Results for 'Charles Stokes'

930 found
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  1.  39
    Whole and part learning as a function of approximation to English.Judith Goggin & Charles Stokes - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 81 (1):67.
  2. Conspiracy Theories, Deplorables, and Defectibility: A Reply to Patrick Stokes.Charles R. Pigden - 2018 - In Matthew R. X. Dentith (ed.), Taking Conspiracy Theories Seriously. Rowman & Littlefield International. pp. 203-215.
    Patrick Stokes has argued that although many conspiracy theories are true, we should reject the policy of particularism (that is, the policy of investigating conspiracy theories if they are plausible and believing them if that is what the evidence suggests) and should instead adopt a policy of principled skepticism, subjecting conspiracy theories – or at least the kinds of theories that are generally derided as such – to much higher epistemic standards than their non-conspiratorial rivals, and believing them only (...)
     
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  3.  11
    (1 other version)Anaximander's Argument.Michael C. Stokes - 1976 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 2:1-22.
    This topic was first put on a proper scholarly footing by the late Werner Jaeger and by Charles H. Kahn; earlier scholars tended either to refrain from speculating on the relation to Anaximander of Aristotle's Physics arguments on the infinite, or to deduce the Milesian provenance of one of them simply from its inclusion of a mention of Anaximander's name. It way my original intention in this paper to execute a tidying-up operation after the two well-planned attacks on Anaximander's (...)
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  4.  30
    Strands of System: The Philosophy of Charles Peirce.Douglas R. Anderson & Charles Sanders Peirce - 1995 - Purdue University Press.
    The American thinker Charles Sanders Peirce, best known as the founder of pragmatism, has been influential not only in the pragmatic tradition but more recently in the philosophy of science and the study of semiotics, or sign theory. Strands of System provides an accessible overview of Peirce's systematic philosophy for those who are beginning to explore his thinking and its import for more recent trends in philosophy.
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  5. On the Phenomenology of Introspection.Charles Siewert - 2012 - In Declan Smithies & Daniel Stoljar (eds.), Introspection and Consciousness. , US: Oxford University Press. pp. 129.
  6. Quine on the Philosophy of Mathematics.Charles Parsons - 1986 - In Lewis Edwin Hahn & Paul Arthur Schilpp (eds.), The Philosophy of W.V. Quine. Chicago: Open Court. pp. 369-395.
     
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  7. An Experimental Study of Imagination.Charles West Perky - 1911 - Philosophical Review 20:108.
     
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  8.  13
    "Murther, By a Specious Name": Absalom and Achitophel's Poetics of Sacrificial Surrogacy.Gary Ernst - 2003 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 10 (1):61-82.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:"MURTHER, BY A SPECIOUS NAME": ABSALOMAND ACHITOPHEVS POETICS OF SACRIFICIAL SURROGACY Gary Ernst Roger's State University d;,uring the late 1670's and early '80s, English political satirists 'participated in the endeavors of the rival factions, Dissenter or Whig and Royalist or Tory, to effect judicial violence. While juries condemned and the hangman executed Catholics as traitors during the Popish Plot persecution, John Oldham suggests in the "Prologue' to his Satires (...)
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  9. The Problem of Absolute Universality.Charles Parsons - 2006 - In Agustín Rayo & Gabriel Uzquiano (eds.), Absolute generality. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 203--19.
  10.  31
    Empiricist heresies in early modern medical thought.Charles T. Wolfe - 2010 - In Charles T. Wolfe & Ofer Gal (eds.), The Body as Object and Instrument of Knowledge: Embodied Empiricism in Early Modern Science. Springer. pp. 333--344.
    Vitalism, from its early modern to its Enlightenment forms (from Glisson and Willis to La Caze and Barthez), is notoriously opposed to intervention into the living sphere. Experiment, quantification, measurement are all ‘vivisectionist’, morally suspect and worse, they alter and warp the ‘life’ of the subject. They are good for studying corpses, not living individuals. This much is well known, and it has disqualified vitalist medicine from having a place in standard histories of medicine, until recent, post-Foucauldian maneuvers have sought (...)
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  11. Muscles or Movements? Representation in the Nascent Brain Sciences.Zina B. Ward - 2023 - Journal of the History of Biology 56 (1):5-34.
    The idea that the brain is a representational organ has roots in the nineteenth century, when neurologists began drawing conclusions about what the brain represents from clinical and experimental studies. One of the earliest controversies surrounding representation in the brain was the “muscles versus movements” debate, which concerned whether the motor cortex represents complex movements or rather fractional components of movement. Prominent thinkers weighed in on each side: neurologists John Hughlings Jackson and F.M.R. Walshe in favor of complex movements, neurophysiologist (...)
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  12.  8
    The Edge of Objectivity: An Essay in the History of Scientific Ideas.Charles Coulston Gillispie - 2016 - Princeton Science Library (Pap.
    Originally published in 1960, The Edge of Objectivity helped to establish the history of science as a full-fledged academic discipline. In the mid-1950s, a young professor at Princeton named Charles Gillispie began teaching Humanities 304, one of the first undergraduate courses offered anywhere in the world on the history of science. From Galileo's analysis of motion to theories of evolution and relativity, Gillispie introduces key concepts, individuals, and themes. The Edge of Objectivity arose out of this course. It must (...)
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  13.  15
    The philosophy of Peirce.Charles Sanders Peirce - 1956 - London,: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Edited by Justus Buchler.
  14. Traité de l'Argumentation.Charles Perelman - 1961 - Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 15 (1):142-144.
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  15.  54
    Structuralism and the concept of set.Charles Parsons - 1997 - In Evandro Agazzi & György Darvas (eds.), Philosophy of Mathematics Today. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 171--194.
  16. Coda : out waltzed Stanley.Charles Bernstein - 2024 - In David LaRocca (ed.), Music with Stanley Cavell in mind. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  17.  60
    In the Beginning.Charles Morris - 1906 - The Monist 16 (2):313-318.
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  18.  29
    Individual Voice in the Collective Discourse: Literary Innovation in Postmodern American Fiction.Charles Russell - 1980 - Substance 9 (2):29.
  19.  6
    History and contemporary issues: studies in moral theology.Charles E. Curran - 1996 - New York: Continuum.
    The turbulence of Charles Curran's academic career in the past decade stands in sharp contrast to the equanimity and intellectual balance of his writings during that strained-filled period. Here is a collection of the most important of those writings.
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  20. Contemporary Approaches to the Philosophy of Lying.James Mahon - 2018 - In Jörg Meibauer (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Lying. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford Handbooks. pp. 32-55.
    The chapter examines fifty years of philosophers working on lying - from the 1970s to the current day – focusing on how lying is defined (descriptively and normatively), whether lying involves an intention to deceive (Deceptionists) or not (Non-Deceptionists), why lying is wrong, and whether lying is worse than other forms of deception, including misleading with the truth. Philosophers discussed include Roderick Chisholm and Thomas Feehan, Alan Donagan, Sissela Boy, Charles Fried, David Simpson, David Simpson, Bernard Williams, Paul Faulkner, (...)
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  21.  15
    (1 other version)In Defense of Free Will.Charles Arthur Campbell - 1938 - London: Allen & Unwin.
  22.  16
    Rethinking Revolution.Charles Barbour - 2020 - The European Legacy 26 (2):188-193.
    Perhaps more than any other major historical phenomena, we tend to look through revolutions as much as we look at them, and ascribe to them meanings that have little to do with the intentions and e...
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  23.  21
    Idea and Process in the Historiography of Logic.Charles F. Breslin - 1973 - Review of Metaphysics 26 (4):643 - 669.
    Since structural descriptions rather than ostensive ones are required by the logic of the cultural sciences, the Platonic eidos as a regulative idea continues to play a creative role in establishing the formal unity of historical concepts. Paul Natorp, Troeltsch’s neo-Kantian contemporary and early proponent of the logicist thesis in Germany, first construed mathematical logic as a Platonistic search for the unconditioned in the form of absolutely foundational concepts or categories of thought. The hidden Platonism expressed in Troeltsch’s formal logic (...)
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  24.  46
    Euanthes redivivus: Rubens's prometheus bound.Charles Dempsey - 1967 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 30 (1):420-425.
  25.  23
    Le Marxisme de Sartre: Signification et Projet.Charles Gervais - 1969 - Dialogue 8 (2):272-292.
    La première grande question qui se pose au lecteur de la Critique de la Raison Dialectique est certainement celle des rapports entre les problématiques sartrienne et marxiste. Dans sa conclusion à Questions de Méthode, Sartre la forrnule clairement en écrivant que l'existentialisme « ne remet rien en question, sauf un déterminisme mécaniste qui n'est précisément pas marxiste et qu'on a introduit du dehors dans cette philosophie totale. Il veut, lui aussi, situer l'homme dans sa classe et dans les conflits qui (...)
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  26.  8
    Exodus Paraphrased.Charles E. Jackson - 1980 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 2 (7):11.
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  27. The Story of the Church.Charles M. Jacobs - unknown
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  28.  51
    A critique of Peirce's idea of God.Charles Hartshorne - 1941 - Philosophical Review 50 (5):516-523.
  29.  22
    Metaphysical Statements as Nonrestrictive and Existential.Charles Hartshorne - 1958 - Review of Metaphysics 12 (1):35 - 47.
    Let us now consider the third class of statements, those completely nonrestrictive. For example, "Something exists." Since this is the pure contradictory of the wholly restrictive, "Nothing exists," which we have found reason to regard as impossible, and since the contradictory of an impossible statement is necessary, we should expect "Something exists" to be necessarily true, a statement valid a priori. And we see that it excludes nothing from existence, except bare "nothing" itself. But the existence of bare nothing is (...)
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  30.  28
    The Church in a Changing Society.Charles A. Hart - 1939 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 15:251.
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  31.  64
    The Intelligibility of Sensations.Charles Hartshorne - 1934 - The Monist 44 (2):161-185.
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  32.  51
    Mechanisms of Violent Retribution in Chinese Hell Narratives.Charles D. Orzech - 1994 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 1 (1):111-126.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Mechanisms of Violent Retribution in Chinese Hell Narratives Charles D. Orzech University ofNorth Carolina Greensboro Ai! The criminals in this hell have all had their eyes dug out and the fresh blood flows [from them], and each of them cries out, their two hands pressing their bloody eye-sockets—truly pitiful! To the left a middle-aged person is just having an eye pulled out by one of the shades; he (...)
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  33.  84
    Roundtable on Political Epistemology.Scott Althaus, Mark Bevir, Jeffrey Friedman, Hélène Landemore, Rogers Smith & Susan Stokes - 2014 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 26 (1-2):1-32.
    On August 30, 2013, the American Political Science Association sponsored a roundtable on political epistemology as part of its annual meetings. Co-chairing the roundtable were Jeffrey Friedman, Department of Government, University of Texas at Austin; and Hélène Landemore, Department of Political Science, Yale University. The other participants were Scott Althaus, Department of Political Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Mark Bevir, Department of Political Science, University of California at Berkeley; Rogers Smith, Department of Political Science, University of Pennsylvania; and Susan (...)
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  34. Herodotus' Knowledge of the Archidamian War.Charles Fornara - 1981 - Hermes 109 (2):149-156.
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  35.  5
    Esquisse D Une Classification Systematique Des Doctrines Philosophiques.Charles Renouvier - 2013
    Esquisse d'une classification systematique des doctrines philosophiques. Tome 1 / par Ch. RenouvierDate de l'edition originale: 1885-1886Sujet de l'ouvrage: Philosophie -- HistoireCe livre est la reproduction fidele d'une oeuvre publiee avant 1920 et fait partie d'une collection de livres reimprimes a la demande editee par Hachette Livre, dans le cadre d'un partenariat avec la Bibliotheque nationale de France, offrant l'opportunite d'acceder a des ouvrages anciens et souvent rares issus des fonds patrimoniaux de la BnF.Les oeuvres faisant partie de cette collection (...)
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  36.  4
    The Pursuit of Reason.Charles Francis Keary - 1910 - Cambridge University Press.
    Originally published in 1910, this is a volume of philosophy by an author who found his main calling in the creation of novels, Charles Francis Keary. Unusual in its relatively personal exploration of ideas, together with its accessible, literary style, the text nonetheless maintains an academically rigorous approach to its exploration of the boundaries of reason. The fundamental premise is that mental processes generally thought to be based on intuition can, more accurately, be seen to find their basis in (...)
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  37.  7
    A Child's History of England 3 Volume Set.Charles Dickens - 2015 - Cambridge University Press.
    This three-volume history of England from before the Roman conquest through to the Glorious Revolution of 1688 was originally serialised in Charles Dickens' magazine Household Words between 1851 and 1853. The text was published in book form in the same period, although each volume was post-dated to the following year. Dickens dedicated the work to his own children, intending it to be a stepping stone to more substantial histories. The volumes were popular with readers for decades, and were used (...)
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  38. Is visual experience rich or poor?Charles Siewert - 2002 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 9 (5-6):131-40.
  39.  8
    State Organization and Policy Formation: The 1970 Reorganization of the Post Office Department.Charles G. Benda - 1980 - Politics and Society 9 (2):123-151.
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  40. Essays in the Philosophy of Science.Charles S. Peirce & Philip P. Wiener - 1958 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 13 (2):228-228.
  41.  30
    Spinoza: vie, immortalité, éternité (Pour une immortalité vulgaire).Charles Ramond - 2006 - Kairos (Université de Toulouse-Le Mirail. Faculté de philosophie) 28.
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  42.  22
    Appreciating Marcuse Anew.Charles Reitz - 2021 - Radical Philosophy Review 24 (1):117-122.
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  43.  10
    Annex.Charles Renouvier - 2016 - Enrahonar: Quaderns de Filosofía 1:615.
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  44.  20
    More and more lawyers but still no judges.Charles Sampford - 2005 - Legal Ethics 8 (1):16-22.
  45.  35
    The Role of Family of Origin in Physicians Referred to a CME Course.Charles P. Samenow, Scott T. Yabiku, Marine Ghulyan, Betsy Williams & William Swiggart - 2012 - HEC Forum 24 (2):115-126.
    Few studies exist which look at psychological factors associated with physician sexual misconduct. In this study, we explore family dysfunction as a possible risk factor associated with physician sexual misconduct. Six hundred thirteen physicians referred to a continuing medical education (CME) course for sexual misconduct were administered the FACES-II survey, a validated and reliable measure of family dynamics. The survey was part of a self-learning activity. We collected data from February 2000 to February 2009. Participants were predominantly white, middle-aged males (...)
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  46.  95
    The Birth of Political Subjects: Individuals, Foucault, and Boundary Experiences.Charles E. Scott - 2010 - Research in Phenomenology 40 (1):19-33.
    In a context of experiences in which events become apparent that encroach upon mainstream and reasonable good sense, this paper gives an account of the emergence of political subjects into public domains that make possible new knowledge and personal and institutional transformations. A statement by Simone de Beauvoir and engagement with Michel Foucault's interpretation of “limit experiences” help to orient the paper. The essay ends with a discussion of certain types of power and the birth of political subjects.
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  47.  46
    Thinking Non-Interpretively.Charles Scott - 1993 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 1 (1):13-40.
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  48. Heidegger, Kant & time.Charles M. Sherover - 1971 - Bloomington,: Indiana University Press.
  49.  27
    Philosophy of Theism, by Alexander Campbell Fraser.Charles F. D' Arcy - 1896 - International Journal of Ethics 7:125.
  50.  43
    On the meaning of truth.Charles M. Bakewell - 1908 - Philosophical Review 17 (6):579-591.
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