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  • 121 Davy, Sir Humphry

    [br]
    b. 17 December 1778 Penzance, Cornwall, England
    d. 29 May 1829 Geneva, Switzerland
    [br]
    English chemist, discoverer of the alkali and alkaline earth metals and the halogens, inventor of the miner's safety lamp.
    [br]
    Educated at the Latin School at Penzance and from 1792 at Truro Grammar School, Davy was apprenticed to a surgeon in Penzance. In 1797 he began to teach himself chemistry by reading, among other works, Lavoisier's elementary treatise on chemistry. In 1798 Dr Thomas Beddoes of Bristol engaged him as assistant in setting up his Pneumatic Institution to pioneer the medical application of the newly discovered gases, especially oxygen.
    In 1799 he discovered the anaesthetic properties of nitrous oxide, discovered not long before by the chemist Joseph Priestley. He also noted its intoxicating qualities, on account of which it was dubbed "laughing-gas". Two years later Count Rumford, founder of the Royal Institution in 1800, appointed Davy Assistant Lecturer, and the following year Professor. His lecturing ability soon began to attract large audiences, making science both popular and fashionable.
    Davy was stimulated by Volta's invention of the voltaic pile, or electric battery, to construct one for himself in 1800. That enabled him to embark on the researches into electrochemistry by which is chiefly known. In 1807 he tried decomposing caustic soda and caustic potash, hitherto regarded as elements, by electrolysis and obtained the metals sodium and potassium. He went on to discover the metals barium, strontium, calcium and magnesium by the same means. Next, he turned his attention to chlorine, which was then regarded as an oxide in accordance with Lavoisier's theory that oxygen was the essential component of acids; Davy failed to decompose it, however, even with the aid of electricity and concluded that it was an element, thus disproving Lavoisier's view of the nature of acids. In 1812 Davy published his Elements of Chemical Philosophy, in which he presented his chemical ideas without, however, committing himself to the atomic theory, recently advanced by John Dalton.
    In 1813 Davy engaged Faraday as Assistant, perhaps his greatest service to science. In April 1815 Davy was asked to assist in the development of a miner's lamp which could be safely used in a firedamp (methane) laden atmosphere. The "Davy lamp", which emerged in January 1816, had its flame completely surrounded by a fine wire mesh; George Stephenson's lamp, based on a similar principle, had been introduced into the Northumberland pits several months earlier, and a bitter controversy as to priority of invention ensued, but it was Davy who was awarded the prize for inventing a successful safety lamp.
    In 1824 Davy was the first to suggest the possibility of conferring cathodic protection to the copper bottoms of naval vessels by the use of sacrificial electrodes. Zinc and iron were found to be equally effective in inhibiting corrosion, although the scheme was later abandoned when it was found that ships protected in this way were rapidly fouled by weeds and barnacles.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1812. FRS 1803; President, Royal Society 1820. Royal Society Copley Medal 1805.
    Bibliography
    1812, Elements of Chemical Philosophy.
    1839–40, The Collected Works of Sir Humphry Davy, 9 vols, ed. John Davy, London.
    Further Reading
    J.Davy, 1836, Memoirs of the Life of Sir Humphry Davy, London (a classic biography). J.A.Paris, 1831, The Life of Sir Humphry Davy, London (a classic biography). H.Hartley, 1967, Humphry Davy, London (a more recent biography).
    J.Z.Fullmer, 1969, Cambridge, Mass, (a bibliography of Davy's works).
    ASD

    Biographical history of technology > Davy, Sir Humphry

  • 122 Papin, Denis

    [br]
    b. 22 August 1647 Blois, Loire et Cher, France
    d. 1712 London, England
    [br]
    French mathematician and physicist, inventor of the pressure-cooker.
    [br]
    Largely educated by his father, he worked for some time for Huygens at Ley den, then for a time in London where he assisted Robert Boyle with his experiments on the air pump. He supposedly invented the double-acting air pump. He travelled to Venice and worked there for a time, but was back in London in 1684 before taking up the position of Professor of Mathematics at the University of Marburg (in 1669 or 1670 he became a Doctor of Medicine at Angers), where he remained from 1687 to 1695. Then followed a period at Cassel, where he was employed by the Duke of Hesse. In this capacity he was much involved in the application of steam-power to pumping water for the Duke's garden fountains. Papin finally returned to London in 1707. He is best known for his "digester", none other than the domestic pressure-cooker. John Evelyn describes it in his diary (12 April 1682): "I went this Afternoone to a Supper, with severall of the R.Society, which was all dressed (both fish and flesh) in Monsieur Papins Digestorie; by which the hardest bones of Biefe itself, \& Mutton, were without water, or other liquor, \& with less than 8 ounces of Coales made as soft as Cheeze, produc'd an incredible quantity of Gravie…. This Philosophical Supper raised much mirth among us, \& exceedingly pleased all the Companie." The pressure-cooker depends on the increase in the boiling point of water with increase of pressure. To avoid the risk of the vessel exploding, Papin devised a weight-loaded lever-type safety valve.
    There are those who would claim that Papin preceded Newcomen as the true inventor of the steam engine. There is no doubt that as early as 1690 Papin had the idea of an atmospheric engine, in which a piston in a cylinder is forced upwards by expanding steam and then returned by the weight of the atmosphere upon the piston, but he lacked practical engineering skill such as was necessary to put theory into practice. The story is told of his last trip from Cassel, when returning to England. It is said that he built his own steamboat, intending to make the whole journey by this means, ending with a triumphal journey up the Thames. However, boatmen on the river Weser, thinking that the steamboat threatened their livelihood, attacked it and broke it up. Papin had to travel by more orthodox means. Papin is said to have co-operated with Thomas Savery in the development of the lat-ter's steam engine, on which he was working c. 1705.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Charles-Armand Klein, 1987, Denis Papin: Illustre savant blaisois, Chambray, France: CLD.
    A.P.M.Fleming and H.R.S.Brocklehurst, 1925, A History of Engineering.
    Sigvar Strandh, 1979, Machines, Mitchell Beazley.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Papin, Denis

  • 123 Radcliffe, William

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 1761 Mellor, Cheshire, England
    d. 1842 Mellor, Cheshire, England
    [br]
    English inventor of the sizing machine.
    [br]
    Radcliffe was brought up in the textile industry and learned carding and spinning as a child. When he was old enough, he became a weaver. It was a time when there were not enough weavers to work up all the yarn being spun on the recently invented spinning machines, so some yarn was exported. Radcliffe regarded this as a sin; meetings were held to prohibit the export, and Radcliffe promised to use his best endeavours to discover means to work up the yarn in England. He owned a mill at Mellor and by 1801 was employing over 1,000 hand-loom weavers. He wanted to improve their efficiency so they could compete against power looms, which were beginning to be introduced at that time.
    His first step was to divide up as much as possible the different weaving processes, not unlike the plan adopted by Arkwright in spinning. In order to strengthen the warp yarns made of cotton and to reduce their tendency to fray during weaving, it was customary to apply an adhesive substance such as starch paste. This was brushed on as the warp was unwound from the back beam during weaving, so only short lengths could be treated before being dried. Instead of dressing the warp in the loom as was hitherto done, Radcliffe had it dressed in a separate machine, relieving the weaver of the trouble and saving the time wasted by the method previously used. Radcliffe employed a young man names Thomas Johnson, who proved to be a clever mechanic. Radcliffe patented his inventions in Johnson's name to avoid other people, especially foreigners, finding out his ideas. He took out his first patent, for a dressing machine, in March 1803 and a second the following year. The combined result of the two patents was the introduction of a beaming machine and a dressing machine which, in addition to applying the paste to the yarns and then drying them, wound them onto a beam ready for the loom. These machines enabled the weaver to work a loom with fewer stoppages; however, Radcliffe did not anticipate that his method of sizing would soon be applied to power looms as well and lead to the commercial success of powered weaving. Other manufacturers quickly adopted Radcliffe's system, and Radcliffe himself soon had to introduce power looms in his own business.
    Radcliffe improved the hand looms themselves when, with the help of Johnson, he devised a cloth taking-up motion that wound the woven cloth onto a roller automatically as the weaver operated the loom. Radcliffe and Johnson also developed the "dandy loom", which was a more compact form of hand loom and was also later adapted for weaving by power. Radcliffe was among the witnesses before the Parliamentary Committee which in 1808 awarded Edmund Cartwright a grant for his invention of the power loom. Later Radcliffe was unsuccessfully to petition Parliament for a similar reward for his contributions to the introduction of power weaving. His business affairs ultimately failed partly through his own obstinacy and his continued opposition to the export of cotton yarn. He lived to be 81 years old and was buried in Mellor churchyard.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1811, Exportation of Cotton Yarn and Real Cause of the Distress that has Fallen upon the Cotton Trade for a Series of Years Past, Stockport.
    1828, Origin of the New System of Manufacture, Commonly Called "Power-Loom Weaving", Stockport (this should be read, even though it is mostly covers Radcliffe's political aims).
    Further Reading
    A.Barlow, 1870, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London (provides an outline of Radcliffe's life and work).
    W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (a general background of his inventions). R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (a general background).
    D.J.Jeremy, 1981, Transatlantic Industrial Revolution. The Diffusion of Textile Technologies Between Britain and America, 1790–1830s, Oxford (discusses the spread of the sizing machine in America).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Radcliffe, William

  • 124 Unconscious

       Prior to Descartes and his sharp definition of the dualism there was no cause to contemplate the possible existence of unconscious mentality as part of a separate realm of mind. Many religious and speculative thinkers had taken for granted factors lying outside but influencing immediate awareness.... Until an attempt had been made (with apparent success) to choose awareness as the defining characteristic of mind, there was no occasion to invent the idea of unconscious mind.... It is only after Descartes that we find, first the idea and then the term "unconscious mind" entering European thought. (Whyte, 1962, p. 25)
       If there are two realms, physical and mental, awareness cannot be taken as the criterion of mentality [because] the springs of human nature lie in the unconscious... as the realm which links the moments of human awareness with the background of organic processes within which they emerge. (Whyte, 1962, p. 63)
       he unconscious was no more invented by Freud than evolution was invented by Darwin, and has an equally impressive pedigree, reaching back to antiquity.... At the dawn of Christian Europe the dominant influence were the Neoplatonists; foremost among them Plotinus, who took it for granted that "feelings can be present without awareness of them," that "the absence of a conscious perception is no proof of the absence of mental activity," and who talked confidently of a "mirror" in the mind which, when correctly aimed, reflects the processes going on inside it, when aimed in another direction, fails to do so-but the process goes on all the same. Augustine marvelled at man's immense store of unconscious memories-"a spreading, limitless room within me-who can reach its limitless depth?"
       The knowledge of unconscious mentation had always been there, as can be shown by quotations from theologians like St. Thomas Aquinas, mystics like Jacob Boehme, physicians like Paracelsus, astronomers like Kepler, writers and poets as far apart as Dante, Cervantes, Shakespeare, and Montaigne. This in itself is in no way remarkable; what is remarkable is that this knowledge was lost during the scientific revolution, more particularly under the impact of its most influential philosopher, Rene Descartes. (Koestler, 1964, p. 148)
       4) The Constructive Nature of Automatic Cognitive Functioning Argues for the Existence of Unconscious Activity
       The constructive nature of the automatic functioning argues the existence of an activity analogous to consciousness though hidden from observation, and we have therefore termed it unconscious. The negative prefix suggests an opposition, but it is no more than verbal, not any sort of hostility or incompatibility being implied by it, but simply the absence of consciousness. Yet a real opposition between the conscious and the unconscious activity does subsist in the limitations which the former tends to impose on the latter. (Ghiselin, 1985, p. 7)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Unconscious

  • 125 feeling

    ˈfi:lɪŋ
    1. сущ.
    1) физические чувства и ощущения а) ощущение, чувство tickling feeling in the throat ≈ чувство першения в горле queasy feeling ≈ тошнота feeling of relaxationрасслабленность sick feeling, sinking feelingслабость gut feeling ≈ инстинктивное чувство Syn: sensation б) чувствительность After the accident he had no feeling in his legs. ≈ После аварии он не чувствовал своих ног. Syn: sensitivity
    2) эмоция, переживание, чувство to arouse feeling, stir up feeling ≈ вызывать, возбуждать чувство to hurt smb.'s feelingsобидеть кого-л., задеть чьи-л. чувства to relieve one's feelingsотвести душу feeling ran high ≈ страсти разгорелись to hide, mask one's feelings ≈ прятать свои чувства to repress one's feelings ≈ подавлять свои чувства deep feeling, strong feeling ≈ сильное чувство eery feeling, strange feeling ≈ страх перед чем-то неведомым feeling of pride ≈ чувство гордости friendly, tender, warm feeling ≈ теплое чувство gloomy feeling, sad feeling ≈ грусть, чувство грусти good feeling ≈ доброжелательность hostile feeling ≈ враждебность ill feeling ≈ неприязнь, предубеждение;
    враждебность intangible feeling ≈ неуловимое чувство intense feeling ≈ сильное чувство innermost feelings, intimate feelings ≈ самые сокровенные чувства pent-up feelings ≈ сдерживаемые чувства hard feelings ≈ злость sneaking feeling ≈ неосознанное чувство uneasy feeling ≈ беспокойство He was afraid of hurting my feelings. ≈ Он боялся задеть мои чувства. It gave me a feeling of satisfaction. ≈ Это принесло мне чувство удовлетворения. He has no respect, no regard for anyone's feelings. ≈ У него нет ни уважения, ни внимания к чувствам других. What about my feelings? ≈ А как же мои чувства? Syn: emotion, sentiment, sensitivity
    3) мнение( о чем-л.), отношение( к чему-л.) ;
    часто мн. взгляд to express feelings ≈ выражать чувство, отношение to show one's feelings ≈ выказывать чувство, отношение I have also begun to reassess my own feelings about being a woman. ≈ Я тоже стала пересматривать свои взгляды на то, что я женщина. He made no real secret of his feelings to his friends. ≈ Он не скрывал своего отношения к друзьям. popular feelingобщественное мнение Syn: appreciation, attitude, opinion
    4) любовь, сочувствие, симпатия( к кому-л.) Thomas never lost his feeling for Harriet. ≈ Томас никогда не переставал любить Хэрриет.
    5) восприятие, понимание, вкус develop a feeling for smth. ≈ развить вкус к чему-л. A woman of feeling would not wear false jewels. ≈ Женщина с тонким восприятием не стала бы носить фальшивые драгоценности.
    6) впечатление, ощущение That's what we tried to portray in the book, this feeling of opulence and grandeur. ≈ В книге мы хотели передать именно это ощущение богатства и великолепия.
    7) интуиция, предчувствие I have a feeling that everything will come right for us one day. ≈ Я предчувствую, что когда-нибудь и у нас все будет хорошо. Syn: premonition, presentiment
    2. прил.
    1) чувствующий, испытывающий какое-л. чувство, чувствительный Syn: sentient, sensitive
    2) сочувственный, сочувствующий;
    прочувствованный( о речи) He could not have used more feeling language. ≈ Он говорил очень прочувственно. Syn: sympathetic, compassionate
    1. ощущение, чувство, сознание - * of safety чувство безопасности - * of cold ощущение холода - the sudden blow made him lose all * внезапный удар вызвал у него полную потерю сознания чувствительность - I have no * in my arm у меня онемела рука - I have no * in my leg у меня затекла нога - a sence of * чувство осязания ощупывание - * of smb.'s pockets прощупывание /обыскивание/ чьих-л. карманов чувство, эмоция - a * of pride чувство гордости - a man of * сентиментальный или эмоциональный человек - to be dead /lost/ to all * быть бесчувственным /бессердечным, черствым/ - to speak with * говорить с чувством /эмоционально/ (обыкновенно) pl чувства;
    переживания - to appeal to the *s rather than to the reason взывать к чувствам, а не к рассудку - to have mixed *s испытывать двойное /смешанное/ чувство (радости и сожаления и т. п.) - to have strong *s on smth. принимать что-л. близко к сердцу - he has strong *s on... он не может говорить спокойно о... - to hurt smb.'s *s обижать кого-л., задевать чье-л. самолюбие - to relieve one's *s облегчить /отвести/ душу - the conversation helped her to relieve her *s разговор помог ей облегчить душу - to control one's *s держать себя в руках, владеть собой сочувствие, симпатия;
    доброта - not to show much * for the sufferings of other people не проявлять сочувствия к страданиям ближних - to have no * for smb. не сочувствовать кому-л., быть безразличным к кому-л. волнение, возбуждение - *s ran high at the time страсти разгорелись в то время - the speech aroused strong * on all sides речь глубоко взволновала всех присутствующих - I have no * about his attack on me я не сержусь на него за его нападки - to entertain a * against smb. иметь зуб против кого-л. мнение;
    впечатление - he expressed his *s about the latest discoveries он выразил свое мнение о последних открытиях - what is the general * on this question? каково отношение к этому вопросу?;
    а что все думают /говорят/ об этом? восприятие, понимание (искусства, красоты и т. п.) - to have a deep * for beauty глубоко чувствовать красоту - she has a fine * for langauge у нее очень тонкое чувство языка( эмоциональная) атмосфера;
    настроение - the place has the * of a haunted house кажется, что этот дом полон привидений - his new picture is full of * его новая картина( написана) с большим настроением - to play the piano with * играть( на рояле) с чувством /с воодушевлением/ предчувствие - he had a * that smth. was going to happen он чувствовал /у него было предчувствие/, что что-то должно произойти - I had a * of danger у меня было ощущение (надвигающейся) опасности > good * дружелюбие, доброжелательность, добрые чувства > ill * враждебность, недружелюбие > to bear good * испытывать добрые чувства > hard *s обида > I hope you have no hard *s about my going without you надеюсь, что вы не обиделись за то, что я ушел без вас > no hard *s! все в порядке!, я не в обиде! чувствительный - * heart чувствительное /доброе/ сердце прочувствованный - * speech прочувствованная речь сочувственный, сочувствующий - * remark сочувственное замечание( устаревшее) остро переживаемый, глубокий( о чувстве) - * grief глубокое горе - * pleasure истинное наслаждение /удовольствие/ to appeal to (smb.'s) better ~s взывать к лучшим чувствам (кого-л.) ;
    стараться разжалобить( кого-л.) ~ ощущение, впечатление;
    bad feeling плохое впечатление feeling pres. p. от feel ~ интуиция, предчувствие;
    a feeling of danger ощущение надвигающейся опасности;
    I have no feeling in this leg у меня нога онемела ~ настроение ~ отношение, настроение;
    (часто pl) взгляд;
    the general feeling was against him общее настроение было против него;
    good feeling доброжелательность ~ ощущение, впечатление;
    bad feeling плохое впечатление ~ ощущение ~ полный сочувствия ~ прочувствованный ~ тонкое восприятие (искусства, красоты) ~ чувствительный ~ чувство, ощущение, сознание;
    he had a feeling of safety он чувствовал себя в безопасности ~ эмоция, волнение;
    чувство;
    feeling ran high страсти разгорелись;
    to hurt (smb.'s) feelings обидеть (кого-л.) ~ интуиция, предчувствие;
    a feeling of danger ощущение надвигающейся опасности;
    I have no feeling in this leg у меня нога онемела ~ эмоция, волнение;
    чувство;
    feeling ran high страсти разгорелись;
    to hurt (smb.'s) feelings обидеть (кого-л.) ~ отношение, настроение;
    (часто pl) взгляд;
    the general feeling was against him общее настроение было против него;
    good feeling доброжелательность ~ отношение, настроение;
    (часто pl) взгляд;
    the general feeling was against him общее настроение было против него;
    good feeling доброжелательность ~ чувство, ощущение, сознание;
    he had a feeling of safety он чувствовал себя в безопасности ~ эмоция, волнение;
    чувство;
    feeling ran high страсти разгорелись;
    to hurt (smb.'s) feelings обидеть (кого-л.) hurt: ~ задевать, обижать, делать больно;
    to hurt (smb.'s) feelings задеть, обидеть (кого-л.) ;
    nothing hurts like the truth = правда глаза колет ~ интуиция, предчувствие;
    a feeling of danger ощущение надвигающейся опасности;
    I have no feeling in this leg у меня нога онемела ill ~ неприязнь, предубеждение;
    враждебность;
    strong feeling(s) (глубокое) возмущение monday ~ нежелание работать после воскресенья Monday: Monday понедельник;
    Black Monday школ. жарг. первый день занятий после каникул;
    Monday feeling нежелание работать (после воскресенья) to relieve one's ~s отвести душу relieve: ~ успокаивать;
    to relieve one's feelings отвести душу ill ~ неприязнь, предубеждение;
    враждебность;
    strong feeling(s) (глубокое) возмущение

    Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > feeling

  • 126 Т-176

    ТОЧКА ЗРЕНИЯ NP usu. sing usu. subj or obj fixed WO
    a way of considering or judging a phenomenon, person, thing etc
    point of view
    viewpoint standpoint vantage point perspective
    с точки зрения чьей, кого-чего = from 8.оЛ point of view
    from the viewpoint (standpoint, vantage point, perspective) of s.o. ( sth.) in the light of sth. in the eyes of s.o. sth.
    стоять на точке зрения чьей, кого-чего (стать на точку зрения чью, кого-чего) side with s.o. sth.
    be on the side of s.o. sth.
    отстаивать свою точку зрения = stick to one's guns
    stand firm
    точка зрения большинства (меньшинства) — the majority (minority) view.
    Картина слишком пессимистическая, сказал Социолог. Смотря с какой точки зрения, сказал Шизофреник (Зиновьев 1). "That's far too pessimistic a picture," said Sociologist. "From what point of view?" asked Schizophrenic (1a).
    Лёва мягко уговаривает Бланка переменить его точку зрения на Есенина (Битов 2). Lyova mildly coaxes Blank to change his viewpoint on Esenin (2a).
    Власть, с точки зрения опыта, есть только зависимость, существующая между выражением воли лица и исполнением этой воли другими людьми (Толстой 7). Power, from the standpoint of experience, is merely the relation that exists between the expression of someone's will and the execution of that will by others (7a).
    ...Закон поэзии - быть выше своего гнева и воспринимать сущее с точки зрения вечности (Солженицын 2)—The laws of poetry command us to rise above our anger and try to see the present in the light of eternity (2a).
    Так сочинение давно умершего английского классика стало вдруг злободневным и совершенно непроходимым с точки зрения советской цензуры (Войнович 1). And so, a classic by a long-dead English writer had suddenly become topical and absolutely unpassable in the eyes of Soviet censorship (1a).
    ...Иногда за ужином разыгрывались схоластические диспуты. Например, так: что более ценно - воля или разум? Рита стояла на точке зрения Фомы Аквинского — за примат разума (Трифонов 5)____Sometimes Scholastic disputes would break out at the supper table. Thus, for example: which was more important-will or reason? Rita was on the side of Thomas Aquinas—for the primacy of reason... (5a).
    Мы добились главного: завтра правление будет докладывать точку зрения большинства» (Войнович 1). "...We got the main thing: tomorrow the board will report the majority view" (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > Т-176

  • 127 точка зрения

    [NP; usu. sing; usu. subj or obj; fixed WO]
    =====
    a way of considering or judging a phenomenon, person, thing etc:
    || с точки зрения чьей, кого-чего from s.o.'s point of view;
    - from the viewpoint (standpoint, vantage point, perspective) of s.o. < sth.>;
    - in the light of sth.;
    - in the eyes of s.o. < sth.>;
    || стоять на точке зрения чьей, кого-чего <стать на точку зрения чью, кого-чего> side with s.o. < sth.>;
    - be on the side of s.o. < sth.>;
         ♦ Картина слишком пессимистическая, сказал Социолог. Смотря с какой точки зрения, сказал Шизофреник (Зиновьев 1). "That's far too pessimistic a picture," said Sociologist. "From what point of view?" asked Schizophrenic (1a).
         ♦ Лёва мягко уговаривает Бланка переменить его точку зрения на Есенина (Битов 2). Lyova mildly coaxes Blank to change his viewpoint on Esenin (2a).
         ♦ Власть, с точки зрения опыта, есть только зависимость, существующая между выражением воли лица и исполнением этой воли другими людьми (Толстой 7). Power, from the standpoint of experience, is merely the relation that exists between the expression of someone's will and the execution of that will by others (7a).
         ♦...Закон поэзии - быть выше своего гнева и воспринимать сущее с точки зрения вечности (Солженицын 2) - The laws of poetry command us to rise above our anger and try to see the present in the light of eternity (2a).
         ♦ Так сочинение давно умершего английского классика стало вдруг злободневным и совершенно непроходимым с точки зрения советской цензуры (Войнович 1). And so, a classic by a long-dead English writer had suddenly become topical and absolutely unpassable in the eyes of Soviet censorship (1a).
         ♦...Иногда за ужином разыгрывались схоластические диспуты. Например, так: что более ценно - воля или разум? Рита стояла на точке зрения Фомы Аквинского - за примат разума (Трифонов 5) Sometimes Scholastic disputes would break out at the supper table. Thus, for example: which was more important-will or reason? Rita was on the side of Thomas Aquinas - for the primacy of reason... (5a).
         ♦ "Мы добились главного: завтра правление будет докладывать точку зрения большинства" (Войнович 1). "...We got the main thing: tomorrow the board will report the majority view" (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > точка зрения

  • 128 golfo2

    2 = street urchin, slum urchin, urchin, street arab, bum, rapscallion, ragamuffin.
    Ex. The author examines Whistler's visits to the more squalid sections of the city, his views along the Thames and his portrayals of street urchins.
    Ex. Victorian photographs of social commentary ranged from the pseudo-sentimental slum urchins of Oscar Rejlander to the stark honest portrayal of the horrible conditions of the Glascow slums by Thomas Annan.
    Ex. This is a film that that will melt hearts of stone, with its cast of scruffy urchins who learn both song and life lessons under the tutelage of a paternalistic mentor at a grim boarding school for 'difficult' boys.
    Ex. Many New York citizens blamed the street arabs for crime and violence in the city and wanted them placed in orphan homes or prisons.
    Ex. Although the results provide support for the 'drunken bum' theory of wife beating, they also demythologize the stereotype because alcohol is shown to be far from a necessary or sufficient cause of wife abuse.
    Ex. In all truth, it must be said that this howling, hissing, foot-scraping body of young rapscallions found some cause for complaint.
    Ex. He was looking affably at the two dubious ragamuffins and, moreover, even making inviting gestures to them.
    ----
    * golfo de la playa = beach bum.

    Spanish-English dictionary > golfo2

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