The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to a talk
(as part of its Departmental Colloquium series)
by
Anna Babarczy, Budapest University of Technology and Economics
on
Can the comprehension of abstract language be rooted in sensory
experiences?
Date: Wed, March 14, 2012 - 17:00 - 18:30
Location: Department of Cognitive Science, CEU, Frankel Leó út 30-34.,
Room G15
Can the comprehension of abstract language be rooted in sensory
experiences?
ABSTRACT: The question of learning the meaning of abstract language
(roughly, expressions with no perceptible referents) has been bugging
philosophers for thousands of years. More recently, a number of
experimental paradigms have emerged trying to shed light on this issue.
The basic idea explored in the talk is that people understand abstract
(metaphorical) expressions by linking them to sensory or bodily
experiences. If this is the case, we should be able to show that these
experiences affect people’s interpretation of abstract utterances. The
talk looks at the evidence we have so far (pro and contra).We're looking
forward to see you there (Frankel Leo u. 30-34) !
_______________________________________________
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We cordially invite you to the next lecture of the BME Cognitive Seminar
Series:
Date & Time: November 12, Monday, 12:00-13:00
Location: BME, XI., Egry József utca 1., T. ép 515.
*Lie detection with polygraph: theory and practice*
*Márk Bérdi*
Psychologist, PhD
Péterfy Sándor utcai Kórház, Krízis Intervenciós és Pszichiátriai
Osztály (Péterfy Sándor Hospital, Crisis Intervention and Psychiatry)
Handwriting expert
Grafológiai Intézet, Oktató és Kutató Kft. (Institute of Graphology)
Abstract
For the detection of deception the polygraph, or "lie detector", is a
widely used instrument in forensic psychology. Albeit its validity and
reliability is repeatedly questioned by the public opinion and
scientific researches as well, results of polygraph can be used as an
evidence in criminal suit. The standard methodology and the use of the
polygraph will be presented in the seminar, and theoretical dilemmas
will be discussed.
--
Attila Keresztes
Junior Research Fellow
Budapest University of Technology and Economics
Dept. of Cognitive Science,
Egry József u. 1, Budapest
1111, Hungary
Tel: +36 1 4633525
CEU OPEN HOUSE INVTITATION
You are cordially invited to the 2012 Open House at CEU! We have planned a whole day of events for you, including presentations about our academic programs, how to apply to CEU, scholarship opportunities, and student life. Throughout the day you will have the opportunity to meet with faculty, students and staff members who can answer your questions and provide information about the exceptional programs and services available for students at CEU.
If you would like to attend, PLEASE REGISTER ONLINE HERE:
http://www.ceu.hu/OpenHouse/Registration2012A detailed program of the day is posted on our website:
http://www.ceu.hu/events/2012-11-16/ceu-open-house-2012
We look forward to welcoming you on campus!
THEORETICAL PHILOSOPHY FORUM
Institute of Philosophy
Faculty of Humanities, Eötvös University
Address: Múzeum krt. 4/i, Budapest
November Program
7 November (Wednesday) 5:00 PM Room 226
Balázs Gyenis
Institute of Philosophy, Research Center for the Humanities, Hungarian
Academy of Sciences
Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh
Propagator equations as laws: reconciling Humean and anti-reductionist
intuitions
14 November (Wednesday) 5:00 PM Room 226
Gábor Bács and János Tőzsér
Department of Social Sciences, University of Kaposvár
A műalkotások filozófiailag legártatlanabb pillanatainkban
(Works of art in our philosophically most innocent moments)
21 November
No seminar session!
28 November (Wednesday) 5:00 PM Room 226
Péter Fazekas
Institute of Philosophy, Research Center for the Humanities, Hungarian
Academy of Sciences
From H2O to Water - The Prospects of Reductive Explanation
___________________________________
Abstracts and printable program (poster) are available from the web
site of the Forum: http://phil.elte.hu/tpf (Please feel free to post
the program in your institution!)
The Forum is open to everyone, including students, visitors, and faculty
members from all departments and institutes! Format: 60 minute lecture,
coffee break, 60 minute discussion.
The organizer of the Forum: László E. Szabó
(leszabo(a)phil.elte.hu)
--
L a s z l o E. S z a b o
Professor of Philosophy
DEPARTMENT OF LOGIC, INSTITUTE OF PHILOSOPHY
EOTVOS UNIVERSITY, BUDAPEST
http://phil.elte.hu/leszabo
Tisztelt Listatagok!
Gyarapító könyvtárosként futottam át az alábbi cikket az idei
augusztus 31-i TLS-ben (pp 5,7-8).
Érdekelne, hogy szintén látnak-e mélyebb ellentmondásokat,
összegyeztethetetlenséget
Chomsky nyelvtudományi biologizmusa és "démonizáló" antikapilista
politikai nézetei között.
(A TLS - európai értelemben - inkább konzervatív kulturális hetilap, sztem.)
Üdv.: NpL
(Magam csak munkanapokon olvasok e-mailt,
mert nincs otthon számítógépem.)
http://www.the-tls.co.uk/tls/public/article1114177.ece
How Noam Chomsky’s world works
David Hawkes
Noam Chomsky
HOW THE WORLD WORKS
Edited by Arthur Naiman
335pp. Hamish Hamilton. Paperback, £14.99. 978 0 241 14538 8
US: Soft Skull Press. Paperback, $18. 978 1 59376 427 2
THE SCIENCE OF LANGUAGE
Interviews with James McGilvray
321pp. Cambridge University Press. £50 (paperback, £15.99); US $75
(paperback, $24.99).
978 1 107 60240 3
Published: 29 August 2012
A nyone following the career of Noam Chomsky is soon confronted with a
problem. In fact, it has become known as the “Chomsky problem”.
Chomsky has achieved eminence in two very different fields,
theoretical linguistics and political commentary. The “Chomsky
problem” is that his approaches to these fields appear to contradict
each other. In politics Chomsky is a radical, but in linguistics he
takes positions that can easily be characterized as reactionary. He
treats linguistics as a branch of biology. He traces language to a
“Universal Grammar” resident in the physical brain. He believes that
our linguistic nature is hard-wired into our genes. Because they
diminish the influence of environment on human behaviour, such claims
can be used to suggest that certain modes of social organization are
natural and immutable. As a result, they have often been associated
with conservative politics.
Chomsky himself professes to see no problem. He believes that
linguistics is a natural science, and research in the natural sciences
must be objective and based on the evidence alone. Indeed, part of the
researcher’s job is to divest himself of his cultural and political
prejudices before entering the laboratory. These methodological
principles were established by the seventeenth-century scientific
revolution of Newton and the Royal Society, which was in Chomsky’s
view a progressive development and an immeasurable boon to humanity.
He sees no reason why the methods of the natural sciences should not
be applied to the study of the human mind.
His critics caution that empirical science is closely linked,
certainly historically and perhaps conceptually, to capitalist
political economy. These discourses both emerge in late
seventeenth-century England, and they conquer the world together.
Surely this suggests an affinity that ought to trouble those who
advocate one but castigate the other? The interviews now published as
The Science of Language and How the World Works show that this paradox
is at least playing on Chomsky’s mind. The conversations range
promiscuously, and although one book is largely concerned with
linguistics while the other is mainly political, Chomsky seems happier
than usual to discuss the mutual implications of his two fields of
interest.
By issuing such collections of informal discussions, transcribed and
edited by others, Chomsky is presumably attempting to reach a popular
audience. He certainly exploits the pedagogical potential of dialogue
to impressive effect. Yet he cannot entirely hide the Brahmin’s
disdain for the ways of the Untouchable. In How the World Works he
avers that, although “I like to watch a good basketball game and that
sort of thing . . . spectator sports make people more passive”,
because sport indoctrinates “them” with “jingoist and chauvinist
attitudes”.
Throughout his career, Chomsky has depicted a world ruled by demonic
forces of quite incredible malice and guile
This ideological chasm between the American Left and its putative
constituency yawns nowhere wider than in Chomsky’s withering
references to popular religion. He cites the fact that “about 75% of
the US population has a literal belief in the devil” as the clearest
possible example of American ignorance and stupidity. But is it really
so different from his own beliefs? Throughout his career, Chomsky has
depicted a world ruled by demonic forces of quite incredible malice
and guile. Whatever is running the world Chomsky describes is
undoubtedly a very greedy, violent and selfish entity – it would be
hard not to call it “evil”, or even Evil, were such tropes not sternly
prohibited by the monochrome literalism of our age.
The incarnate, worldly identity of this terrifying power is less
clear. Sometimes it is “the US government”, which Chomsky depicts as a
cartoonish amalgamation of petty spite and cataclysmic violence,
determined to crush the slightest remnant of human decency still
cowering in any corner of its empire. “When the Mennonites tried to
send pencils to Cambodia, the State Department tried to stop them”,
while the CIA allegedly trained its Central American death squads by
forcing recruits to bite the heads off live vultures. As Chomsky puts
it, “no degree of cruelty is too great for Washington sadists”. The
America described here is a crazed, bloodthirsty monster, hell-bent on
the destruction of humanity.
But Chomsky is not so silly as to ascribe a monopoly of malignity to
any single nation. He traces the roots of American turpitude back to
medieval Europe, which “had been fighting vicious, murderous wars
internally. So it had developed an unsurpassed culture of violence”.
As a result, European colonialism unleashed a wave of unprecedented
horror on a hapless world: “European wars were wars of extermination.
If we were to be honest about that history, we would describe it
simply as a barbarian invasion”. Here, at least, Chomsky does not
discuss the ways in which empirical science both facilitated and
rationalized the European conquest of the globe.
In any case, the degree of historical blame accruing to either Europe
or America is unimportant. The important question, surely, is what
made these polities so fearsomely aggressive? Chomsky usually locates
the source of modern evil in economics rather than politics, assigning
ultimate blame to the pursuit of self-interest, which he sometimes
presents as a manifestation of human nature, and sometimes as a
historical aberration. He refers to “class war” but does not identify
the classes he believes to be engaged in warfare. He frequently
describes our oppressors as “investors” or “the people in charge of
investment decisions”, as if the problem were a group of nefarious
individuals. But he concedes the futility of convincing an individual
capitalist of the error of his ways: “What would happen then? He’d get
thrown out and someone else would be put in as CEO”.
if we want to understand the atrocities that Chomsky documents, we
must not look to human nature, but to the nature of capital
Occasionally, Chomsky implies that the pursuit of self-interest is,
like language, simply in our genes. But he is far too sophisticated to
be satisfied with such Hobbesian speculation. Nor does the problem lie
with the ethical failings of any nation, bloc of nations, social class
or malignant cabal. The problem lies with the power that motivates the
malignity. The problem is capital itself. Although Chomsky calls
capital a “virtual Senate” and a “de facto world government”, he does
not follow through to the conclusions involved in this position. If
the nominal possessors of capital are in reality its slaves, if their
actions are determined by its demands, and if we want to understand
the atrocities that Chomsky documents, we must not look to human
nature, but to the nature of capital.
This Chomsky cannot do. The logical conclusion of his political
commentary is that capital acts as an independent agent, insinuating
itself into the human mind and systematically perverting it. But this
is incompatible with his scientific assumption that the mind is merely
an “emergent property” of the physical brain. As Chomsky himself
reminds us, the idea that human beings are purely physical entities,
devoid of discarnate qualities such as mind, spirit or soul (or indeed
ideas), has become plausible only over the past three centuries.
Thomas Kuhn refers to this as a “paradigm shift”, but Chomsky rejects
the concept because it implies that scientific truth is historically
relative. For him, the Galilean revolution of the seventeenth century
was simply an unprecedented, almost miraculous leap forward, and he
sees it as his task to extend this revolution to areas, such as
linguistics, in which its impact has been delayed. He does not attempt
to explain why it occurred in the first place.
Both his science and his politics have seemed the poorer for his
neglect of the connections between them, and the main attraction of
these books is that they go some way to remedying that deficiency.
Along with the Galilean revolution in science, economic systems based
on wage labour have rapidly spread throughout the world over the past
three centuries. A wage labourer must think of his time – which is his
life – as a thing that he owns and can sell. He must conceive of his
self as an alienable object. And Chomsky’s scientific approach
enthusiastically endorses the conception of human beings as objects.
His linguistics proposes that our thoughts are produced by the
material brain, and that biology holds the key to our nature. His
scientific assumptions prevent him from considering the possibility
that the kind of human being he describes might be the result of
capitalism, rather than its cause.
Chomsky is hardly alone in this, of course. In fact the “Chomsky
problem” is arguably the fundamental contradiction of the capitalist
age. With the relaxation of the laws against usury in early modern
Europe, money became an autonomous power, acquiring its own interests
and making its own demands, as if it were alive. Money behaves like a
living creature when it takes on the definitive characteristic of
life: the ability to reproduce. But money is not part of the natural
universe. No one can touch or taste a piece of financial value. Money
is merely a sign representing alienated human life, and “capitalism”
is the name we give to the process of our own objectification. Chomsky
understands that this process is the source of the quasi-metaphysical
evil he describes in his political work, but he does not acknowledge
that it is also the ideological precondition of the method he
practises in his science.
Yet his own observations point directly to that conclusion. Chomsky
has often noted the similarities between modern wage slavery and
chattel slavery. As he remarks in The Science of Language:
“In a market society, you rent people; in a slave society, you buy
them. So therefore slave societies are more moral than market
societies. Well, I’ve never heard an answer to that, and I don’t think
that there is an answer. But it’s rejected as morally repugnant –
correctly – without following out the implications, that renting
people is an atrocity. If you follow out that thought, slave owners
are right: renting people is indeed a moral atrocity.”
Furthermore, wage labour has now become almost universal, so that
“wage slavery seems to be the natural condition today”. As Chomsky
recalls, Aristotle defines a slave as one who does not pursue his own
ends, but whose activity is subordinated to the ends of another.
According to this classical definition, all wage labour is piecemeal
slavery. The worker’s time, his life, is not his property while he is
at work.
Chomsky has always been clear about this indictment of wage labour.
Yet he has never taken the next logical step in the argument. The
classical tradition assumes, plausibly enough, that the condition of
slavery has certain psychological consequences. Slaves conceive of
themselves as objects, for the very good reason that legally they are
objects: commodities to be traded on the market. Aristotle’s Politics
therefore associates slavery with corporeality: “that which can
foresee by the exercise of mind is by nature intended to be lord and
master, and that which can with its body give effect to such foresight
is a subject, and by nature a slave”.
Aristotle famously distinguished between “legal” and “natural” slaves.
“Legal” slavery was the empirical condition of objectification – being
turned into an object – and “natural” slavery was its psychological
equivalent. Each could exist without the other. For Aristotle, the
natural purpose of a human being was the cultivation of the soul. A
slave is by definition a person who does not pursue the proper ends of
humanity. Those proper ends are intellectual or spiritual, while the
ends pursued by the slave will be purely physical. In fact, the slave
will instinctively reverse the proper relation of means to ends, and
make his entire soul the slave of his body. This association of
slavery with physicality spans two millennia. It acquired racist
overtones with the burgeoning of the Atlantic trade, and declined only
as wage slavery became universal.
Today, most educated Westerners find an intuitive truth in science’s
proposition that they are objects, identical with their bodies. Why
have we arrived at this historically unique opinion? If it is true, as
Chomsky believes, that we have now reached a condition of virtually
universal slavery, we must surely assume that mental slavery will have
become as ubiquitous as its economic counterpart. The psychological
manifestation of slavery is objectification. The materialist method
practised by Chomsky the linguist is thus part of the same more
general, more sinister, tendency as the reified economics denounced by
Chomsky the activist. By bringing the two sides of his career together
in ways that his specialist works have eschewed, the conversations
recorded in these books remind us that the “Chomsky problem” is no
individual foible, but the deepest ideological contradiction of our
age.
David Hawkes is Professor of English at Arizona State University. His
most recent books are John Milton: A hero for our time, 2009, and The
Culture of Usury in Renaissance England, 2010.
Kedves Mindenki,
Kathie Galotti professzor
a Carleton College kognitiv tudomanyi vezetoje, egy nagy sikeru kognitiv pszichologia tankonyv szerzoje az alabbi cimmel tart eloadast:
"Consistency in College Students' Real-Life Decision Making"
Az eloadas helyszine: ELTE TTK Kari Tanacsterem (Pazmany Peter setany, Eszaki Tomb, 7.em. 7.21)
Ideje: november 5, 16:00
Minden erdklodot szeretettel varunk,
udvozlettel kgy
Kampis Gyorgy
Meghívó
A MTA Nyelvtudományi Intézete és a MTA TTK Kognitív Idegtudományi és
Pszichológiai Intézete tisztelettel meghívja az érdeklődőket a Magyar
Tudomány Ünnepe alkalmából 2012. november 7-én szerdán, 10 órától 14
óráig az MTA Székház Kistermében tartandó programjára:
Látható nyelvek, hangzó nyelvek és az agy. Új lehetőségek és kihívások a
neurolingvisztikában és az idegtudományokban
(előadások és vita)
Részletes program:
Az idegtudomány a nyelv rejtélyeinek nyomában
Csépe Valéria, akadémikus
Hangzó nyelv és agyi működés.
Honbolygó Ferenc, tudományos munkatárs
A jelnyelvekkel kapcsolatos tévhitek és igazságok
Romanek Péter, siket jelnyelvi szakértő
Jelnyelvek és agyi működés.
Bartha Csilla, tudományos tanácsadó
Hattyár Helga, tudományos munkatárs
Az előadásokat beszélgetés és vita követi
Vitavezető: Bánréti Zoltán tudományos tanácsadó
Minden érdeklődőt szeretettel várunk!
MEGHÍVÓ
Az MTA Alkalmazott Nyelvészeti Munkabizottsága és az MTA
Nyelvtudományi Intézete szeretettel meghívja Önt a 2013. február 1-jén
megrendezésre kerülő
VII. Alkalmazott Nyelvészeti Doktoranduszkonferenciára.
Az Alkalmazott Nyelvészeti Doktoranduszkonferenciák megrendezésére
évente kerül sor.
A hatodik konferencia helyszíne az MTA Nyelvtudományi Intézete (1068
Budapest, Benczúr u. 33.).
A konferenciára való jelentkezés határideje: 2012. december 7.
Részvételi díj: 3000 Ft.
Előadók és résztvevők jelentkezését egyaránt várjuk. Angol és magyar
nyelvű jelentkezési lapok letölthetők a
http://www.nytud.hu/alknyelvdok13/reg.html weboldalról. A kitöltött
jelentkezési lapokat e-mailben kérjük elküldeni az
alknyelvdok[kukac]nytud[pont]hu email címre.
A beküldendő kivonatok formai és tartalmi követelményeire vonatkozó
útmutató a www.nytud.hu/alknyelvdok13/absinfok.html webhelyen
található. A konferenciával kapcsolatos további részleteket szintén a
konferencia webhelyén olvashatnak: http://www.nytud.hu/alknyelvdok13
Üdvözlettel,
Fenyvesi Anna
Az MTA Alkalmazott Nyelvészeti Munkabizottságának elnöke
--
Kas Bence
MTA Nyelvtudományi Intézete
ELTE GYK Fonetikai és Logopédiai Tanszék
http://www.nytud.hu/oszt/neuro/kasb/index.htmlwww.logotanszek.barczi.elte.hu
Kedves lista tagok,
a jovo heten lesz Budapesten a "Brain oscillations in health and
disease" workshop.
Date: 2012.11.08.- 2012.11.10
Venue: Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest
Organizers: Zoltán Vidnyánszky, Wolfgang Klimesch, Gyula Kovács, Stephen
Jackson
Supported by the European Science Foundation and the Hungarian Academy of
Sciences
This workshop will bring together investigators working in different
areas to discuss
emerging ideas and approaches in the research of human neural
oscillations in health
and disease. Brain oscillations have been associated with diverse neural
processes
involved in sensory and motor functions, attention, and memory. The
workshop will
focus on how oscillations contribute to the neural responses within
brain areas as well
as to the coordination of activity between distant areas during both
normal brain
functioning and in disease states.
A reszletes program itt olvashato:
http://www.erni-hsf.eu/budapest2012/ESF-HAS-Oscillation-workshop.pdf
Udv,
Stefanics Gabor
Begin forwarded message:
> From: Mária Sipos <maria.sipos(a)gmail.com>
> Subject: Horizon project: ‘Knowledge and Culture’
> Date: 29 October 2012 9:45:12 am CET
> To: racsmany(a)cogsci.bme.hu, babarczy(a)cogsci.bme.hu, alukacs(a)cogsci.bme.hu, honbolygo.ferenc(a)ppk.elte.hu, kiraly.ildiko(a)ppk.elte.hu, Zoltan Banreti <banreti(a)nytud.mta.hu>, richter.pal(a)btk.mta.hu, Gergely Csibra <csibrag(a)ceu.hu>, szorenyi(a)iti.mta.hu
> Reply-To: sipos(a)nytud.hu
>
> Tisztelt Kollégák!
>
> Kérjük segítségüket, hogy a levélben röviden bemutatott lehetőségek (posztdoktori és PhD-állások) híre eljuthasson az Önök által alkalmasnak ítélt fiatal szakemberekhez.
> Köszönjük közreműködésüket!
> Üdvözlettel:
>
> Sipos Mária
> tudományos titkár
> MTA Nyelvtudományi Intézet
> 1068 Budapest, Benczúr u. 33.
> Tel.: 06-1-32-14-830 / 133, 118
>
> *
>
> 4 Postdoctoral researchers and 4PhD positions, NWO-sponsored Horizon project: ‘Knowledge and Culture’
>
>
> The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) will be funding the Horizon research project ‘Knowledge and Culture’. This project will be carried out as a collaboration between the Leiden University Centre for Linguistics (LUCL), the Leiden University Centre for Arts in Society (LUCAS), the Meertens Institute (KNAW), and the University of Amsterdam (UvA). Prof. dr Johan Rooryck at the Leiden University Centre for Linguistics (LUCL) of the Faculty of Humanities at Leiden University will be coordinating the research project.For more information, please see the full description of the project at http://www.hum.leiden.edu/lucl/job-opportunities/vacancies-at-leiden-univer…
>
>
> Knowledge and culture:
>
> In various domains of cognitive science, a new paradigm holds that humans and non-human animals are born with a small set of hard-wired cognitive abilities that are task-specific, language-independent, and non-species-specific. These core knowledge systemsare innate cognitive skills that have the capacity for building mental representations of objects, persons, spatial relationships, numerosity, and social interaction. In addition to core knowledge systems, humans possess species-specific, uniquely human abilities such as language and music.
>
> The ‘core knowledge’ paradigm challenges scholars in the humanities to ask the question how nurture and culture build on nature. This project examines the way in which innate, non specifically human, core knowledge systems for object representation, number, and geometry constrain cultural expressions in music, language, and the visual arts. In this research program, four domains of the humanities will be investigated from the point of view of core knowledge: (1) music cognition; (2) language and number; (3) visual arts and geometry; (4) poetry, rhythm, and meter.
>
> 8 positions in 4 subprojects:
> Subproject 1: Music cognition
> teamleader: Prof.dr H. Honing (UvA)
> 1PhD student in music cognition
> http://vacatures.leidenuniv.nl/wetenschappelijk/12-246-phd-student-in-music…
> 1 Postdoctoral researcher in music cognition/ linguistics
> http://vacatures.leidenuniv.nl/wetenschappelijk/12-251-postdoctoral-researc…
>
> Subproject 2: Language and Number
> teamleader: Prof.dr S. Barbiers(Meertens Institute/ UU)
> 1PhD student in linguistics or cognitive science
> http://vacatures.leidenuniv.nl/wetenschappelijk/12-247-phd-student-in-lingu…
> 1 Postdoctoral researcher in linguistics
> http://vacatures.leidenuniv.nl/wetenschappelijk/12-252-postdoctoral-researc…
>
> Subproject 3: Visual Arts and Geometry
> teamleaders: Prof.dr.ir M. Delbeke (UGent) & Prof.dr C. van Eck (UL)
> 1PhD student in art history
> http://vacatures.leidenuniv.nl/wetenschappelijk/12-249-phd-student-in-art-h…
> 1 Postdoctoral researcher in art history
> http://vacatures.leidenuniv.nl/wetenschappelijk/12-254-postdoctoral-researc…
>
> Subproject 4: Poetry, rhythm, and meter
> teamleader: Prof.dr M. van Oostendorp (Meertens Institute/ UL)
> 1PhD student in metrics
> http://vacatures.leidenuniv.nl/wetenschappelijk/12-248-phd-student-in-metri…
> 1 Postdoctoral researcher in metrics
> http://vacatures.leidenuniv.nl/wetenschappelijk/12-253-postdoctoral-researc…
>
>
>