... Moran would recoEnize that the location change is from the location ofthe Agent to the location ofthe indirect object by the interaction of building block #3 with other buildlng blocks and ... represents the types of entities chat partic- ipate in an action and the changes the entities undergo during the action. The ~s are organized so thac the similarities among various senses of a ... uniform identification ofthe co alleles and differences of the various meanings of different root: verbs. As l enrning continues the new knowledge incorporated into the verb world will...
... - the time of speech or narration (S) - the time of event (E), i.e. the interval at which the basic proposition is said to be true - one time of reference (R) The S-interval consists of ... 36 The specifiers ofthe reference time are the when-adverbials. A classification ofthe latter that appears to be relevant for the assignment of deictic values in particular cases is the ... time-points, on the one hand the time ofthe state resulting from a prior situation, and on the other the time of that prior situation.' (ibid., p. 52). In order to make these nations...
... uncorrelativity ofthe random force is the shortness of its time ofthe correlation as compared with the time ofthe relaxation ofthe velocity for the large Brownian particles (large frequency ofthe ... expressed by the formula ofthe Boussinet, then the assumption about the random force will lead, in particular, to the results ofthe work. The physical reason ofthe assumption about the uncorrelativity ... to the results of the work (perhaps he means to the satisfying results?). The physical reason ofthe assump- tion about the uncorrelativity ofthe random force, is the shortness of time of...
... categories of urban landscapes on the basis of users’ aesthetic judgements. It also explores the role that the restorativecapacity of a place—in terms ofthe attentional restoration theory (ART)—together ... reliability level of .05.DISCUSSION The analysis ofthe characteristics ofthe mostattractive and most unattractive places in the cityFigure 2. Average scores in the aesthetic attributes ofthe most ... how often they visited orwalked by their first choice. Once they hadcompleted the ‘‘attractive’’ places section, partici-pants were asked to place themselves on the otherside ofthe aesthetic...
... As a result of these twodifferent modes of socio-technical evolution, the concept of ba can therefore beredefined. The chapter links the concept of ba to the sociocultural basis of know-ledge, ... the visibility of relationships in an ecology of communities. At the level of ecology of communities of practice, the speed of recombination has therefore increased. The space of recombination ... on the identity ofthe members of a specific email-using community and its practices, as well as in the direction of evolution of the community.Another important factor in the dynamics of...
... sense of what matters to them, what inspiresthem, concerns them, motivates them, and instills curiosity in their worktoward the research and development of nanotechnology. Whether or notthey ... nointerpretation is offered. Themeaningofthe conversation with Russell isleft entirely up to the reader. The introduction to the book is placed after the conversation withRussell. It explains the importance ... possible meanings and impli-cations ofthe content ofthe conversations is determined by the reader.However, the placement of those conversations is strategic, because the content alludes to some of...
... assign-ment of truth depending on the cost ofthe law, rather than onedependent upon the price of a bird, my favourite colour, or the height ofthe Empire State Building. Suppose, on the other hand,that ... Inputsin advance of their treatment by the truth theory. What the pragmatictheor y must confront is the very diVerent issue of how the hearerrecognizes . . . the one . . . of these n possibilities. ... verdicts about u. But the interfacebetween the system’s theory ofmeaning and truth, on the onehand, and the treatment of particular instances of language use, on the other, does not only raise...
... believe that there is a fact ofthe matter whether I meanchicken pox by ‘chicken pox’. Furthermore, given the assumption thatthere is a fact ofthe matter what I mean, nothing themeaning scepticsays ... account for the normativity of meaning. He says: The moral ofthe present discussion ofthe dispositional account may be relevantto other areas of concern to philosophers beyond the immediate ... simplycriticise the current theories of what makes it the case that someonemeans something by a word. Since the thesis that meaning is normativeprovides the sceptic with an aprioriargument against all theories,...
... thesisthat meaning (Sinn) is prior in the order of inquiry to all “positive”(scientific and metaphysical) thematics. The question ofthemeaning of meaning set the terms ofthe debate between phenomenologists ... aspects of the philosophy ofmeaning that have surfaced in more recent approaches to the “space of reasons.”Lask, for instance, offers an account ofthe relationbetween meaning and truth, and the ... have the character of “essential insights” or “a priori truths”? What is the ground of theirvalidity?Inthe following chapters I explore thehypothesis30HUSSERL, HEIDEGGER, AND THE SPACE OF MEANING itself”...
... arrangements signify after the fashion ofthe artful patterning of words (the figures of words of classical rhetoric) rather than the constructions of grammar or the formulae of logic. Rhetorical ... multiplicity of links and metaphors: the mind's eye, the hand of creation, the coordination of hand and eye, the hand and tool, the integration of person and work, the wholeness of artistic ... graphics. There is some point to this digital artists take their images where they find them, whether in a box of old photographs, scans of objects sitting on top ofthe scanner, stock photos, their...
... true to their “authentic selves”rather than to what others thought they ought to be, then they would ultimately choose good over evil.This rather optimistic view of atheism was the theme of Sartre’s ... aconspicuous clue to the Neanderthals’ theory -of- mind abilities, or rather their absence, is the fact thatthey didn’t seem to gather socially at the most obvious place for a meeting ofthe minds:Neanderthals ... chagrin of those faithful evolutionists who like to think they’ve cast off the lodestone of God altogether, the father of evolutionary theory himself, Charles Darwin, was a far cryfrom the full-blooded...
... Merida tomorrow.In the first sentence the text in blue marks the semantic role of LocationIn the second, the semantic role of SourceIn the third one, the semantic role of Goal Location, ... is the state or phenomenon in which the words have the sense relation which involve the opposite of meaning. The concrete form of antonymy is called “antonym” (opposite). The word pairs of antonym ... (original) meaning is the meaning that we can find in a dictionaryE.g. RoseRose The flower of a rose brush The flower of a rose brushWhat is “semantics”?E.g. The lexical presentation of: Red,...