
U211-A Power Regulator
Features:
Power in : AC 100Vď˝?00V; Power out : AC 200V , 2kW
Voltage protection device under unstable voltage
Easily installed into fuel dispenser
100% Factory Tested.
Packing:
Weight: Dimension:
10.3kg/case of 1 150Ă—200Ă—340mm/case of 1
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into the mind of another—i fuel dispenser n other words, to have a theory of
mind. It is a combination of language and theory of mind that makes human society possible.
In science, as in other fields of endeavour, it helps to have a good slogan. “The language instinct� coined
by Steven Pinker, of Harvard University, is an excellent way of describing human powers of
communication. But although Dr Pinker came up with the label, the idea of such an instinct was originally
dreamed up by Noam Chomsky, who referred to it as “deep, universal grammar� Ambitious claims about
language have been made for other species, from parrots to dolphins to chimpanzees. None of these,
however, has been shown to engage in the complexity of communication that people do.
Though Dr Pinker and Dr Chomsky disagree about the details—in particular on how the instinct evolved�
there is a lot of behavioural evidence that the basic idea is right. The speed with which children learn the
rules of speech is one piece of that evidence. It is hard to see how this could happen if what babies hear
is not being plugged into some pre-programmed circuitry. Oddly, the difficulty of teaching the rules of
writing is another piece of evidence. Writing is an artefact. Written language is no fuel dispenser more complex than the
spoken variety, but it is a recent invention and has not co-evolved with the fuel dispenser language instinct. Children
therefore struggle to master it. Perhaps the most persuasive behavioural evidence, though, is the way
that the children of migrants in mixed-language communities (for example, sugar-producing islands in
which slaves spoke different languages from each other and from their masters) are able to make up
their own fully functional languages, known as creoles, in a single generation.
Besides the behavioural evidence, the mere existence of Broca s area, which governs speech production,
and the speech-recognition area discovered a few years later by Carl Wernicke, points powerfully to the
idea that a language instinct is hard-wire