Results for 'James H. Steiger'

937 found
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  1.  22
    Best-guess errors in multistage inference.James H. Steiger & Charles F. Gettys - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 92 (1):1.
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  2.  16
    On the validity of indeterminate factor scores.Peter H. SchÖnemann & James H. Steiger - 1978 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 12 (4):287-290.
  3.  80
    James H. Nehring 57.James H. Nehring - forthcoming - Journal of Thought.
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  4. Artificial Intelligence: Its Scope and Limits.James H. Fetzer - 1990 - Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    1. WHAT IS ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE? One of the fascinating aspects of the field of artificial intelligence (AI) is that the precise nature of its subject ..
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  5.  55
    Computer Reliability and Public Policy: Limits of Knowledge of Computer-Based Systems*: JAMES H. FETZER.James H. Fetzer - 1996 - Social Philosophy and Policy 13 (2):229-266.
    Perhaps no technological innovation has so dominated the second half of the twentieth century as has the introduction of the programmable computer. It is quite difficult if not impossible to imagine how contemporary affairs—in business and science, communications and transportation, governmental and military activities, for example—could be conducted without the use of computing machines, whose principal contribution has been to relieve us of the necessity for certain kinds of mental exertion. The computer revolution has reduced our mental labors by means (...)
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  6. What is computer ethics?James H. Moor - 1985 - Metaphilosophy 16 (4):266-275.
  7.  66
    Philosophy of science.James H. Fetzer - 1993 - New York: Paragon House Publishers.
    The development of science has been a distinctive feature of human history in recent times, especially in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. In light of the problems that define the philosophy of science today, James Fetzer provides a foundation for inquiry into the nature of science, the history of science, and the relationship between the two. In Philosophy of Science, Fetzer investigates the aim and methods of empirical science and examines the importance of methodological commitments to the study of (...)
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  8. Varieties of Second-Personal Reason.James H. P. Lewis - forthcoming - Erkenntnis:1-21.
    A lineage of prominent philosophers who have discussed the second-person relation can be regarded as advancing structural accounts. They posit that the second-person relation effects one transformative change to the structure of practical reasoning. In this paper, I criticise this orthodoxy and offer an alternative, substantive account. That is, I argue that entering into second-personal relations with others does indeed affect one's practical reasoning, but it does this not by altering the structure of one's agential thought, but by changing what (...)
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  9. The aesthetics of coming to know someone.James H. P. Lewis - 2023 - Philosophical Studies (5-6):1-16.
    This paper is about the similarity between the appreciation of a piece of art, such as a cherished music album, and the loving appreciation of a person whom one knows well. In philosophical discussion about the rationality of love, the Qualities View (QV) says that love can be justified by reference to the qualities of the beloved. I argue that the oft-rehearsed trading-up objection fails to undermine the QV. The problems typically identified by the objection arise from the idea that (...)
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  10. Relationality without obligation.James H. P. Lewis - 2022 - Analysis 82 (2):238-246.
    Some reasons are thought to depend on relations between people, such as that of a promiser to a promisee. It has sometimes been assumed that all reasons that are relational in this way are moral obligations. I argue, via a counter example, that there are non-obligatory relational reasons. If true, this has ramifications for relational theories of morality.
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  11.  63
    Bad Blood Thirty Years Later: A Q&A with James H. Jones.James H. Jones & Nancy M. P. King - 2012 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (4):867-872.
    Historian James H. Jones published the first edition of Bad Blood, the definitive history of the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment, in 1981. Its clear-eyed examination of that research and its implications remains a bioethics classic, and the 30-year anniversary of its publication served as the impetus for the reexamination of research ethics that this symposium presents. Recent revelations about the United States Public Health Service study that infected mental patients and prisoners in Guatemala with syphilis in the late 1940s in (...)
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  12. On the psychology of a group of Christian mystics.James H. Leuba - 1905 - Mind 14 (53):15-27.
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  13.  17
    The Sixth International Congress of Philosophy.James H. Ryan - 1927 - New Scholasticism 1 (1):78-84.
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  14.  55
    Decidability and finite axiomatizability of theories of ℵ0-categorical partially ordered sets.James H. Schmerl - 1981 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 46 (1):101 - 120.
    Every ℵ 0 -categorical partially ordered set of finite width has a finitely axiomatizable theory. Every ℵ 0 -categorical partially ordered set of finite weak width has a decidable theory. This last statement constitutes a major portion of the complete (with three exceptions) characterization of those finite partially ordered sets for which any ℵ 0 -categorical partially ordered set not embedding one of them has a decidable theory.
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  15.  17
    (1 other version)Philosophy and Cognitive Science.James H. Fetzer - 1991 - New York: Paragon House.
  16.  77
    Scientific Explanation and the Causal Structure of the World. Wesley Salmon.James H. Fetzer - 1987 - Philosophy of Science 54 (4):597-610.
    If the decades of the forties through the sixties were dominated by discussion of Hempel's “covering law“ explication of explanation, that of the seventies was preoccupied with Salmon's “statistical relevance” conception, which emerged as the principal alternative to Hempel's enormously influential account. Readers of Wesley C. Salmon's Scientific Explanation and the Causal Structure of the World, therefore, ought to find it refreshing to discover that its author has not remained content with a facile defense of his previous investigations; on the (...)
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  17. Religion's Place in Securing a Better World-Order.James H. Tufts - 1922 - Philosophical Review 31:423.
     
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  18.  18
    Some contributions of psychology to the conception of justice.James H. Tufts - 1906 - Philosophical Review 15 (4):361-379.
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  19. Zen and the Brain: Toward an Understanding of Meditation and Consciousness.James H. Austin - 1998 - MIT Press.
    The book uses Zen Buddhism as the opening wedge for an extraordinarily wide-ranging exploration of consciousness.
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  20. Testing robots for qualia.James H. Moor - 1987 - In Herbert R. Otto, Perspectives On Mind. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
  21.  56
    The New Rationalism: The Development of a Constructive Realism Upon the Basis of Modern Logic and Science, and Through the Criticism of Opposed Philosophical Systems. Edward Gleason Spaulding.James H. Tufts - 1919 - International Journal of Ethics 29 (3):383-384.
  22.  24
    (1 other version)Note on the idea of a `moral sense' in british thought prior to shaftesbury.James H. Tufts - 1904 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 1 (4):97-98.
  23.  12
    Stimuli and incentives as determinants of the successive negative contrast effect.James H. McHose - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 1 (4):264-266.
  24. Joe Pitt, the philosophical imagination, and the practice of pedagogy.James H. Collier - 2020 - In Andrew Wells Garnar & Ashley Shew, Feedback Loops: Pragmatism about Science and Technology. Lanham: Lexington Books.
     
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  25. The personality of God.James H. Snowden - 1920 - New York,: Macmillan.
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  26. The world a spiritual system.James H. Snowden - 1910 - New York,: The Macmillan company.
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  27.  63
    A Yankee Xavier.James H. Barry - 1938 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 13 (4):651-652.
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  28. An analysis of the Turing test.James H. Moor - 1976 - Philosophical Studies 30 (4):249 - 257.
  29. (1 other version)Language and mentality: Computational, representational, and dispositional conceptions.James H. Fetzer - 1989 - Behaviorism 17 (1):21-39.
    The purpose of this paper is to explore three alternative frameworks for understanding the nature of language and mentality, which accent syntactical, semantical, and pragmatical aspects of the phenomena with which they are concerned, respectively. Although the computational conception currently exerts considerable appeal, its defensibility appears to hinge upon an extremely implausible theory of the relation of form to content. Similarly, while the representational approach has much to recommend it, its range is essentially restricted to those units of language that (...)
     
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  30. Three myths of computer science.James H. Moor - 1978 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 29 (3):213-222.
  31. You will be well advised to watch what we do instead of what we say.James H. Bryan - 1975 - In David J. DePalma & Jeanne M. Foley, Moral development: current theory and research. New York: Halsted Press.
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  32.  23
    An explanation.James H. Hyslop - 1895 - Philosophical Review 4 (6):642.
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  33.  25
    Inhibition and the freedom of the will.James H. Hyslop - 1892 - Philosophical Review 1 (4):369-388.
  34. Towards a theory of privacy in the information age.James H. Moor - 1997 - Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 27 (3):27-32.
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  35. Why we need better ethics for emerging technologies.James H. Moor - 2005 - Ethics and Information Technology 7 (3):111-119.
    Technological revolutions are dissected into three stages: the introduction stage, the permeation stage, and the power stage. The information revolution is a primary example of this tripartite model. A hypothesis about ethics is proposed, namely, ethical problems increase as technological revolutions progress toward and into the power stage. Genetic technology, nanotechnology, and neurotechnology are good candidates for impending technological revolutions. Two reasons favoring their candidacy as revolutionary are their high degree of malleability and their convergence. Assuming the emerging technologies develop (...)
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  36.  25
    Thinking Must Be Computation of the Right Kind.James H. Fetzer - 2000 - The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 9:115-122.
    In this paper I argue for a computational theory of thinking that does not eliminate the mind. In doing so, I will defend computationalism against the arguments of John Searle and James Fetzer, and briefly respond to other common criticisms.
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  37. Program verification: the very idea.James H. Fetzer - 1988 - Communications of the Acm 31 (9):1048--1063.
    The notion of program verification appears to trade upon an equivocation. Algorithms, as logical structures, are appropriate subjects for deductive verification. Programs, as causal models of those structures, are not. The success of program verification as a generally applicable and completely reliable method for guaranteeing program performance is not even a theoretical possibility.
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  38.  32
    A failure to replicate the inhibitory effects of a second stimulus following the primary stimulus to react.James H. Koplin, Robert Fox & Frank Dozier - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 72 (6):914.
  39.  31
    Muscle partitioning via multiple inputs: An alternative hypothesis.James H. Abbs & Benoni B. Edin - 1989 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 (4):645-646.
  40.  12
    Freedom and Purpose. An Interpretation of the Psychology of Spinoza.James H. Dunham - 1917 - Philosophical Review 26 (1):102-104.
  41.  53
    Escaping the Propositional Prison.James H. Fetzer - 1997 - The Monist 80 (3):368-388.
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  42. A Black Theology of Liberation, Fortieth Anniversary Edition.James H. Cone - 2010
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  43. Kant's Treatment of Analytic and Synthetic Judgments.James H. Hyslop - 1903 - The Monist 13 (3):331-351.
  44. A Brief History of the Presbyterians.James H. Smylie - 1996
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  45.  39
    The Settlement Horizon: A National Estimate. Robert A. Woods, Albert J. Kennedy.James H. Tufts - 1923 - International Journal of Ethics 33 (2):221-223.
  46.  55
    Connectionism and cognition: Why Fodor and Pylyshyn are wrong.James H. Fetzer - 1992 - In A. Clark & Ronald Lutz, Connectionism in Context. Springer Verlag. pp. 305-319.
  47.  8
    The Quest for Holiness in American Protestantism.James H. Moorhead - 1999 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 53 (4):365-379.
    Three images of holiness have, at different times, enjoyed wide currency among American Protestants: holiness as pilgrimage, holiness as perfection, and holiness as pentecostal outpouring. Since the colonial era, confidence in the attainment of holiness has grown dramatically. Yet such assurance has not been matched by equal agreement on the content of the holy life.
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  48. Participation, Power, and Democracy.James H. Read - 1996 - Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 46:239-262.
  49.  8
    Implausible dream: the world-class university and repurposing higher education.James H. Mittelman - 2017 - Princeton: Princeton University Press.
    Why the paradigm of the world-class university is an implausible dream for most institutions of higher education Universities have become major actors on the global stage. Yet, as they strive to be "world-class," institutions of higher education are shifting away from their core missions of cultivating democratic citizenship, fostering critical thinking, and safeguarding academic freedom. In the contest to raise their national and global profiles, universities are embracing a new form of utilitarianism, one that favors market power over academic values. (...)
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  50. Professor William James' Interpretation of Religious Experience.James H. Leuba - 1904 - International Journal of Ethics 14 (3):322-339.
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