reading lamp - translation to greek
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reading lamp - translation to greek

PHILOSOPHICAL PUZZLE THAT IS A VARIATION ON ZENO'S PARADOXES
Thompson Lamp Paradox; Thompson lamp paradox; Lamp paradox; Thomson lamp

reading lamp      
πορτατίφ
kerosene lamp         
  • "Central-draft" tubular-wick kerosene lamp
  • Dead-flame
  • Cold-blast
  • New Zealand Railways]] lamp on the [[Weka Pass Railway]]
  • Sumburgh Head lighthouse]] until 1976.
  • Hot-blast
TYPE OF LIGHTING DEVICE
Paraffin lamp; Pressure lamp; Kerosine Lamp; Kerosene lantern; Hurricane lamp; Hurricane lantern; Kerosene pressure lamp; Kerosene lamps; Kerosene lighting; Kerosine Lantern; Hurricane Lanterns
λάμπα πετρέλαιου
carbon arc         
  • right
  • mercury]] arc lamp from a [[fluorescence microscope]].
LIGHT CREATED BY ELECTRICAL BREAKDOWN OF GAS
Carbon arc light; Carbon arc lamp; Arc Lamp; Arc lamps; Arclamp; Electric arc lamp; Arc tube; Arc tubes; Carbon arc; Arclights; Carbon-arc light; Electric arc light
βολταικό τόξο

Definition

reading lamp
(reading lamps)
A reading lamp is a small lamp that you keep on a desk or table. You can move part of it in order to direct the light to where you need it for reading.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Thomson's lamp

Thomson's lamp is a philosophical puzzle based on infinites. It was devised in 1954 by British philosopher James F. Thomson, who used it to analyze the possibility of a supertask, which is the completion of an infinite number of tasks.

Consider a lamp with a toggle switch. Flicking the switch once turns the lamp on. Another flick will turn the lamp off. Now suppose that there is a being who is able to perform the following task: starting a timer, he turns the lamp on. At the end of one minute, he turns it off. At the end of another half minute, he turns it on again. At the end of another quarter of a minute, he turns it off. At the next eighth of a minute, he turns it on again, and he continues thus, flicking the switch each time after waiting exactly one-half the time he waited before flicking it previously. The sum of this infinite series of time intervals is exactly two minutes.

The following question is then considered: Is the lamp on or off at two minutes? Thomson reasoned that this supertask creates a contradiction:

It seems impossible to answer this question. It cannot be on, because I did not ever turn it on without at once turning it off. It cannot be off, because I did in the first place turn it on, and thereafter I never turned it off without at once turning it on. But the lamp must be either on or off. This is a contradiction.

Examples of use of reading lamp
1. Then he saw the book in my hand, and my surprised expression in the light of the reading lamp.
2. Other than the toothbrush incident – and the crash landing that happened in my ear when I made the mistake of sitting too close to my reading lamp – they didn‘t really bug me that much.