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21 пропозициональная функция
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > пропозициональная функция
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22 пропорциональная функция
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > пропорциональная функция
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23 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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24 letter
1) буква || буквенный2) полигр. литера3) элемент алфавита; символ; знак4) письмо || писать письмо5) помечать буквами; надписывать• -
25 network
1) (вычислительная) сеть (см. тж net)2) схема•- activity network
- ad hoc network
- adder network
- adding network
- adjustment network
- analog network
- aperiodic network
- arbitration network
- artificial neuron network
- backbone network
- balancing network
- baseband network
- baseline network
- bearer network
- bilateral network
- bluetooth network
- bluetooth voice network
- bridged-T network
- broadcasting network
- bus network
- business-communications network
- campus network
- carrier band network
- centralized network
- circuit-switched network
- circuit network
- closed network
- code slotted network
- coding network
- collapsed backbone network
- combinatorial network
- communication computers network
- computer network
- concentrator network
- connectionless network
- connection-oriented network
- consistent network
- controller area network
- corrective network
- coupling network
- cube-connected network
- cube network
- cube-connected-cycles network
- daisy chain network
- data bank network
- data communications network
- data transportation network
- datacom network
- data-transmission network
- decentralized network
- decoding network
- delay network
- despotic network
- dial-up network
- digital network
- direct-linked network
- distributed backbone network
- distributed function network
- distributed intelligence network
- distributed network
- distributed processing network
- dual network
- elemental network
- expert network
- facsimile network
- feedforward network
- four-terminal network
- fully connected network
- fuzzy-constraint network
- generalized network
- heterogeneous computer network
- hierarchical computer network
- hierarchical network
- high-bandwidth network
- high-degree network
- high-flux network
- highway network
- home-area network
- homogeneous computer network
- host-based network
- inconsistent network
- information network
- integrated services network
- integrated service network
- intelligent network
- interruption network
- IP-routed network
- irredundant network
- iterated network
- knowledge information network
- ladder network
- large-grained network
- leased line network
- local area network
- local network - lumped network
- matching network
- mesh interconnection network
- mesh network
- meshed network
- metropolitain network
- mixed backbone network
- mixed network- monochannel computer network- monochannel network - multiple-work-station network
- multipoint network - multistation network
- multiterminal network
- nearest neighbour network
- network with gains
- neural network
- n-node-fault testable network
- nonpartitionable network
- nonuniform network
- N-port network
- office network
- one-port network
- packet network
- packet switched network
- partitionable network
- passive network
- pass-through network
- PCS network
- peer-to-peer network
- perceptual network
- personal-computer network
- phase-shifting network
- phase-shift network
- planar network
- point-to-point network
- port-to-port network
- power distribution network
- priority network
- private line network
- process network
- propositional network
- public data network
- public network
- public-swithced network
- pulse-forming network
- queueing network
- radio-access network
- reciprocal network
- recognition network
- regional computer network
- regional network
- resistance network
- resistance-capacitance network
- resource-sharing network
- ring-topology network
- ring network
- satellite meshed network
- semantic network
- service-driven network
- shaping network
- shuffle-exchange network
- single-site network
- social network
- star-type network
- star network
- star-wired network
- Steiner network
- stereotype network
- switched message network
- switched network
- switching network
- systolic network
- teleprocessing network
- teletype network
- terrestrial network
- tightly coupled network
- token-bus-based network
- token-passing network
- transit network
- transition network
- transport network
- two-port network
- two-terminal network
- undirected network
- unilateral network
- value-added network
- virtual call network
- virtual-datagram network
- virtual-transport network
- weighted-resistor network
- well-behaved network
- wide-area network
- wireless networkEnglish-Russian dictionary of computer science and programming > network
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26 algebra
algebra with minimality condition — алгебра с условием минимальности, алгебра с условием обрыва убывающих цепей
algebra with maximality condition — алгебра с условием максимальности, алгебра с условием обрыва возрастающих цепей
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27 variable
1) переменная (величина) || переменный2) изменчивый3) изменяемый; варьируемый4) регулируемый•variable unrestricted in sign — переменная, не ограниченная в знаке
- absolutely integrable variable - anonymous free variable - complex free variable - complex random variable - discontinuous variable - discrete random variable - discrete variable variable - discrete variable - essentially free variable - excessive random variable - exchangeable random variables - generalized random variable - geometric random variable - infinitesimal random variable - jointly normal random variables - linguistic random variable - multinomial random variable - multinormal random variable - multiplicative random variable - mutually independent random variables - nonanticipative random variable - normed random variable - number variable - optimal stopping variable - orthonormal random variables - pairwise independent random variables - spatial variable - symmetrized random variable - two-state variable - two-valued variable - uniformly limited variableto separate variables — мат. разделять переменные
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См. также в других словарях:
propositional function — n. Logic an expression containing at least one variable, that becomes a proposition when a constant is substituted for the variable (Ex.: x is a man) … English World dictionary
propositional function — Logic. See sentential function. [1900 05] * * * Sentencelike expression that may be thought of as obtained from a sentence by substituting variables for constants occurring in the sentence. For example, x was a parent of y may be thought of as… … Universalium
propositional function — The concept introduced by Frege of a function taking a number of names as arguments, and delivering one proposition as the value. The idea is that ‘ x loves y ’ is a propositional function, which yields the proposition ‘John loves Mary’ for those … Philosophy dictionary
propositional function — noun 1. : sentential function 2. : something that is designated or expressed by a sentential function * * * Logic. See sentential function. [1900 05] * * * propositional function, 1. a combination of two or more propositions whose truth or… … Useful english dictionary
propositional function — noun Date: 1903 1. sentential function 2. something that is designated or expressed by a sentential function … New Collegiate Dictionary
propositional function — proposi′tional func′tion n. pho sentential function • Etymology: 1900–05 … From formal English to slang
propositional function — noun An expression containing algebraic symbols that serve to represent words or other elements of a sentence or proposition … Wiktionary
Function (mathematics) — f(x) redirects here. For the band, see f(x) (band). Graph of example function, In mathematics, a function associates one quantity, the a … Wikipedia
propositional — See proposition. * * * (as used in expressions) propositional attitude propositional calculus propositional function * * * … Universalium
function — /fungk sheuhn/, n. 1. the kind of action or activity proper to a person, thing, or institution; the purpose for which something is designed or exists; role. 2. any ceremonious public or social gathering or occasion. 3. a factor related to or… … Universalium
Propositional calculus — In mathematical logic, a propositional calculus or logic (also called sentential calculus or sentential logic) is a formal system in which formulas of a formal language may be interpreted as representing propositions. A system of inference rules… … Wikipedia