander [qn] pour [prize, award] ; to put oneself in for poser sa candidature pour [job, promotion].■ put off:▶ put off from s'éloigner de [quay, jetty] ;▶ put off [sth], put [sth] off1 (delay, defer) remettre [qch] (à plus tard) [wedding, meeting] ; to put sth off until June/until after Christmas remettre qch à juin/à après Noël ; I should see a doctor, but I keep putting it off je devrais voir un médecin, mais je remets toujours ça à plus tard ; to put off visiting sb/doing one's homework remettre à plus tard une visite chez qn/ses devoirs ;▶ put off [sb], put [sb] off1 (fob off, postpone seeing) décommander [guest] ; dissuader [person] ; to put sb off coming with an excuse trouver une excuse pour dissuader qn de venir ; to be easily put off se décourager facilement ;2 ( repel) [appearance, smell, colour] dégoûter ; [manner, person] déconcerter ; to put sb off sth dégoûter qn de qch ; don't be put off by the colour-it tastes delicious! ne te laisse pas dégoûter par la couleur-c'est délicieux! ;3 GB ( distract) distraire ; stop trying to put me off! arrête de me distraire! ; you're putting me off my work tu me distrais de mon travail ;4 ( drop off) déposer [passenger].■ put on:▶ put on [sth], put [sth] on1 mettre [garment, hat, cream, lipstick] ;2 (switch on, operate) allumer [light, gas, radio, heating] ; mettre [record, tape, music] ; to put the kettle on mettre de l'eau à chauffer ; to put the brakes on freiner ;3 ( gain) prendre [weight, kilo] ;4 ( add) rajouter [extra duty, tax] ;5 ( produce) monter [play, exhibition] ;7 (lay on, offer) ajouter [extra train, bus service] ; proposer [meal, dish] ;8 ( put forward) avancer [clock] ;▶ put [sb] on2 ○ US faire marcher ○ [person] ;3 ( recommend) to put sb on to sth indiquer qch à qn ; who put you on to me? qui vous a envoyé à moi? ;■ put out:▶ put out1 Naut partir (from de) ; to put out to sea mettre à la mer ;2 ◑ US péj coucher avec n'importe qui ○ ;▶ put out [sth], put [sth] out2 ( extinguish) éteindre [fire, cigarette, candle, light] ;5 (make available, arrange) mettre [food, dishes, towels etc] ;6 ( sprout) déployer [shoot, bud, root] ;7 ( cause to be wrong) fausser [figure, estimate, result] ;8 ( dislocate) se démettre [shoulder, ankle] ;9 ( subcontract) confier [qch] en sous-traitance [work] (to à) ;▶ put [sb] out1 ( inconvenience) déranger ; to put oneself out se mettre en quatre ○ (to do pour faire) ; to put oneself out for sb se donner beaucoup de mal pour qn ; don't put yourself out for us ne vous dérangez pas pour nous ;2 ( annoy) contrarier ; he looked really put out il avait l'air vraiment contrarié ;3 ( evict) expulser.■ put over = put across.■ put through:▶ put [sth] through, put through [sth]1 ( implement) faire passer [reform, bill, amendment, plan, measure] ;2 Telecom ( transfer) passer [call] (to à) ; she put through a call from my husband elle m'a passé mon mari ○ ;▶ put [sb] through Telecom passer [caller] (to à) ; I'm just putting you through je vous le/la passe ; I was put through to another department on m'a passé un autre service.■ put together:▶ put [sb/sth] together, put together [sb/sth]1 ( assemble) assembler [pieces, parts] ; to put sth together again, to put sth back together reconstituer qch ; more/smarter than all the rest put together plus/plus intelligent que tous les autres réunis ;2 ( place together) mettre ensemble [animals, objects, people] ;3 ( form) former [coalition, partnership, group, team, consortium] ;4 (edit, make) constituer [file, portfolio, anthology] ; rédiger [newsletter, leaflet] ; établir [list] ; faire [film, programme, video] ;5 ( concoct) improviser [meal] ;■ put up:▶ put up2 to put up with ( tolerate) supporter [behaviour, person] ; to have a lot to put up with avoir beaucoup de choses à supporter ;▶ put up [sth] opposer [resistance] ; to put up a fight/struggle combattre ; to put up a good performance [team, competitor] bien se défendre ;▶ put [sth] up, put up [sth]1 ( raise) hisser [flag, sail] ; relever [hair] ; to put up one's hand/leg lever la main/la jambe ; put your hands up! ( in class) levez le doigt! ; put 'em up ○ ! ( to fight) bats-toi! ; ( to surrender) haut les mains! ;2 ( post up) mettre [sign, poster, notice, plaque, decorations] ; afficher [list] ; to put sth up on the wall/on the board afficher qch sur le mur/au tableau ;3 (build, erect) dresser [fence, barrier, tent] ; construire [building, memorial] ;4 (increase, raise) augmenter [rent, prices, tax] ; faire monter [temperature, pressure] ;5 ( provide) fournir [money, amount, percentage] (for pour ; to do pour faire) ;6 ( present) soumettre [proposal, argument] ; to put sth up for discussion soumettre qch à la discussion ;7 ( put in orbit) placer [qch] en orbite [satellite, probe] ;▶ put [sb] up, put up [sb]1 ( lodge) héberger ;2 ( as candidate) présenter [candidate] ; to put sb up for proposer qn comme [leader, chairman] ; proposer qn pour [promotion, position] ; to put oneself up for se proposer comme [chairman] ; se proposer pour [post] ;3 ( promote) faire passer [qn] au niveau supérieur [pupil] ; to be put up [pupil, team] monter (to dans) ;4 ( incite) to put sb up to sth/to doing pousser [qn] à/à faire ; somebody must have put her up to it quelqu'un a dû l'y pousser.■ put upon:▶ put upon [sb] abuser de [person] ; to be put upon se faire marcher sur les pieds ; to feel put upon avoir l'impression de se faire marcher sur les pieds ; I won't be put upon any more je ne me ferai plus jamais avoir ○. -
19 Thinking
But what then am I? A thing which thinks. What is a thing which thinks? It is a thing which doubts, understands, [conceives], affirms, denies, wills, refuses, which also imagines and feels. (Descartes, 1951, p. 153)I have been trying in all this to remove the temptation to think that there "must be" a mental process of thinking, hoping, wishing, believing, etc., independent of the process of expressing a thought, a hope, a wish, etc.... If we scrutinize the usages which we make of "thinking," "meaning," "wishing," etc., going through this process rids us of the temptation to look for a peculiar act of thinking, independent of the act of expressing our thoughts, and stowed away in some particular medium. (Wittgenstein, 1958, pp. 41-43)Analyse the proofs employed by the subject. If they do not go beyond observation of empirical correspondences, they can be fully explained in terms of concrete operations, and nothing would warrant our assuming that more complex thought mechanisms are operating. If, on the other hand, the subject interprets a given correspondence as the result of any one of several possible combinations, and this leads him to verify his hypotheses by observing their consequences, we know that propositional operations are involved. (Inhelder & Piaget, 1958, p. 279)In every age, philosophical thinking exploits some dominant concepts and makes its greatest headway in solving problems conceived in terms of them. The seventeenth- and eighteenth-century philosophers construed knowledge, knower, and known in terms of sense data and their association. Descartes' self-examination gave classical psychology the mind and its contents as a starting point. Locke set up sensory immediacy as the new criterion of the real... Hobbes provided the genetic method of building up complex ideas from simple ones... and, in another quarter, still true to the Hobbesian method, Pavlov built intellect out of conditioned reflexes and Loeb built life out of tropisms. (S. Langer, 1962, p. 54)Experiments on deductive reasoning show that subjects are influenced sufficiently by their experience for their reasoning to differ from that described by a purely deductive system, whilst experiments on inductive reasoning lead to the view that an understanding of the strategies used by adult subjects in attaining concepts involves reference to higher-order concepts of a logical and deductive nature. (Bolton, 1972, p. 154)There are now machines in the world that think, that learn and create. Moreover, their ability to do these things is going to increase rapidly until-in the visible future-the range of problems they can handle will be coextensive with the range to which the human mind has been applied. (Newell & Simon, quoted in Weizenbaum, 1976, p. 138)But how does it happen that thinking is sometimes accompanied by action and sometimes not, sometimes by motion, and sometimes not? It looks as if almost the same thing happens as in the case of reasoning and making inferences about unchanging objects. But in that case the end is a speculative proposition... whereas here the conclusion which results from the two premises is an action.... I need covering; a cloak is a covering. I need a cloak. What I need, I have to make; I need a cloak. I have to make a cloak. And the conclusion, the "I have to make a cloak," is an action. (Nussbaum, 1978, p. 40)It is well to remember that when philosophy emerged in Greece in the sixth century, B.C., it did not burst suddenly out of the Mediterranean blue. The development of societies of reasoning creatures-what we call civilization-had been a process to be measured not in thousands but in millions of years. Human beings became civilized as they became reasonable, and for an animal to begin to reason and to learn how to improve its reasoning is a long, slow process. So thinking had been going on for ages before Greece-slowly improving itself, uncovering the pitfalls to be avoided by forethought, endeavoring to weigh alternative sets of consequences intellectually. What happened in the sixth century, B.C., is that thinking turned round on itself; people began to think about thinking, and the momentous event, the culmination of the long process to that point, was in fact the birth of philosophy. (Lipman, Sharp & Oscanyan, 1980, p. xi)The way to look at thought is not to assume that there is a parallel thread of correlated affects or internal experiences that go with it in some regular way. It's not of course that people don't have internal experiences, of course they do; but that when you ask what is the state of mind of someone, say while he or she is performing a ritual, it's hard to believe that such experiences are the same for all people involved.... The thinking, and indeed the feeling in an odd sort of way, is really going on in public. They are really saying what they're saying, doing what they're doing, meaning what they're meaning. Thought is, in great part anyway, a public activity. (Geertz, quoted in J. Miller, 1983, pp. 202-203)Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler. (Einstein, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 17)What, in effect, are the conditions for the construction of formal thought? The child must not only apply operations to objects-in other words, mentally execute possible actions on them-he must also "reflect" those operations in the absence of the objects which are replaced by pure propositions. Thus, "reflection" is thought raised to the second power. Concrete thinking is the representation of a possible action, and formal thinking is the representation of a representation of possible action.... It is not surprising, therefore, that the system of concrete operations must be completed during the last years of childhood before it can be "reflected" by formal operations. In terms of their function, formal operations do not differ from concrete operations except that they are applied to hypotheses or propositions [whose logic is] an abstract translation of the system of "inference" that governs concrete operations. (Piaget, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 237)[E]ven a human being today (hence, a fortiori, a remote ancestor of contemporary human beings) cannot easily or ordinarily maintain uninterrupted attention on a single problem for more than a few tens of seconds. Yet we work on problems that require vastly more time. The way we do that (as we can observe by watching ourselves) requires periods of mulling to be followed by periods of recapitulation, describing to ourselves what seems to have gone on during the mulling, leading to whatever intermediate results we have reached. This has an obvious function: namely, by rehearsing these interim results... we commit them to memory, for the immediate contents of the stream of consciousness are very quickly lost unless rehearsed.... Given language, we can describe to ourselves what seemed to occur during the mulling that led to a judgment, produce a rehearsable version of the reaching-a-judgment process, and commit that to long-term memory by in fact rehearsing it. (Margolis, 1987, p. 60)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Thinking
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20 full
1. adjective1) vollthe bus was completely full — der Bus war voll besetzt
full of hatred/holes — voller Hass/Löcher
be full up — (coll.) voll [besetzt] sein; [Behälter:] randvoll sein; [Liste:] voll sein; [Flug:] völlig ausgebucht sein (see also academic.ru/9982/c">c)
2)be full of oneself/one's own importance — sehr von sich eingenommen sein/sich sehr wichtig nehmen
she's been full of it ever since — seitdem spricht sie von nichts anderem [mehr]
the newspapers are full of the crisis — die Zeitungen sind voll von Berichten über die Krise
3) (replete with food) voll [Magen]; satt [Person]I'm full [up] — (coll.) ich bin voll [bis obenhin] (ugs.) (see also a)
4) (comprehensive) ausführlich, umfassend [Bericht, Beschreibung]; (satisfying) vollwertig [Mahlzeit]; erfüllt [Leben]; (complete) ganz [Stunde, Tag, Jahr, Monat, Semester, Seite]; voll [Name, Fahrpreis, Gehalt, Bezahlung, Unterstützung, Mitgefühl, Verständnis][the] full details — alle Einzelheiten
in full daylight — am helllichten Tag
the moon is full — es ist Vollmond
in full bloom — in voller Blüte
full member — Vollmitglied, das
in full view of somebody — [direkt] vor jemandes Augen
at full speed — mit Höchstgeschwindigkeit
be at full strength — [Mannschaft, Ausschuss, Kabinett:] vollzählig sein
5) (intense in quality) hell, voll [Licht]; voll [Klang, Stimme, Aroma]6) (rounded, plump) voll [Gesicht, Busen, Lippen, Mund, Segel]; füllig [Figur]; weit geschnitten [Rock]2. noun1)write your name [out] in full — schreiben Sie Ihren Namen aus
2)3. adverbenjoy something to the full — etwas in vollen Zügen genießen
1) (very)know full well that... — ganz genau od. sehr wohl wissen, dass...
full in the face — direkt ins Gesicht [schlagen, scheinen]
* * *[ful] 1. adjective1) (holding or containing as much as possible: My basket is full.) voll2) (complete: a full year; a full account of what happened.) vollständig,ganz2. adverb1) (completely: Fill the petrol tank full.) völlig2) (exactly; directly: She hit him full in the face.) genau•- fully- full-length
- full moon
- full-scale
- full stop
- full-time
- fully-fledged
- full of
- in full
- to the full* * *[fʊl]I. adjher eyes were \full of tears ihre Augen waren voller Tränento talk with one's mouth \full mit vollem Mund sprechento do sth on a \full stomach etw mit vollem Magen tunthey kept packing people in until the hall was \full to bursting man hat so lange immer wieder Leute reingelassen, bis die Halle zum Brechen voll warI couldn't speak, my heart was too \full ich konnte nicht sprechen, denn mir ging das Herz übershe was \full of praise for your work sie war voll des Lobes über deine Arbeithe shot her a look \full of hatred er warf ihr einen hasserfüllten Blick zuto be \full of surprises voller Überraschungen seinto be \full of oneself [or one's own importance] ( pej fam) eingebildet sein▪ to be \full satt seinto be \full to the brim [or to bursting] platzen fam4. (omitting nothing) voll, vollständig\full employment Vollbeschäftigung f\full explanation vollständige Erklärungthe \full form of a word die Vollform eines Wortesto write one's \full name and address den Vor- und Zunamen und die volle Adresse angebento give/write a \full report einen vollständigen Bericht geben/schreiben5. (entire) voll, vollständighe was suspended on \full pay er wurde bei vollen Bezügen freigestelltthey had a furious row outside their house in \full view of their neighbours sie hatten eine wilde Auseinandersetzung vor dem Haus, direkt vor den Augen der Nachbarn\full fare voller Fahrpreisto be in \full flow in voller Fahrt sein\full member Vollmitglied nt\full-price ticket Fahrkarte f zum vollen Preisto be under \full sail NAUT mit vollen Segeln fahrento be in \full swing voll im Gang sein6. (maximum) vollhis headlights were on \full seine Scheinwerfer waren voll aufgeblendet[at] \full blast [or volume] mit voller Lautstärketo be in \full cry [after sb/sth] [jdn/etw] begeistert verfolgenat \full stretch völlig durchgestreckt; ( fig) mit vollen Kräften7. (busy and active) ausgefüllt▪ to be \full of sth von etw dat völlig in Anspruch genommen sein; (enthusiastic) von etw dat ganz begeistert seindid the kids enjoy their day at the beach? — oh yes, they're still \full of it haben die Kinder den Tag am Strand genossen? — oh ja, sie sind noch immer ganz begeistert davon9. (rounded) vollfor the \fuller figure für die vollschlanke Figur10. (wide) weit geschnitten\full skirt weiter Rock11. (rich and deep) voll\full voice sonore Stimme\full wine vollmundiger Wein12.▶ to be \full of beans wie ein Sack [voller] Flöhe sein▶ to be \full of the joys of spring prächtig aufgelegt sein▶ to be \full of the milk of human kindness vor Freundlichkeit [geradezu] überströmen▶ the wheel has [or things have] come \full circle der Kreis hat sich geschlossen1. (completely) vollto be \full on/off tap voll auf-/abgedreht sein2. (directly) direkt3. (very) sehrto know \full well [that...] sehr gut [o wohl] wissen, [dass...]III. nin \full zur Gänzeto the \full bis zum Äußersten* * *[fʊl]1. adj (+er)1) (= filled) room, theatre, train vollto be full of... — voller (+gen) or voll von... sein, voll sein mit...
a look full of hate —
his heart was full (liter) — das Herz lief ihm über
I am full ( up) (inf) — ich bin (papp)satt, ich bin voll (bis obenhin) (inf)
2) (= maximum, complete) voll; description, report vollständig; understanding, sympathy vollste(r, s)that's a full day's work — damit habe ich etc den ganzen Tag zu tun
I need a full night's sleep — ich muss mich (ein)mal gründlich ausschlafen
to be in full flight —
I waited two full hours — ich habe geschlagene zwei or zwei ganze Stunden gewartet
to run full tilt into sth — mit voller Wucht in etw (acc) or auf etw (acc) rennen
to go at full tilt — rasen, Volldampf (inf) or volle Pulle (inf) fahren
3)(= preoccupied)
to be full of oneself — von sich (selbst) eingenommen sein, nur sich selbst im Kopf habenshe was full of it — sie hat gar nicht mehr aufgehört, davon zu reden
you're full of it! (inf) — du erzählst lauter Scheiß! (inf)
4) (= rounded) lips, face voll; figure, skirt etc füllig2. adv1)(= at least)
it is a full five miles from here — es sind volle or gute fünf Meilen von hier2)(= very, perfectly)
I know full well that... — ich weiß sehr wohl, dass...3)(= directly)
to hit sb full in the face — jdn voll ins Gesicht schlagento look sb full in the face —
4)3. n1)in full — ganz, vollständig
2)to the full — vollständig, total
* * *full1 [fʊl]1. a) allg voll:speak while one’s mouth is full ( oder with one’s mouth full) mit vollem Mund sprechen; → beam A 6, stomach A 1, swing C 1, C 42. voll, ganz:in full court JUR vor dem voll besetzten Gericht;a full hour eine volle oder geschlagene Stunde;for a full three years für volle drei Jahre3. weit (geschnitten) (Rock etc)for the fuller figure für die vollschlanke Dame5. voll, kräftig (Stimme)6. schwer, vollmundig (Wein)7. voll, besetzt:full up (voll) besetzt (Bus etc);“house full” THEAT „ausverkauft!“8. vollständig, ausführlich, genau (Einzelheiten etc):9. fig (ganz) erfüllt (of von):full of hatred hasserfüllt;he is full of plans er ist oder steckt voller Pläne;he is full of his success er redet von nichts anderem als von seinem Erfolg;full of oneself (ganz) von sich eingenommen10. reichlich (Mahlzeit)11. voll, unbeschränkt:full power Vollmacht f;have full power to do sth bevollmächtigt sein, etwas zu tun;full power of attorney Generalvollmacht f;12. voll (berechtigt):full member Vollmitglied n13. rein, echt:a full sister eine leibliche Schwester14. umg fig voll:b) Aus betrunkenB adv1. völlig, gänzlich, ganz:know full well that … ganz genau wissen, dass …2. gerade, direkt, genau:the sun was shining full on her face die Sonne schien ihr voll ins GesichtC v/t Stoff raffenE s1. (das) Ganze:in full vollständig, ganz;print sth in full etwas in voller Länge abdrucken;to the full vollständig, vollkommen, bis ins Letzte oder Kleinste;live life to the full das Leben auskosten;pay in full voll oder den vollen Betrag bezahlen;I cannot tell you the full of it ich kann Ihnen nicht alles ausführlich erzählen2. Fülle f, Höhepunkt m:the moon is at the full es ist Vollmond;at the full of the tide beim höchsten Wasserstandfull2 [fʊl] v/t TECH Tuch etc walken* * *1. adjective1) vollfull of hatred/holes — voller Hass/Löcher
be full up — (coll.) voll [besetzt] sein; [Behälter:] randvoll sein; [Liste:] voll sein; [Flug:] völlig ausgebucht sein (see also c)
2)full of — (engrossed with)
be full of oneself/one's own importance — sehr von sich eingenommen sein/sich sehr wichtig nehmen
she's been full of it ever since — seitdem spricht sie von nichts anderem [mehr]
3) (replete with food) voll [Magen]; satt [Person]I'm full [up] — (coll.) ich bin voll [bis obenhin] (ugs.) (see also a)
4) (comprehensive) ausführlich, umfassend [Bericht, Beschreibung]; (satisfying) vollwertig [Mahlzeit]; erfüllt [Leben]; (complete) ganz [Stunde, Tag, Jahr, Monat, Semester, Seite]; voll [Name, Fahrpreis, Gehalt, Bezahlung, Unterstützung, Mitgefühl, Verständnis][the] full details — alle Einzelheiten
full member — Vollmitglied, das
in full view of somebody — [direkt] vor jemandes Augen
be at full strength — [Mannschaft, Ausschuss, Kabinett:] vollzählig sein
5) (intense in quality) hell, voll [Licht]; voll [Klang, Stimme, Aroma]6) (rounded, plump) voll [Gesicht, Busen, Lippen, Mund, Segel]; füllig [Figur]; weit geschnitten [Rock]2. noun1)write your name [out] in full — schreiben Sie Ihren Namen aus
2)3. adverb1) (very)know full well that... — ganz genau od. sehr wohl wissen, dass...
2) (exactly, directly) genaufull in the face — direkt ins Gesicht [schlagen, scheinen]
* * *adj.voll adj.vollständig adj.völlig adj.
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