Our understanding of these mechanisms, though only fragmentary, does seem to me to have real implications for the study of human psychology. By pursuing the kinds of research that now seem feasible and by focus- ing attention on certain problems that are now accessible to study, we may be able to spell out in some detail the elaborate and abstract computations that determine, in part, the nature of percepts and the character of the knowledge that we can acquire the highly specific ways of interpreting phenomena that are, in large measure, beyond our consciousness and control and that may be unique to man. — Noam Chomsky, Language and Mind, 1968
Our understanding of these mechanisms, though only fragmentary, does seem to me to have real implications for the study of human psychology. By pursuing the kinds of research that now seem feasible and by focus- ing attention on certain problems that are now accessible to study, we may be able to spell out in some detail the elaborate and abstract computations that determine, in part, the nature of percepts and the character of the knowledge that we can acquire the highly specific ways of interpreting phenomena that are, in large measure, beyond our consciousness and control and that may be unique to man. — Noam Chomsky, Language and Mind, 1968
Reconstructing Lexicography in Glyptic Art: Structural Relations between the Akkadian age and the Ur III Period / Ramazzotti, Marco; Di, Ludovico; Alessandro,. - STAMPA. - (2008), pp. 263-280. (Intervento presentato al convegno Classifications of Knowledge in the Ancient Near East: Lexicography, Iconography, Stratigraphy tenutosi a Chicago).
Reconstructing Lexicography in Glyptic Art: Structural Relations between the Akkadian age and the Ur III Period
RAMAZZOTTI, Marco;
2008
Abstract
Our understanding of these mechanisms, though only fragmentary, does seem to me to have real implications for the study of human psychology. By pursuing the kinds of research that now seem feasible and by focus- ing attention on certain problems that are now accessible to study, we may be able to spell out in some detail the elaborate and abstract computations that determine, in part, the nature of percepts and the character of the knowledge that we can acquire the highly specific ways of interpreting phenomena that are, in large measure, beyond our consciousness and control and that may be unique to man. — Noam Chomsky, Language and Mind, 1968I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.