Results for 'Herbert Stanley Matsen'

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  1. Alessandro Achillini (1463-1512) and his doctrine of "universals" and "transcendentals".Herbert Stanley Matsen - 1974 - Lewisburg [Pa.]: Bucknell University Press.
  2.  35
    Herbert Stanley Matsen, "Alessandro Achillini and His Doctrine of "Universals" and "Transcendentals". [REVIEW]Paul J. W. Miller - 1978 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 16 (1):108.
  3.  6
    Roger Bacon, the father of experimental science and mediæval occultism.Herbert Stanley Redgrove - 1920 - London,: W. Rider & son.
    This Is A New Release Of The Original 1920 Edition.
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  4.  48
    Alessandro achillini (1463-1512) and 'ockhamism' at bologna (1490-1500).Herbert Matsen - 1975 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 13 (4):437-451.
  5.  27
    Jasper Hopkins on Nicholas of Cusa.Herbert S. Matsen - 1982 - International Studies in Philosophy 14 (2):77-84.
  6.  34
    A History of Metallography. Cyril Stanley Smith.Herbert Maryon - 1962 - Isis 53 (2):244-246.
  7.  13
    Teatr zawsze umiera.Stanley Gontarski - 2020 - Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Litteraria Polonica 59 (4):191-209.
    The Theater Is always Dying traces the resilience of live theatrical performance in the face of competing performative forms like cinema, television and contemporary streaming services on personal, hand-held devices and focuses on theater’s ability to continue as a significant cultural, community and intellectual force in the face of such competition. To echo Beckett, we might suggest, then, that theater may be at its best at its dying since its extended demise seems self-regenerating. Whether or not you “go out of (...)
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  8.  8
    Renaissance Talk: Ordinary Language and the Mystique of Critical Problems.Stanley Stewart - 1997
    Proceeding on the assumption that confusion in Renaissance criticism arises from the way we talk and the vocabularies we use, Stewart investigates typical assertions in recent criticism of Spenser, Shakespeare, Donne, and Herbert, using a Wittgensteinian method of investigation. This involves taking a thing, usually a statement, apart. If a statement, under such scrutiny, seems to make no sense, or to lead critics into blind alleys, then we must try to clarify the expression. As Stewart asserts, if we are (...)
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  9.  20
    (2 other versions)Tradition. By W. R. Sorley, Litt.D., F.B.A., Professor of Moral Philosophy in the University of Cambridge. The Herbert Spencer Lecture, delivered at Oxford. May 19, 1926. [REVIEW]Stanley Keeling - 1926 - Philosophy 1 (4):517.
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  10.  87
    Normal Circumstances, Literal Language, Direct Speech Acts, the Ordinary, the Everyday, the Obvious, What Goes without Saying, and Other Special Cases.Stanley E. Fish - 1978 - Critical Inquiry 4 (4):625-644.
    A sentence is never not in a context. We are never not in a situation. A statute is never not read in the light on some purpose. A set of interpretative assumptions is always in force. A sentence that seems to need no interpretation is already the product of one...No sentence is ever apprehended independently of some or other illocutionary force. Illocutionary force is the key term in speech-act theory. It refers to the way an utterance is taken—as an order, (...)
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  11. Brief essays for sanley Rosen.Herbert Mason - 2006 - In Stanley Rosen & Nalin Ranasinghe (eds.), Logos and eros: essays honoring Stanley Rosen. South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press.
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  12.  56
    Arthur Stanley Eddington Memorial Lectureship.Joseph Barcroft, E. W. Birmingham, Max Born, R. B. Braithwaite, W. Maude Brayshaw, G. A. Chase, Henry Dale, Howard Diamond, Herbert Dingle, Winifred Eddington, Wilson Harris, G. B. Jeffery, Martin Johnson, Rufus M. Jones, Harold Spencer Jones, Kathleen Lonsdale, E. J. Maskell, A. Victor Murray, C. E. Raven, F. J. M. Stratton, Hilda Sturge, W. H. Thorpe, Henry T. Tizard, G. M. Trevelyan, Elsie Watchorn, A. N. Whitehead, Edmund T. Whittaker, Alex Wood & H. G. Wood - 1946 - Philosophy 21 (80):287-.
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  13.  82
    Marcuse's Conception of Eros. [REVIEW]Stanley Aronowitz - 2013 - Radical Philosophy Review 16 (1):31-47.
    In his books Eros and Civilization and An Essay on Liberation, Herbert Marcuse offers a different, but complementary, theory of eros from that of Freud. While sexuality still occupies a central space in the pleasure principle, Marcuse extends the concept to embrace a wider understanding of eros. Now eros is termed the “new sensibility,” which, in his view, has been made possible by the end of scarcity’s rule over human life. In an epoch in which necessary labor can be (...)
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  14.  11
    The great refusal: Herbert Marcuse and contemporary social movements.Andrew T. Lamas (ed.) - 2017 - Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
    Herbert Marcuse examined the subjective and material conditions of radical social change and developed the "Great Refusal," a radical concept of "the protest against that which is." The editors and contributors to the exciting new volume The Great Refusal provide an analysis of contemporary social movements around the world with particular reference to Marcuse's revolutionary concept. The book also engages-and puts Marcuse in critical dialogue with-major theorists including Slavoj Žižek and Michel Foucault, among others. The chapters in this book (...)
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  15.  17
    Bergwerk- und Probierbüchlein by Anneliese Grünhaldt Sisco; Cyril Stanley Smith; De Re Metallica by Herbert Clark Hoover; Louhenry Hoover; Georgius Agricola. [REVIEW]I. Cohen - 1951 - Isis 42:54-56.
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  16.  28
    Edward Teller: Giant of the Golden Age of Physics. Stanley A. Blumberg, Louis G. PanosThe Advisors: Oppenheimer, Teller, and the Superbomb. Herbert F. YorkAtom and Void: Essays on Science and Community. J. Robert Oppenheimer. [REVIEW]Charles Ziegler - 1991 - Isis 82 (3):589-590.
  17.  75
    Philosophy and Humanism. Renaissance Essays in Honor of Paul Oskar Kristeller. [REVIEW]F. W. J. - 1979 - Review of Metaphysics 33 (2):436-438.
    This Festschrift in Professor Kristeller’s honor consists of contributions by scholars who have had some connection with Columbia University, his "intellectual home in the United States for three decades." It also includes a Tabula Gratulatoria listing many other friends from the United States and Europe. The editor’s opening essay provides an interesting and informative account of this scholar’s academic career, and should be read together with the complete annotated bibliography of his publications through 1974. The latter lists 149 "major publications" (...)
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  18.  53
    Making Dollars out of DNA: The First Major Patent in Biotechnology and the Commercialization of Molecular Biology, 1974-1980.Sally Hughes - 2001 - Isis 92 (3):541-575.
    In 1973-1974 Stanley N. Cohen of Stanford and Herbert W. Boyer of the University of California, San Francisco, developed a laboratory process for joining and replicating DNA from different species. In 1974 Stanford and UC applied for a patent on the recombinant DNA process; the U.S. Patent Office granted it in 1980. This essay describes how the patenting procedure was shaped by the concurrent recombinant DNA controversy, tension over the commercialization of academic biology, governmental deliberations over the regulation (...)
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  19. Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science.Herbert Feigl & Michael Scriven (eds.) - 1956 - , Vol.
     
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  20.  69
    Social robots as depictions of social agents.Herbert H. Clark & Kerstin Fischer - 2023 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e21.
    Social robots serve people as tutors, caretakers, receptionists, companions, and other social agents. People know that the robots are mechanical artifacts, yet they interact with them as if they were actual agents. How is this possible? The proposal here is that people construe social robots not as social agentsper se, but asdepictionsof social agents. They interpret them much as they interpret ventriloquist dummies, hand puppets, virtual assistants, and other interactive depictions of people and animals. Depictions as a class consist of (...)
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  21.  39
    (1 other version)Eros and Civilization: A Philosophical Inquiry into Freud.Herbert Marcuse - 1955 - London,: Routledge.
    In this classic work, Herbert Marcuse takes as his starting point Freud's statement that civilization is based on the permanent subjugation of the human instincts, his reconstruction of the prehistory of mankind - to an interpretation of the basic trends of western civilization, stressing the philosophical and sociological implications.
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  22.  34
    The semantics of exceptives.Stanley Peters & Dag Westerståhl - 2023 - Linguistics and Philosophy 46 (2):197-235.
    This paper gives a uniform account of the meaning of generalizations with explicit exceptions that employ the prepositions “but”, “except”, and “except for”. Our theory is that exceptives depend on generalizations, which can but need not be universal, whose generality they limit, and some of whose exceptions they comment on. Every generalization intrinsically partitions its domain of applicability into regular cases, which are as it says to expect, and exceptions, which are not. A generalization’s exceptions are instances that falsify it (...)
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  23. Definite reference and mutual knowledge In Aravind K. Joshi, Bonnie L. Webber, and Ivan A. Sag, editors.Herbert H. Clark & Catherine R. Marshall - 1981 - In Aravind K. Joshi, Bonnie L. Webber & Ivan A. Sag (eds.), Elements of Discourse Understanding. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  24.  90
    A truth-conditional formulation of Karttunen's account of presupposition.Stanley Peters - 1979 - Synthese 40 (2):301-316.
    Karttunen's seminal 1973 article Presuppositions of compound sentences, lays the groundwork for the elegant and fruitful theory of this subject which he subsequently presented in (1974). In (1973, pp. 185–8), however, he fallaciously argued that the regularities he discovered concerning the behavior of and, or, and if ... then in English cannot be embodied in any three-valued logic giving a truth-functional interpretation to these connectives. The present paper refutes Karttunen's argument by exhibiting an interpretation with the desired properties, and shows (...)
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  25.  19
    Stoic Philosophy.Herbert S. Long & J. M. Rist - 1971 - American Journal of Philology 92 (4):748.
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  26.  12
    The Senses of Walden: An Expanded Edition.Stanley Cavell - 1992 - University of Chicago Press.
    This collection of essays explores Thoreau's Walden, and discusses the importance of Thoreau and Emerson on American thought.
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  27.  6
    The Principles of Logic.Herbert Austin Aikins - 1902 - New York, NY, USA: Holt.
    The Principles of Logic by Herbert Austin Aikins, first published in 1902, is a rare manuscript, the original residing in one of the great libraries of the world. This book is a reproduction of that original, which has been scanned and cleaned by state-of-the-art publishing tools for better readability and enhanced appreciation. Restoration Editors' mission is to bring long out of print manuscripts back to life. Some smudges, annotations or unclear text may still exist, due to permanent damage to (...)
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  28. Human dignity: A challenge to contemporary philosophy.Herbert Spiegelberg - 1971 - World Futures 9 (1):39-64.
  29.  4
    A.S. Eddington and the Unity of Knowledge: Scientist, Quaker and Philosopher: A Selection of the Eddington Memorial Lectures with a Preface by Lord Martin Rees.Volker Heine (ed.) - 2012 - Cambridge University Press.
    Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington was a key figure in the development of modern astrophysics, who also made important contributions to the philosophy of science and popular science writing. The Arthur Eddington Memorial Trust was set up after his death in order to hold annual lectures on the relationship between scientific thought and aspects of philosophy, religion or ethics. This 2012 collection gathers together six of these lectures, including contributions by Sir Edmund Whittaker, Herbert Dingle, Richard B. Braithwaite, John (...)
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  30.  74
    Guilt and suffering.Herbert Morris - 1971 - Philosophy East and West 21 (4):419-434.
  31. Some remarks on the meaning of scientific explanation.Herbert Feigl - 1949 - In Readings in philosophical analysis. New York,: Appleton-Century-Crofts. pp. 510--14.
     
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  32. (1 other version)Some Social Implications of Modern Technology.Herbert Marcuse - 1941 - Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung 9 (3):414-439.
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  33.  9
    A Study of Sophoclean Drama.Herbert Musurillo & G. M. Kirkwood - 1959 - American Journal of Philology 80 (4):445.
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  34. Nominalism and Idealism.Herbert Hochberg - 2013 - Axiomathes 23 (2):213-234.
    The article considers, in a historical setting, the links between varieties of nominalism—the extreme nominalism of the Quine-Goodman variety and the trope nominalism current today—and types of idealism. In so doing arguments of various twentieth century figures, including Husserl, Bradley, Russell, and Sartre, as well as a contemporary attack on relations by Peter Simons are critically examined. The paper seeks to link the rejection of realism about universals with the rejection of a mind-independent “world”—in short, linking nominalism with idealism.
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  35. Self-organization in the dreaming brain.Stanley Krippner & Allan Combs - 2000 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 21 (4):399-412.
    This paper approaches dreaming consciousness through an examination of the self-organizing properties of the sleeping brain. This view offers a step toward reconciliation between brain-based and content-based attempts to understand the nature of dreaming. Here it is argued that the brain can be understood as a complex self-organizing system that in dreaming responds to subtle influences such as residual feelings and memories. The hyper-responsiveness of the brain during dreaming is viewed in terms of the tendency of complex chaotic-like systems to (...)
     
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  36. Précis of knowledge and practical interests. [REVIEW]Jason Stanley - 2005 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 75 (1):168–172.
    Our intuitions about whether someone knows that p vary even fixing the intuitively epistemic features of that person’s situation. Sometimes they vary with features of our own situation, and sometimes they vary with features of the putative knower’s situation. If the putative knower is in a risky situation and her belief that p is pivotal in achieving a positive outcome of one of the actions available to her, or avoiding a negative one, we often feel she must be in a (...)
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  37.  29
    My Sadness – Our Happiness: Writing About Positive, Negative, and Neutral Autobiographical Life Events Reveals Linguistic Markers of Self-Positivity and Individual Well-Being.Cornelia Herbert, Eileen Bendig & Roberto Rojas - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  38.  10
    C. Wright Mills.Stanley Aronowitz (ed.) - 2004 - Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE.
    C.Wright Mills (1917-63) was one of the great sociologists and leading public intellectuals of the last century. His contribution to the sociology of power elites, industrial relations, bureaucracy, social structure and personality, reformist and revolutionary politics and the sociological imagination are seminal. These three volumes, edited by one of America's most influential sociologists and cultural commentators, provides an unparalleled resource for understanding the intellectual relevance of Mill's writings. Mill's engagement with contemporary issues and his sociological vision emerge powerfully. The challenge (...)
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  39.  9
    (1 other version)The Cremated Catholic: The Ends of a Deceased Guatemalan.Stanley Brandes - 2001 - Body and Society 7 (2-3):111-120.
    After a Guatemalan migrant worker living in northern California was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing a highway one night, his family requested that his body be sent back to his native village in southwestern Guatemala to be mourned and buried according to traditional Catholic custom. But the County morgue confused this deceased individual with another Latino and cremated his body before it could be shipped. This article analyzes the cultural, psychological and economic ramifications of this accidental cremation. Although (...)
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  40.  11
    The Temple of Hibis in El Khargeh Oasis.Herbert C. Youtie, H. G. Evelyn White & James H. Oliver - 1941 - American Journal of Philology 62 (4):502.
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  41.  11
    Protecting Research Subjects after Consent: The Case for the "Research Intermediary".Stanley Joel Reiser & Paula Knudson - 1993 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 15 (2):10.
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  42.  11
    The Chief Currents of Contemporary Philosophy.Stanley Maron - 1952 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 13 (2):257-259.
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  43.  25
    Toward a Marxist Anthropology: Problems and Perspectives.Stanley Diamond (ed.) - 1979 - De Gruyter Mouton.
    No detailed description available for "Toward a Marxist Anthropology".
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  44.  24
    Monitoring the Abolition of the International Slave Trade: Slave Registration in the British Caribbean.Stanley L. Engerman - 2012 - In Engerman Stanley L. (ed.), Registration and Recognition: Documenting the Person in World History. pp. 323.
    This chapter deals with the background and implementation of the registration of slaves on the island of Trinidad after 1813. Registration was introduced by James Stephen in the British Colonial Office as a means of limiting the inflow of slaves in the illegal slave trade. Slave registration was extended to the other British colonies and then extended every three years until the end of slavery in 1834. Other registrations of slaves are noted, including the manifests of the coastal shipping of (...)
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  45. Woodruff on Discrimination.Stanley S. Kleinberg - 1976 - Analysis 37 (1):46 - 48.
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  46.  29
    Chance and circumstance: Are laws of history possible?Stanley Lebergott - 1944 - Journal of Philosophy 41 (15):393-411.
  47. Metacognition and the evolution of language.Herbert S. Terrace - 2005 - In Herbert S. Terrace & Janet Metcalfe (eds.), The Missing Link in Cognition: Origins of Self-Reflective Consciousness. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  48. Reply to Hintikka and Sandu: Frege and Second-Order Logic.Jason Stanley & Richard Heck - 1993 - Journal of Philosophy 90 (8):416-424.
    Hintikka and Sandu had argued that 'Frege's failure to grasp the idea of the standard interpretation of higher-order logic turns his entire foundational project into a hopeless daydream' and that he is 'inextricably committed to a non-standard interpretation' of higher-order logic. We disagree.
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  49.  15
    The Quarrel Between Philosophy and Poetry: Studies in Ancient Thought.Stanley Rosen - 1988 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 53 (1):138-138.
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  50. The interactions of beauty and truth.Herbert Ellsworth Cory - 1925 - Journal of Philosophy 22 (15):393-402.
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