Results for 'C. Ritchie'

951 found
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  1.  79
    Studies in spatial learning. I. Orientation and the short-cut.E. C. Tolman, B. F. Ritchie & D. Kalish - 1946 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 36 (1):13.
  2. Studies in spatial learning. II. Place learning versus response learning.E. C. Tolman, B. F. Ritchie & D. Kalish - 1946 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 36 (3):221.
  3.  39
    Studies in spatial learning. IV. The transfer of place learning to other starting paths.E. C. Tolman, B. F. Ritchie & D. Kalish - 1947 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 37 (1):39.
  4.  46
    Studies in spatial learning. V. Response learning vs. place learning by the non-correction method.E. C. Tolman, B. F. Ritchie & D. Kalish - 1947 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 37 (4):285.
  5.  36
    Cue selection as a function of degree of learning and response similarity.William L. Davis, Sam C. Brown & Elaine Ritchie - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 78 (2p1):323.
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  6. Talking about causing events.C. A. Vogel, Alexis Wellwood, Rachel Dudley & J. Brendan Ritchie - 2014 - The Baltic International Yearbook of Cognition, Logic and Communication 9 (1).
    Questions about the nature of the relationship between language and extralinguistic cognition are old, but only recently has a new view emerged that allows for the systematic investigation of claims about linguistic structure, based on how it is understood or utilized outside of the language system. Our paper represents a case study for this interaction in the domain of event semantics. We adopt a transparency thesis about the relationship between linguistic structure and extralinguistic cognition, investigating whether different lexico-syntactic structures can (...)
     
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  7. Material perception for philosophers.J. Brendan Ritchie, Vivian C. Paulun, Katherine R. Storrs & Roland W. Fleming - 2021 - Philosophy Compass 16 (10):e12777.
    Common everyday materials such as textiles, foodstuffs, soil or skin can have complex, mutable and varied appearances. Under typical viewing conditions, most observers can visually recognize materials effortlessly, and determine many of their properties without touching them. Visual material perception raises many fascinating questions for vision researchers, neuroscientists and philosophers, yet has received little attention compared to the perception of color or shape. Here we discuss some of the challenges that material perception raises and argue that further philosophical thought should (...)
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  8.  61
    Same people, different group: Social structures are a central component of group concepts.Alexander Noyes, Frank C. Keil, Yarrow Dunham & Katherine Ritchie - 2023 - Cognition 240 (C):105567.
  9.  62
    Signalling signalhood and the emergence of communication.Thomas C. Scott-Phillips, Simon Kirby & Graham R. S. Ritchie - 2009 - Cognition 113 (2):226-233.
  10.  76
    C S Peirce & Immanuel Kant.Jack Ritchie - 1999 - The Philosophers' Magazine 6 (6):30-31.
  11.  97
    New books. [REVIEW]David G. Ritchie, C. A. F. Rhys Davids, M. E., J. Adam, T. W. Levin, M. L. & Alfred W. Benn - 1897 - Mind 6 (21):120-135.
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  12.  58
    New books. [REVIEW]A. D. Ritchie, Karl Britton, M. Macdonald, Alice Ambrose, H. D. Lewis, J. R. Jones & A. C. Ewing - 1946 - Mind 55 (220):357-377.
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  13. Lloyd Morgan, C. - emergent evolution. [REVIEW]A. D. Ritchie - 1923 - Mind 32:485.
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  14.  66
    The editors express their appreciation to the following individuals who, though not members of the Advisory board, generously reviewed articles for the Journal during 1990: George J. Annas, Nora K. Bell, Robert C. Cefalo, John H. Cover-dale, Larry Churchill, Rebecca Dresser, Gary B. Ferngren, James. [REVIEW]M. Gustafson, Stanley Hauerwas, George BChusfh, Andrew Lustig, James J. McCartney, Karen Ritchie, David C. Thomasma & Becky Cox White - 1991 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 16 (369).
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  15.  34
    Ritchie Robert W.. Classes of predictably computable functions. Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 106 , pp. 139–173. [REVIEW]C. C. Elgot - 1963 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 28 (3):252-253.
  16. RITCHIE, A. D. -The Natural History of Mind. [REVIEW]A. C. Ewing - 1936 - Mind 45:399.
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  17.  52
    Darwin and Hegel.D. G. Ritchie.J. C. Smith - 1894 - International Journal of Ethics 4 (3):408-411.
  18.  39
    Ritchie's Fabulae Faciles. Edited by J. C. Kirtland. Pp. xi + 182. New York, etc.: Longmans, Green and Co., 1931. Cloth, 3s. 6d. [REVIEW]H. Lister - 1932 - The Classical Review 46 (1):36-36.
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  19.  18
    What is Enlightenment? Religion and the Rise of Capitalism, by Benjamin M. Friedman. New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 2021, xv, 534 pp., $37.50 (hb), ISBN: 978–0593317983; $20.00 (pb), ISBN 978-0593311097 [also available as an Ebook] The Enlightenment: The Pursuit of Happiness, 1680-1790, by Ritchie Robertson. London, Allen Lane, 2020, xxi, 984 pp., £40.00 (hb), ISBN: 978-024-1004821 [also published in New York under the Harper imprint]. [REVIEW]David Harris Sacks - 2024 - Intellectual History Review 34 (2):457-469.
    Although both books discussed in this review essay address problems with relevance to our present day and its dilemmas, they have different chronological scopes and employ different methods of interpretation. Robertson focuses exclusively on the era of the “Enlightenment” (c. 1680–1790), eschewing overt “presentism” to treat a wide range of authors and works as they addressed one another in the context of the events and developments of the period, mainly in Britain, France, and Germany. Friedman's aim, emphasizing the role of (...)
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  20.  41
    Mild Cognitive Impairment Is Relevant.Ronald C. Petersen - 2006 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 13 (1):45-49.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Mild Cognitive Impairment Is RelevantRonald C. Petersen (bio)Keywordsaging, Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, mild cognitive impairment, pharmaceutical industryGraham and Ritchie (2006) have contributed a scholarly document that implores us to reexamine nosological categories and certain diagnostic outcomes. They have chosen mild cognitive impairment (MCI) as the target of their scrutiny and have raised several interesting issues. I would like to comment on their approach and suggest that MCI is a (...)
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  21.  9
    Revisiting Stanley Milgram’s Experiment: What Lessons Can We Learn from It Today?Raphaël Künstler, Pascal Ludwig & Anna C. Zielinska - unknown
    Since the publication of “Behavioral studies of obedience” in 1963, and then of “Obedience to Authority” in 1974, the experiments conducted by Stanley Milgram at Yale in the early 1960s has provoked many lively debates. The opening of his archives by Yale University (Blass 2002), the partial replication of the experiment (Burger 2009), interviews with former “guinea pigs” or collaborators (Perry 2012), as well as the more general context of the replicability crisis in experimental psychology (Ritchie 2020) have triggered (...)
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  22. Social Structures and the Ontology of Social Groups.Katherine Ritchie - 2018 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 100 (2):402-424.
    Social groups—like teams, committees, gender groups, and racial groups—play a central role in our lives and in philosophical inquiry. Here I develop and motivate a structuralist ontology of social groups centered on social structures (i.e., networks of relations that are constitutively dependent on social factors). The view delivers a picture that encompasses a diverse range of social groups, while maintaining important metaphysical and normative distinctions between groups of different kinds. It also meets the constraint that not every arbitrary collection of (...)
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  23. What are groups?Katherine Ritchie - 2013 - Philosophical Studies 166 (2):257-272.
    In this paper I argue for a view of groups, things like teams, committees, clubs and courts. I begin by examining features all groups seem to share. I formulate a list of six features of groups that serve as criteria any adequate theory of groups must capture. Next, I examine four of the most prominent views of groups currently on offer—that groups are non-singular pluralities, fusions, aggregates and sets. I argue that each fails to capture one or more of the (...)
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  24. Introduction.William Ritchie & E. Lawson - unknown - Proceedings of the Heraclitean Society 14.
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  25.  9
    Plato.David George Ritchie - 1902 - New York,: C. Scribner's sons.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work. This work is in the public domain (...)
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  26. Essentializing Language and the Prospects for Ameliorative Projects.Katherine Ritchie - 2021 - Ethics 131 (3):460-488.
    Some language encourages essentialist thinking. While philosophers have largely focused on generics and essentialism, I argue that nouns as a category are poised to refer to kinds and to promote representational essentializing. Our psychological propensity to essentialize when nouns are used reveals a limitation for anti-essentialist ameliorative projects. Even ameliorated nouns can continue to underpin essentialist thinking. I conclude by arguing that representational essentialism does not doom anti-essentialist ameliorative projects. Rather it reveals that would-be ameliorators ought to attend to the (...)
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  27.  31
    Pragmatism's Evolution: Organism and Environment in American Philosophy by Trevor Pearce (review).Alexander Klein - 2024 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 62 (1):160-161.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Pragmatism's Evolution: Organism and Environment in American Philosophy by Trevor PearceAlexander KleinTrevor Pearce. Pragmatism's Evolution: Organism and Environment in American Philosophy. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2020. Pp. 384. Paperback, $35.00.Pragmatist pioneers were young lions in the days of Darwin. Evolutionary-biological thinking infused this philosophical movement from the start. And yet the last time a major monograph appeared on classic pragmatism and evolutionary biology—Philip Wiener's Evolution and (...)
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  28. What’s wrong with the minimal conception of innateness in cognitive science?J. Brendan Ritchie - 2020 - Synthese 199 (Suppl 1):159-176.
    One of the classic debates in cognitive science is between nativism and empiricism about the development of psychological capacities. In principle, the debate is empirical. However, in practice nativist hypotheses have also been challenged for relying on an ill-defined, or even unscientific, notion of innateness as that which is “not learned”. Here this minimal conception of innateness is defended on four fronts. First, it is argued that the minimal conception is crucial to understanding the nativism-empiricism debate, when properly construed; Second, (...)
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  29.  68
    Essentializing Inferences.Katherine Ritchie - 2021 - Mind and Language 36 (4):570-591.
    Predicate nominals (e.g., “is a female”) seem to label or categorize their subjects, while their adjectival correlates (e.g., “is female”) merely attribute a property. Predicate nominals also elicit essentializing inferential judgments about inductive potential and stable explanatory membership. Data from psychology and semantics support that this distinction is robust and productive. I argue that while the difference between predicate nominals and predicate adjectives is elided by standard semantic theories, it ought not be. I then develop and defend a psychologically motivated (...)
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  30. The earth killers.Ritchie Calder - 1971 - Santa Barbara, Calif.,: Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions. Edited by John Cogley.
    Lord Ritchie-Calder tells John Cogley in a conversation, that the world will continue 'mucking things up' beyond repair unless science comes under public control while time remains." Cf Publisher's catalog, 1971.
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  31. Decoding the Brain: Neural Representation and the Limits of Multivariate Pattern Analysis in Cognitive Neuroscience.J. Brendan Ritchie, David Michael Kaplan & Colin Klein - 2019 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 70 (2):581-607.
    Since its introduction, multivariate pattern analysis, or ‘neural decoding’, has transformed the field of cognitive neuroscience. Underlying its influence is a crucial inference, which we call the decoder’s dictum: if information can be decoded from patterns of neural activity, then this provides strong evidence about what information those patterns represent. Although the dictum is a widely held and well-motivated principle in decoding research, it has received scant philosophical attention. We critically evaluate the dictum, arguing that it is false: decodability is (...)
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  32. Should We Use Racial and Gender Generics?Katherine Ritchie - 2019 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 8 (1):33-41.
    Recently several philosophers have argued that racial, gender, and other social generic generalizations should be avoided given their propensity to promote essentialist thinking, obscure the social nature of categories, and contribute to oppression. Here I argue that a general prohibition against social generics goes too far. Given that the truth of many generics require regularities or systematic rather than mere accidental correlations, they are our best means for describing structural forms of violence and discrimination. Moreover, their accuracy, their persistence in (...)
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  33.  80
    From morality to metaphysics: the theistic implications of our ethical commitments.Angus Ritchie - 2012 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Part I: The 'explanatory gap'. 1. Why take morality to be objective? -- 2. The gap opens: evolution and our capacity for moral knowledge -- Part II: Secular responses. 3. Alternatives to realism: Simon Blackburn and Allan Gibbard -- 4. Procedures and reasons: Tim Scanlon and Christine Korsgaard -- 5. Natural goodness: Philippa Foot's moral objectivism -- 6. Natural goodness and 'second nature': John McDowell and David Wiggin -- Part III: Theism. 7. From goodness to God: closing the explanatory gap (...)
  34.  22
    The Biological Approach to Philosophy.A. D. Ritchie - 1933 - Philosophy 8 (30):167 - 176.
    There are many possible ways of approach to philosophy, and there is also an impossible one, though one that has often been tried. That the philosopher can somehow spin his philosophy out of what he finds inside himself; that he has some private internal source of information in virtue of which he can decide what the Universe must be, without needing to take the trouble to look at it, is a belief that dies hard. But it is now dying, if (...)
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  35.  62
    The content of Marr’s information-processing framework.J. Brendan Ritchie - 2019 - Philosophical Psychology 32 (7):1078-1099.
    ABSTRACTThe seminal work of David Marr, popularized in his classic work Vision, continues to exert a major influence on both cognitive science and philosophy. The interpretation of his work also co...
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  36. Default Domain Restriction Possibilities.Katherine Ritchie & Henry Schiller - forthcoming - Semantics and Pragmatics.
    We start with an observation about implicit quantifier domain restriction: certain implicit restrictions (e.g., restricting objects by location and time) appear to be more natural and widely available than others (e.g., restricting objects by color, aesthetic, or historical properties). Our aim is to explain why this is. That is, we aim to explain why some implicit domain restriction possibilities are available by default. We argue that, regardless of their other explanatory virtues, extant pragmatic and metasemantic frameworks leave this question unanswered. (...)
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  37.  25
    Science fictions: exposing fraud, bias, negligence and hype in science.Stuart Ritchie - 2020 - London: The Bodley Head.
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  38.  38
    Explaining systematic polysemy: kinds and individuation.Katherine Ritchie & Sandeep Prasada - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
    Polysemy is a phenomenon involving single lexical items with multiple related senses. Much theorizing about it has focused on developing linguistic accounts that are responsive to various compositional and representational challenges in semantics and psychology. We focus on an underexplored question: Why does systematic polysemy cluster in the ways it does? That is, why do we see certain regular patterns of sense multiplicity, but not others? Drawing on an independently motivated view of kind cognition – i.e. the formal structures for (...)
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  39.  2
    George Berkeley.Arthur David Ritchie - 1967 - New York,: Barnes & Noble.
  40.  15
    A Comparison of ‘New Institutionalized’ Populism in Venezuela and the USA.Ritchie Savage - 2014 - Constellations 21 (4):518-534.
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  41.  42
    Panpsychism and Spiritual Flourishing: Constructive Engagement with the New Science of Psychedelics.S. L. Ritchie - 2021 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 28 (9-10):268-288.
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  42.  16
    Gateshead Revisited: Perceptual Simulators and Fields of Meaning in the Analysis of Metaphors.L. David Ritchie - 2007 - Metaphor and Symbol 23 (1):24-49.
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  43.  11
    The Interpretation of Dreams.Ritchie Robertson (ed.) - 2008 - Oxford University Press.
    This groundbreaking new translation of The Interpretation of Dreams is the first to be based on the original text published in November 1899. It restores Freud's original argument, unmodified by revisions he made following the book's critical reception. Reading the first edition reveals Freud's original emphasis on the use of words in dreams and on the difficulty of deciphering them and Joyce Crick captures with far greater immediacy and accuracy than previous translations by Strachey's Freud's emphasis and terminology. An accessible (...)
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  44.  42
    Shaughnessy, Edward L., Rewriting Early Chinese Texts: Albany: SUNY Press, 2006, 287 pages.Jennifer Lundin Ritchie - 2010 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 9 (1):129-132.
  45.  35
    Naturalism as a Stance.Jack Ritchie - 2022 - In Mario De Caro & David Macarthur, The Handbook of Liberal Naturalism. Routledge. pp. 190-202.
  46.  21
    Goals and Self-Efficacy Beliefs During the Initial COVID-19 Lockdown: A Mixed Methods Analysis.Laura Ritchie, Daniel Cervone & Benjamin T. Sharpe - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    This study aimed to capture how the coronavirus disease 2019 crisis disrupted and affected individuals’ goal pursuits and self-efficacy beliefs early during the lockdown phase of COVID-19. Participants impacted by lockdown regulations accessed an online questionnaire during a 10-day window from the end of March to early April 2020 and reported a significant personal goal toward which they had been working, and then completed quantitative and qualitative survey items tapping self-efficacy beliefs for goal achievement, subjective caring about the goal during (...)
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  47.  82
    What is a Visual Stream?J. Brendan Ritchie, Sebastian Montesinos & Maleah J. Carter - 2024 - Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 36 (12):2627-2638.
    The dual stream model of the human and non-human primate visual systems remains Leslie Ungerleider's (1946-2020) most indelible contribution to visual neuroscience. In this model, a dorsal "where" stream specialized for visuospatial representation extends through occipitoparietal cortex, whereas a ventral "what" stream specialized for representing object qualities extends through occipitotemporal cortex. Over time, this model underwent a number of revisions and expansions. In one of her last scientific contributions, Leslie proposed a third visual stream specialized for representing dynamic signals related (...)
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  48.  17
    am: A case study in AI methodology.G. D. Ritchie & F. K. Hanna - 1984 - Artificial Intelligence 23 (3):249-268.
  49.  70
    The Dialectic of Immaterialism.A. M. Ritchie - 1965 - Philosophy 40 (153):235-247.
  50.  10
    How ‘Ought’ the Best Interests of Children be Considered in Medical Decision-making?Zoe Ritchie, Micaela Forte, Maxwell Smith & Jacob Shelley - 2024 - Canadian Journal of Bioethics / Revue canadienne de bioéthique 7 (2-3):222-224.
    Ce résumé rend compte de la conception et du déroulement d’un atelier collaboratif basé sur des cas concrets et d’un panel sur la manière dont nous « devrions » prendre en compte le meilleur intérêt des enfants dans la prise de décision médicale, présenté virtuellement lors de l’atelier et du forum communautaire de la Société canadienne de bioéthique - Canadian Bioethics Society, en mai 2023.
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