In this paper, developed wireless portable infrared pyrometer with dual channel fiber optic is described. The pyrometer measures surface temperature in wide infrared spectral range of 2 - 25 um. A data processing algo...In this paper, developed wireless portable infrared pyrometer with dual channel fiber optic is described. The pyrometer measures surface temperature in wide infrared spectral range of 2 - 25 um. A data processing algorithm based on the methods of synchronous detection providing展开更多
The aim of this paper is to defend Searle's view on the semantic role that descriptions associated with proper names play in real contexts. Through an analysis of Kripke's critique of Searle's views, I reach the co...The aim of this paper is to defend Searle's view on the semantic role that descriptions associated with proper names play in real contexts. Through an analysis of Kripke's critique of Searle's views, I reach the conclusion that Kripke;s criticism is based upon a misinterpretation of Searle's ideas. Searle tried to answer the question "what is the object named as such?" That is different from the question that Kripke attributed to the descriptivists, i.e. "what are the necessary criteria to identify the referent of a name in every possible world?" I think Searle's question is also a question that Kripke's Causal Theory of Names has to answer, i.e. how a name transmits through a linguistic community.展开更多
文摘In this paper, developed wireless portable infrared pyrometer with dual channel fiber optic is described. The pyrometer measures surface temperature in wide infrared spectral range of 2 - 25 um. A data processing algorithm based on the methods of synchronous detection providing
文摘The aim of this paper is to defend Searle's view on the semantic role that descriptions associated with proper names play in real contexts. Through an analysis of Kripke's critique of Searle's views, I reach the conclusion that Kripke;s criticism is based upon a misinterpretation of Searle's ideas. Searle tried to answer the question "what is the object named as such?" That is different from the question that Kripke attributed to the descriptivists, i.e. "what are the necessary criteria to identify the referent of a name in every possible world?" I think Searle's question is also a question that Kripke's Causal Theory of Names has to answer, i.e. how a name transmits through a linguistic community.