Results for 'Jon Tweedale'

943 found
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  1. Responsibility and alternative possibilities: The use and abuse of examples. [REVIEW]Sam Black & Jon Tweedale - 2002 - The Journal of Ethics 6 (3):281-303.
    The philosophical debate over the compatibility between causaldeterminism and moral responsibility relies heavily on ourreactions to examples. Although we believe that there is noalternative to this methodology in this area of philosophy, someexamples that feature prominently in the literature are positivelymisleading. In this vein, we criticize the use that incompatibilistsmake of the phenomenon of ``brainwashing,'''' as well as the Frankfurt-styleexamples favored by compatibilists. We provide an instance of thekind of thought experiment that is needed to genuinely test thehypothesis that moral (...)
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  2. Situations and Attitudes.Jon Barwise & John Perry - 1983 - Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. Edited by John Perry.
    This volume tackles the slippery subject of 'meaning'.
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  3. The Liar: An Essay on Truth and Circularity.Jon Barwise & John Etchemendy - 1987 - Oxford, England and New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press USA. Edited by John Etchemendy.
    Bringing together powerful new tools from set theory and the philosophy of language, this book proposes a solution to one of the few unresolved paradoxes from antiquity, the Paradox of the Liar. Treating truth as a property of propositions, not sentences, the authors model two distinct conceptions of propositions: one based on the standard notion used by Bertrand Russell, among others, and the other based on J.L. Austin's work on truth. Comparing these two accounts, the authors show that while the (...)
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  4. (1 other version)Scenes and other situations.Jon Barwise - 1981 - Journal of Philosophy 78 (7):369-397.
  5. On branching quantifiers in English.Jon Barwise - 1979 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 8 (1):47 - 80.
  6.  51
    (1 other version)It's good to talk? Examining attitudes towards corporate social responsibility dialogue and engagement processes.Jon Burchell & Joanne Cook - 2006 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 15 (2):154–170.
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  7.  55
    (2 other versions)Stakeholder dialogue and organisational learning: Changing relationships between companies and NGOs.Jon Burchell & Joanne Cook - 2007 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 17 (1):35–46.
    This article presents a critical examination of the process of stakeholder dialogue in the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) field. It utilises data from a three-year research project into stakeholder dialogue processes to discuss three central themes: first, what is meant by the term ‘dialogue’, both from a theoretical perspective and from its practical application within CSR; second, the challenges of creating effective dialogue; and third, measuring and assessing the potential outcomes of dialogue. In providing a critical overview of these themes, (...)
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  8. Deliberation, Judgement and the Nature of Evidence.Jon Williamson - unknown
    A normative Bayesian theory of deliberation and judgement requires a procedure for merging the evidence of a collection of agents. In order to provide such a procedure, one needs to ask what the evidence is that grounds Bayesian probabilities. After finding fault with several views on the nature of evidence (the views that evidence is knowledge; that evidence is whatever is fully believed; that evidence is observationally set credence; that evidence is information), it is argued that evidence is whatever is (...)
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  9.  20
    Cement of Society.Jon Elster - 1991 - Journal of Philosophy 88 (12):728-738.
  10. Einstein's introduction of photons: Argument by analogy or deduction from the phenomena?Jon Dorling - 1971 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 22 (1):1-8.
  11. Self-Realization in Work and Politics: The Marxist Conception of the Good Life.Jon Elster - 1986 - Social Philosophy and Policy 3 (2):97.
    In arguments in support of capitalism, the following propositions are sometimes advanced or presupposed: the best life for the individual is one of consumption, understood in a broad sense that includes aesthetic pleasures and entertainment as well as consumption of goods in the ordinary sense; consumption is to be valued because it promotes happiness or welfare, which is the ultimate good; since there are not enough opportunities for consumption to provide satiation for everybody, some principles of distributive justice must be (...)
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  12.  87
    Length contraction and clock synchronisation: The empirical equivalence of the Einsteinian and lorentzian theories.Jon Dorling - 1968 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 19 (1):67-69.
  13. Probabilistic theories of causality.Jon Williamson - 2009 - In Helen Beebee, Christopher Hitchcock & Peter Menzies (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Causation. Oxford University Press UK. pp. 185--212.
    This chapter provides an overview of a range of probabilistic theories of causality, including those of Reichenbach, Good and Suppes, and the contemporary causal net approach. It discusses two key problems for probabilistic accounts: counterexamples to these theories and their failure to account for the relationship between causality and mechanisms. It is argued that to overcome the problems, an epistemic theory of causality is required.
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  14. How Can Causal Explanations Explain?Jon Williamson - 2013 - Erkenntnis 78 (2):257-275.
    The mechanistic and causal accounts of explanation are often conflated to yield a ‘causal-mechanical’ account. This paper prizes them apart and asks: if the mechanistic account is correct, how can causal explanations be explanatory? The answer to this question varies according to how causality itself is understood. It is argued that difference-making, mechanistic, dualist and inferentialist accounts of causality all struggle to yield explanatory causal explanations, but that an epistemic account of causality is more promising in this regard.
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  15. Shifting situations and shaken attitudes.Jon Barwise & John Perry - 1985 - Linguistics and Philosophy 8 (1):105--161.
  16. (1 other version)Ulysses Unbound.Jon Elster - 2001 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 59 (4):423-425.
     
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  17.  72
    Probability logic.Jon Williamson - unknown
    Practical reasoning requires decision—making in the face of uncertainty. Xenelda has just left to go to work when she hears a burglar alarm. She doesn’t know whether it is hers but remembers that she left a window slightly open. Should she be worried? Her house may not be being burgled, since the wind or a power cut may have set the burglar alarm off, and even if it isn’t her alarm sounding she might conceivably be being burgled. Thus Xenelda can (...)
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  18.  27
    A Bayesian Account of Establishing.Jon Williamson - 2022 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 73 (4):903-925.
    When a proposition is established, it can be taken as evidence for other propositions. Can the Bayesian theory of rational belief and action provide an account of establishing? I argue that it can, but only if the Bayesian is willing to endorse objective constraints on both probabilities and utilities, and willing to deny that it is rationally permissible to defer wholesale to expert opinion. I develop a new account of deference that accommodates this latter requirement.
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  19. The nature and scope of rational-choice explanations.Jon Elster - 1985 - In Ernest LePore & Brian P. McLaughlin (eds.). Blackwell. pp. 60-72.
     
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  20.  23
    Targeting of widening participation measures by elite institutions: widening access or simply aiding recruitment?Jon Rainford - 2017 - Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education 21 (2-3):45-50.
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  21. Hume's and Smith's Partial Sympathies and Impartial Stances.Jon Rick - 2007 - Journal of Scottish Philosophy 5 (2):135-158.
    The moral psychology of sympathy is the linchpin of the sentimentalist moral theories of both David Hume and Adam Smith. In this paper, I attempt to diagnose the critical differences between Hume's and Smith's respective accounts of sympathy in order to argue that Smithian sympathy is more properly suited to serve as a basis for impartial moral evaluations and judgments than is Humean sympathy. By way of arguing this claim, I take up the problem of overcoming sympathetic partiality in the (...)
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  22.  16
    (1 other version)The Cambridge Rawls Lexicon.Jon Mandle & David A. Reidy (eds.) - 2014 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    John Rawls is widely regarded as one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth century, and his work has permanently shaped the nature and terms of moral and political philosophy, deploying a robust and specialized vocabulary that reaches beyond philosophy to political science, economics, sociology, and law. This volume is a complete and accessible guide to Rawls' vocabulary, with over 200 alphabetical encyclopaedic entries written by the world's leading Rawls scholars. From 'basic structure' to 'burdened society', from 'Sidgwick' to (...)
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  23.  60
    Modal correspondence for models.Jon Barwise & Lawrence S. Moss - 1998 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 27 (3):275-294.
    This paper considers the correspondence theory from modal logic and obtains correspondence results for models as opposed to frames. The key ideas are to consider infinitary modal logic, to phrase correspondence results in terms of substitution instances of a given modal formula, and to identify bisimilar model-world pairs.
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  24. Objective Bayesianism with predicate languages.Jon Williamson - 2008 - Synthese 163 (3):341-356.
    Objective Bayesian probability is often defined over rather simple domains, e.g., finite event spaces or propositional languages. This paper investigates the extension of objective Bayesianism to first-order logical languages. It is argued that the objective Bayesian should choose a probability function, from all those that satisfy constraints imposed by background knowledge, that is closest to a particular frequency-induced probability function which generalises the λ = 0 function of Carnap’s continuum of inductive methods.
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  25. Is the genetic fallacy a fallacy?Jon Pashman - 1970 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 8 (1):57-62.
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  26.  56
    Armstrong was a Cheat: A Reply to Eric Moore.Jon Pike & Sean Cordell - 2019 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 14 (2):247-263.
    In this paper, we reply to Eric Moore’s argument that Lance Armstrong did not cheat, at least according to one, standard account of cheating. If that is the case, we argue, so much the worse for th...
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  27.  73
    Reconsidering Genetic Antidiscrimination Legislation.Jon Beckwith & Joseph S. Alper - 1998 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 26 (3):205-210.
    Until approximately twenty years ago, advances in the study of human genetics had little influence on the practice of medicine. In the 1980s, this changed dramatically with the mapping of the altered genes that cause cystic fibrosis and Huntington disease. In just a few years, these discoveries led to DNA-based tests that enabled clinicians to determine whether prospective parents were carriers of CF or whether an individual carried the Huntington gene and, as a result, would almost certainly develop the disease.Observers (...)
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    A Common Word: Muslims and Christians on Loving God and Neighbor.Jon Armajani - 2010 - Journal for Peace and Justice Studies 20 (2):136-140.
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  29. The unbeatable whiteness of the ipod.Jon Austin - 2008 - In D. E. Wittkower (ed.), Ipod and Philosophy: Icon of an Epoch. Open Court.
     
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  30. An interactive electronic art system based on artificial ecosystemics.Taras Kowaliw, Jon McCormack & Alan Dorin - unknown
  31. Maximising entropy efficiently.Jon Williamson - 2002
    Recommended citation: . . Link¨ oping Electronic Articles in Computer and Information Science, Vol. 7(2002): nr 0. http://www.ep.liu.se/ea/cis/2002/00/. September 18, 2002. </div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-WILMEE"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/thermodynamics-and-statistical-mechanics' rel='section'>Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-physical-science' rel='section'>Philosophy of Physical Science</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=WILMEE&proxyId=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fkar.kent.ac.uk%2F7376%2F"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/WILMEE'>(2 more)</a>   <div id="la-WILMEE" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('WILMEE')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-WILMEE" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('WILMEE','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/WILMEE"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 3 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-WILMEE"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eWETTSA-2' onclick="ee('click','WETTSA-2')" onmouseover="ee('over','WETTSA-2')" onmouseout="ee('out','WETTSA-2')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/WETTSA-2#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>29 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/WETTSA-2"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>The Sage and the Way.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Wetlesen" href="/s/Jon%20Wetlesen"><span class='name'>Jon Wetlesen</span></a>, <a class='discreet' title="View other works by Paul Wienpahl" href="/s/Paul%20Wienpahl"><span class='name'>Paul Wienpahl</span></a> & <a class='discreet' title="View other works by Siegfried Hessing" href="/s/Siegfried%20Hessing"><span class='name'>Siegfried Hessing</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">1981</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Philosophy East and West</i> 31 (1):101-109.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-WETTSA-2"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/asian-philosophy' rel='section'>Asian Philosophy</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/classical-chinese-philosophy' rel='section'>Classical Chinese Philosophy</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/asian-philosophy' rel='section'>Asian Philosophy</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=WETTSA-2&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.2307%2F1399072"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a>   <div id="la-WETTSA-2" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('WETTSA-2')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-WETTSA-2" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('WETTSA-2','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/WETTSA-2"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 5 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-WETTSA-2"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eMOLCAT' onclick="ee('click','MOLCAT')" onmouseover="ee('over','MOLCAT')" onmouseout="ee('out','MOLCAT')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/MOLCAT#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>46 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/MOLCAT"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Contemplation and the human good.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Moline" href="/s/Jon%20Moline"><span class='name'>Jon Moline</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">1983</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Noûs</i> 17 (1):37-53.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-MOLCAT"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/ethics' rel='section'>Ethics</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/value-theory-miscellaneous' rel='section'>Value Theory, Miscellaneous</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=MOLCAT&proxyId=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.jstor.org%2Fstable%2Fpdfplus%2F2214814.pdf"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/MOLCAT'>(5 more)</a>   <div id="la-MOLCAT" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('MOLCAT')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-MOLCAT" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('MOLCAT','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/MOLCAT"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 7 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-MOLCAT"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eELSFAN-2' onclick="ee('click','ELSFAN-2')" onmouseover="ee('over','ELSFAN-2')" onmouseout="ee('out','ELSFAN-2')" class='entry'><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/ELSFAN-2"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Fairness and Norms.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Elster" href="/s/Jon%20Elster"><span class='name'>Jon Elster</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">2006</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Social Research: An International Quarterly</i> 73 (2):365-376.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">The term "fairness," in everyday language, seems to be used in two main ways: to express the idea of a fair division of something, and to express the idea of a fair response to the behavior of other people. This latter, by extension, captures the more general notion of reciprocity. Ernst Fehr refers to reciprocity and conditional cooperation as resulting from the operation of social norms. In this paper I suggest a different framework, recognizing differences between social norms and of<span id="ELSFAN-2-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("ELSFAN-2-abstract2").show();$("ELSFAN-2-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="ELSFAN-2-abstract2" style="display:none"> moral norms, in terms of both operation and substantive content, and establishing a third category of "quasi-moral norms," comprising norms of reciprocity and of conditional cooperation and bearing both conditional and unconditional aspects. In conclusion, I offer two observations about the social consequences of fairness motivations. First, strategic or self-deceptive charges of unfairness can raise the stakes, create deadlock and prevent compromise. Reactions to perceived unfairness, and anticipation of such reactions, can make the world a better place, but may also generate waste and inefficiency. Second, the conditional motivation of fairness requires some unconditional cooperators to get activated. Once activated, it will pick up not only some who are motivated by the quasi-moral norm of fairness, but also some who are under the sway of social norms. Fairness motivations can make the world a better place, but they need help. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("ELSFAN-2-abstract2").hide();$("ELSFAN-2-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-ELSFAN-2"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/ethics' rel='section'>Ethics</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/value-theory-miscellaneous' rel='section'>Value Theory, Miscellaneous</a></div> </div><div class="options"><div id="la-ELSFAN-2" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('ELSFAN-2')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-ELSFAN-2" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('ELSFAN-2','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/ELSFAN-2"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 3 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-ELSFAN-2"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eELSU' onclick="ee('click','ELSU')" onmouseover="ee('over','ELSU')" onmouseout="ee('out','ELSU')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/ELSU#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>99 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/ELSU"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Urgency.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Elster" href="/s/Jon%20Elster"><span class='name'>Jon Elster</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">2009</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy</i> 52 (4):399 – 411.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">It is generally recognized that emotional states induce impatience, in the sense of a heightened preference for early rewards over later rewards. In this article I argue that they also induce urgency, in the sense of a preference for early action over later action. I adduce scattered evidence for the existence of the phenomenon and sketch a possible experiment that might demonstrate it, while also noting that it may be hard to distinguish urgency-based action from action based on the anticipation<span id="ELSU-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("ELSU-abstract2").show();$("ELSU-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="ELSU-abstract2" style="display:none"> of the decay of emotion. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("ELSU-abstract2").hide();$("ELSU-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-ELSU">No categories</div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=ELSU&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1080%2F00201740903087367"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/ELSU'>(2 more)</a>   <div id="la-ELSU" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('ELSU')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-ELSU" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('ELSU','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/ELSU"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 5 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-ELSU"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eFREPOE' onclick="ee('click','FREPOE')" onmouseover="ee('over','FREPOE')" onmouseout="ee('out','FREPOE')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/FREPOE#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>121 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/FREPOE"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Psychophysics of EEG alpha state discrimination.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon A. Frederick" href="/s/Jon A.%20Frederick"><span class='name'>Jon A. Frederick</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">2012</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Consciousness and Cognition</i> 21 (3):1345-1354.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">Nearly all research in neurofeedback since the 1960s has focused on training voluntary control over EEG constructs. By contrast, EEG state discrimination training focuses on awareness of subjective correlates of EEG states. This study presents the first successful replication of EEG alpha state discrimination first reported by Kamiya . A 150-s baseline was recorded in 106 participants. During the task, low triggered a prompt. Participants indicated “high” or “low” with a keypress response and received immediate feedback. Seventy-five percent of participants<span id="FREPOE-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("FREPOE-abstract2").show();$("FREPOE-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="FREPOE-abstract2" style="display:none"> achieved significant discrimination within nine sessions, with a significant learning curve effect. Performance was significantly related to physical properties of the EEG signal, including magnitude, duration, and absolute vs. relative amplitude. These results are consistent with a conceptualization of EEG state discrimination as a sensory modality, although it is also intricately related to voluntary control of these states. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("FREPOE-abstract2").hide();$("FREPOE-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-FREPOE"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/conscious-and-unconscious-learning' rel='section'>Conscious and Unconscious Learning</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-cognitive-science' rel='section'>Philosophy of Cognitive Science</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/science-of-consciousness' rel='section'>Science of Consciousness</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-cognitive-science' rel='section'>Philosophy of Cognitive Science</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/unconscious-and-conscious-processes' rel='section'>Unconscious and Conscious Processes</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-cognitive-science' rel='section'>Philosophy of Cognitive Science</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=FREPOE&proxyId=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.brainm.com%2Fdocuments%2FPublications%2FFrederick.pdf"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/FREPOE'>(7 more)</a>   <div id="la-FREPOE" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('FREPOE')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-FREPOE" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('FREPOE','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/FREPOE"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 4 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-FREPOE"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eWEBSFM-2' onclick="ee('click','WEBSFM-2')" onmouseover="ee('over','WEBSFM-2')" onmouseout="ee('out','WEBSFM-2')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/WEBSFM-2#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>23 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/WEBSFM-2"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Structure from motion of rigid and jointed objects.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon A. Webb" href="/s/Jon A.%20Webb"><span class='name'>Jon A. Webb</span></a> & <a class='discreet' title="View other works by J. K. Aggarwal" href="/s/J. K.%20Aggarwal"><span class='name'>J. K. Aggarwal</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">1982</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Artificial Intelligence</i> 19 (1):107-130.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-WEBSFM-2"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/science-logic-and-mathematics' rel='section'>Science, Logic, and Mathematics</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=WEBSFM-2&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1016%2F0004-3702(82)90023-6"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/WEBSFM-2'>(2 more)</a>   <div id="la-WEBSFM-2" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('WEBSFM-2')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-WEBSFM-2" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('WEBSFM-2','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/WEBSFM-2"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 4 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-WEBSFM-2"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eESPTLO' onclick="ee('click','ESPTLO')" onmouseover="ee('over','ESPTLO')" onmouseout="ee('out','ESPTLO')" class='entry'><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/ESPTLO"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>The logic of imperatives.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Espersen" href="/s/Jon%20Espersen"><span class='name'>Jon Espersen</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">1967</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Danish Yearbook of Philosophy</i> 4:57-112.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-ESPTLO"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/deontic-logic' rel='section'>Deontic Logic</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/logic-and-philosophy-of-logic' rel='section'>Logic and Philosophy of Logic</a></div> </div><div class="options"><div id="la-ESPTLO" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('ESPTLO')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-ESPTLO" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('ESPTLO','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/ESPTLO"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 5 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-ESPTLO"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eBARMOT-3' onclick="ee('click','BARMOT-3')" onmouseover="ee('over','BARMOT-3')" onmouseout="ee('out','BARMOT-3')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/BARMOT-3#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>249 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/BARMOT-3"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Meeting of the association for symbolic logic: Stanford, california, 1985.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Barwise" href="/s/Jon%20Barwise"><span class='name'>Jon Barwise</span></a>, <a class='discreet' title="View other works by Solomon Feferman" href="/s/Solomon%20Feferman"><span class='name'>Solomon Feferman</span></a> & <a class='discreet' title="View other works by David Israel" href="/s/David%20Israel"><span class='name'>David Israel</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">1986</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Journal of Symbolic Logic</i> 51 (3):832-862.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-BARMOT-3"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/logic-and-philosophy-of-logic-misc' rel='section'>Logic and Philosophy of Logic, Misc</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/logic-and-philosophy-of-logic' rel='section'>Logic and Philosophy of Logic</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=BARMOT-3&proxyId=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.jstor.org%2Fstable%2Fpdfplus%2F2274046.pdf"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/BARMOT-3'>(8 more)</a>   <div id="la-BARMOT-3" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('BARMOT-3')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-BARMOT-3" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('BARMOT-3','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <span class="eMsg" id="msg-BARMOT-3"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eDORDDA' onclick="ee('click','DORDDA')" onmouseover="ee('over','DORDDA')" onmouseout="ee('out','DORDDA')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/DORDDA#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>79 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/DORDDA"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Daniel Dennett and the computational turn.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Dorbolo" href="/s/Jon%20Dorbolo"><span class='name'>Jon Dorbolo</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">2006</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Minds and Machines</i> 16 (1):1-1.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">The award of the 2003 Barwise Prize to Daniel Dennett by the American Philosophical Association signifies Dennett’s importance in the developing area of philosophical inquiry into computing and information. One source of Dennett’s intellectual stature is his command of scientific and engineering ideas, which he effectively applies to philosophical debates over machine intelligence, consciousness, and intentionality. Dennett regards the computer as both a model and a tool that will transform the ways that philosophy is pursued in the 21st century. In<span id="DORDDA-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("DORDDA-abstract2").show();$("DORDDA-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="DORDDA-abstract2" style="display:none"> order to understand Dennett’s conception of how philosophy changes and fares, if his mechanistic and reductionist conception of the life of the mind succeeds, we turn to an examination of a central idea in Dennett’s thought: the intuition pump. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("DORDDA-abstract2").hide();$("DORDDA-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-DORDDA"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/philosophy-of-artificial-intelligence' rel='section'>Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-cognitive-science' rel='section'>Philosophy of Cognitive Science</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=DORDDA&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1007%2Fs11023-006-9010-x"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/DORDDA'>(6 more)</a>   <div id="la-DORDDA" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('DORDDA')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-DORDDA" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('DORDDA','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <span class="eMsg" id="msg-DORDDA"></span></div></div></li> <li id='ePASRAO' onclick="ee('click','PASRAO')" onmouseover="ee('over','PASRAO')" onmouseout="ee('out','PASRAO')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/PASRAO#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>25 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/PASRAO"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Raziel Abelson on "because I want to".</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Pashman" href="/s/Jon%20Pashman"><span class='name'>Jon Pashman</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">1968</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Mind</i> 77 (308):581.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-PASRAO">No categories</div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=PASRAO&proxyId=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.jstor.org%2Fstable%2Fpdfplus%2F2252241.pdf"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/PASRAO'>(5 more)</a>   <div id="la-PASRAO" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('PASRAO')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-PASRAO" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('PASRAO','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <span class="eMsg" id="msg-PASRAO"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eLEETHS' onclick="ee('click','LEETHS')" onmouseover="ee('over','LEETHS')" onmouseout="ee('out','LEETHS')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/LEETHS#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>34 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/LEETHS"><span class='articleTitle pub_name recTitle'>The Human Sciences after the Decade of the Brain.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Leefmann" href="/s/Jon%20Leefmann"><span class='name'>Jon Leefmann</span></a> & <a class='discreet' title="View other works by Elisabeth Hildt" href="/s/Elisabeth%20Hildt"><span class='name'>Elisabeth Hildt</span></a> (eds.) - <span class="pubYear">2017</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> London, Vereinigtes Königreich: Elsevier Academic Press.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">The Human Sciences after the Decade of the Brain brings together exciting new works that address today’s key challenges for a mutual interaction between cognitive neuroscience and the social sciences and humanities. Taking up the methodological and conceptual problems of choosing a neuroscience approach to disciplines such as philosophy, history, ethics and education, the book deepens discussions on a range of epistemological, historical, and sociological questions about the "neuro-turn" in the new millennium. The book’s three sections focus on (i) epistemological<span id="LEETHS-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("LEETHS-abstract2").show();$("LEETHS-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="LEETHS-abstract2" style="display:none"> questions posed by neurobiologically informed approaches to philosophy and history, (ii) neuroscience’s influence on explanations for social and moral behavior, and (iii) the consequences of the neuro-turn in diverse sectors of social life such as science, education, film, and human self-understanding. This book is an important resource both for students and scholars of cognitive neuroscience and biological psychology interested in the philosophical, ethical, and societal influences of—and on—their work as well as for students and scholars from the social sciences and humanities interested in neuroscience. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("LEETHS-abstract2").hide();$("LEETHS-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-LEETHS"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/cognitive-sciences' rel='section'>Cognitive Sciences</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/explanation-in-neuroscience' rel='section'>Explanation in Neuroscience</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-cognitive-science' rel='section'>Philosophy of Cognitive Science</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/neuroethics-misc' rel='section'>Neuroethics, Misc</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/applied-ethics' rel='section'>Applied Ethics</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/philosophy-introductions-and-anthologies' rel='section'>Philosophy, Introductions and Anthologies</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/scientific-practice-misc' rel='section'>Scientific Practice, Misc</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/general-philosophy-of-science' rel='section'>General Philosophy of Science</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/sociology-of-science' rel='section'>Sociology of Science</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/general-philosophy-of-science' rel='section'>General Philosophy of Science</a></div> </div><div class="options"><div class='affiliateLinks'><span class='price_new bargain'><a class='price_new bargain' target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0128042052?tag=philp02-20&linkCode=osi&th=1&psc=1">$22.92 new</a></span>   <span class='price_used'><a class='price_used' target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0128042052?tag=philp02-20&linkCode=osi&th=1&psc=1">$86.74 used</a></span>   <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0128042052?tag=philp02-20&linkCode=osi&th=1&psc=1"> View on Amazon.com</a></div><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=LEETHS&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.elsevier.com%2Fbooks%2Fthe-human-sciences-after-the-decade-of-the-brain%2Fleefmann%2F978-0-12-804205-2"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/LEETHS'>(2 more)</a>   <div id="la-LEETHS" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('LEETHS')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-LEETHS" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('LEETHS','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/LEETHS"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 1 citation</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-LEETHS"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eMOLOPO' onclick="ee('click','MOLOPO')" onmouseover="ee('over','MOLOPO')" onmouseout="ee('out','MOLOPO')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/MOLOPO#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>26 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/MOLOPO"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>On Points of View.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Moline" href="/s/Jon%20Moline"><span class='name'>Jon Moline</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">1968</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>American Philosophical Quarterly</i> 5 (3):191 - 198.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-MOLOPO">No categories</div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=MOLOPO&proxyId=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.jstor.org%2Fstable%2F20009272"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a>   <div id="la-MOLOPO" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('MOLOPO')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-MOLOPO" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('MOLOPO','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/MOLOPO"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 4 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-MOLOPO"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eDAVTFE' onclick="ee('click','DAVTFE')" onmouseover="ee('over','DAVTFE')" onmouseout="ee('out','DAVTFE')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/DAVTFE#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>31 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/DAVTFE"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>The functional effects of modal versus amodal filling-in.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Greg Davis" href="/s/Greg%20Davis"><span class='name'>Greg Davis</span></a> & <a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Driver" href="/s/Jon%20Driver"><span class='name'>Jon Driver</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">1998</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Behavioral and Brain Sciences</i> 21 (6):752-753.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">Comparisons between modally and amodally completed regions show that perceptual filling-in is not merely the ignoring of absences. Illusory filled-in colour arises for modal completion, but not for amodal completion in comparable displays. We find that attention spreads automatically to modally but not amodally completed regions from their inducers, revealing a functional effect of filled-in colour. </div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-DAVTFE"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/perception' rel='section'>Perception</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-mind' rel='section'>Philosophy of Mind</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/science-of-perception' rel='section'>Science of Perception</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-mind' rel='section'>Philosophy of Mind</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=DAVTFE&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1017%2Fs0140525x98271755"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/DAVTFE'>(4 more)</a>   <div id="la-DAVTFE" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('DAVTFE')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-DAVTFE" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('DAVTFE','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <span class="eMsg" id="msg-DAVTFE"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eWILRJU' onclick="ee('click','WILRJU')" onmouseover="ee('over','WILRJU')" onmouseout="ee('out','WILRJU')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/WILRJU#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>14 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/WILRJU"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Richard Jeffrey.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Williamson" href="/s/Jon%20Williamson"><span class='name'>Jon Williamson</span></a> & <a class='discreet' title="View other works by Federica Russo" href="/s/Federica%20Russo"><span class='name'>Federica Russo</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">2010</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> In Jon Williamson & Federica Russo (eds.), <i><a href="https://philpapers.org/rec/WILKTI-3">Key Terms in Logic</a></i>. Continuum Press. pp. 129.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">Key Terms in Logic offers the ideal introduction to this core area in the study of philosophy, providing detailed summaries of the important concepts in the study of logic and the application of logic to the rest of philosophy. A brief introduction provides context and background, while the following chapters offer detailed definitions of key terms and concepts, introductions to the work of key thinkers and lists of key texts. Designed specifically to meet the needs of students and assuming no<span id="WILRJU-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("WILRJU-abstract2").show();$("WILRJU-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="WILRJU-abstract2" style="display:none"> prior knowledge of the subject, this is the ideal reference tool for those coming to Logic for the first time. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("WILRJU-abstract2").hide();$("WILRJU-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-WILRJU">No categories</div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=WILRJU&proxyId=&u=http%3A%2F%2Feprints.lse.ac.uk%2F31820%2F"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/WILRJU'>(2 more)</a>   <div id="la-WILRJU" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('WILRJU')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-WILRJU" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('WILRJU','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/WILRJU"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 2 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-WILRJU"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eLEENAT-4' onclick="ee('click','LEENAT-4')" onmouseover="ee('over','LEENAT-4')" onmouseout="ee('out','LEENAT-4')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/LEENAT-4#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>32 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/LEENAT-4"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Neuroethics and the Neuroscientific Turn.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Leefmann" href="/s/Jon%20Leefmann"><span class='name'>Jon Leefmann</span></a> & <a class='discreet' title="View other works by Elisabeth Hildt" href="/s/Elisabeth%20Hildt"><span class='name'>Elisabeth Hildt</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">2017</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> In L. Syd M. Johnson & Karen S. Rommelfanger (eds.), <i><a href="https://philpapers.org/rec/JOHTRH-4">The Routledge Handbook of Neuroethics</a></i>. Routledge. pp. 14-32.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">Stimulated by a general salience of neuroscientific research and the declaration of neuroscience as one of the leading disciplines of the current century, a diversity of disciplines from the social sciences and the humanities have engaged in discussions about the role of the brain in various social and cultural phenomena. The general importance assigned to the brain in so many areas of academic and social life nowadays has been called the ‘neuroscientific turn’. One of the fields that gained particular attention<span id="LEENAT-4-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("LEENAT-4-abstract2").show();$("LEENAT-4-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="LEENAT-4-abstract2" style="display:none"> in this context is neuroethics. It is, however, not clear if neuroethics should be regarded simply as an indicator of a change toward a brain-centered anthropological outlook in Western societies or as an entity that itself plays a crucial role in the development and promotion of this outlook. In this chapter, we present two perspectives on the ‘neuroscientific turn’, sketch a landscape of neuroethics, and scrutinize the current state and development of neuroethics as one of the new fields at the intersection between the neurosciences and the humanities. We will ask to what extent neuroethics is itself a product or a booster of a cultural turn toward neuroscience and which interpretations of neuroscientific knowledge and which public expectations of the potential of neuroscience have actually been put to work in the formation of neuroethics. As our analysis underlines, the interactions of neuroscience and ethics in the field of neuroethics are complex and multidirectional. On the one hand, philosophical and anthropological discourse has favored certain theoretical assumptions about the role of the brain for human self-understanding. On the other hand, neuroscience has stimulated many discourses in ethical theory, as well as in society, of which neuroethics can be regarded as a recent derivative. Finally, neuroethics itself occasionally functions as an amplifier of the assumption that neuroscience provides relevant information to help us understand the nature of human morality and the nature of good social norms and institutions. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("LEENAT-4-abstract2").hide();$("LEENAT-4-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-LEENAT-4"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/history-of-western-philosophy-misc' rel='section'>History of Western Philosophy, Misc</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/neuroethics-misc' rel='section'>Neuroethics, Misc</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/applied-ethics' rel='section'>Applied Ethics</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/neuroscience-of-ethics' rel='section'>Neuroscience of Ethics</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/normative-ethics' rel='section'>Normative Ethics</a></div> </div><div class="options"><div class='affiliateLinks'><span class='price_new'><a class='price_new' target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0744NZ3Z7?tag=philp02-20&linkCode=osi&th=1&psc=1">$47.11 new</a></span>   (collection)   <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0744NZ3Z7?tag=philp02-20&linkCode=osi&th=1&psc=1"> View on Amazon.com</a></div><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=LEENAT-4&proxyId=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.routledge.com%2FThe-Routledge-Handbook-of-Neuroethics%2FJohnson-Rommelfanger%2Fp%2Fbook%2F9780367573379"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a>   <div id="la-LEENAT-4" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('LEENAT-4')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-LEENAT-4" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('LEENAT-4','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/LEENAT-4"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 1 citation</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-LEENAT-4"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eELSGHR-2' onclick="ee('click','ELSGHR-2')" onmouseover="ee('over','ELSGHR-2')" onmouseout="ee('out','ELSGHR-2')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/ELSGHR-2#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>36 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/ELSGHR-2"><span class='articleTitle pub_name recTitle'>Getting Hooked: Rationality and Addiction.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Elster" href="/s/Jon%20Elster"><span class='name'>Jon Elster</span></a> & <a class='discreet' title="View other works by Ole-Jørgen Skog" href="/s/Ole-Jørgen%20Skog"><span class='name'>Ole-Jørgen Skog</span></a> (eds.) - <span class="pubYear">1999</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> Cambridge University Press.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">The essays in this volume offer a thorough discussion of the relationship between addiction and rationality. This book-length treatment of the subject includes contributions from philosophers, psychiatrists, neurobiologists, sociologists and economists. Contrary to the widespread view that addicts are subject to overpowering and compulsive urges, the authors in this volume demonstrate that addicts are capable of making choices and responding to incentives. At the same time they disagree with Gary Becker's argument that addiction is the result of rational choice. The<span id="ELSGHR-2-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("ELSGHR-2-abstract2").show();$("ELSGHR-2-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="ELSGHR-2-abstract2" style="display:none"> volume offers an exposition of the neurophysiology of addiction, a critical examination of the Becker theory of rational addiction, an argument for a 'visceral theory of addiction', a discussion of compulsive gambling as a form of addiction, several discussions of George Ainslie's theory of hyperbolic discounting, analyses of social causes and policy implications, and an investigation of the problem of relapse. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("ELSGHR-2-abstract2").hide();$("ELSGHR-2-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-ELSGHR-2"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/compulsion-and-addiction' rel='section'>Compulsion and Addiction</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-action' rel='section'>Philosophy of Action</a></div> </div><div class="options"><div class='affiliateLinks'><span class='price_used bargain'><a class='price_used bargain' target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0521640083?tag=philp02-20&linkCode=osi&th=1&psc=1">$7.45 used</a></span>   <span class='price_new'><a class='price_new' target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0521640083?tag=philp02-20&linkCode=osi&th=1&psc=1">$90.29 new</a></span>   <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0521640083?tag=philp02-20&linkCode=osi&th=1&psc=1"> View on Amazon.com</a></div><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=ELSGHR-2&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fbooks.google.com%2Fbooks%3Fid%3DGkMmJFMS2IkC%26printsec%3Dfront_cover"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a>   <div id="la-ELSGHR-2" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('ELSGHR-2')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-ELSGHR-2" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('ELSGHR-2','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/ELSGHR-2"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 3 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-ELSGHR-2"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eDORMAT-2' onclick="ee('click','DORMAT-2')" onmouseover="ee('over','DORMAT-2')" onmouseout="ee('out','DORMAT-2')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/DORMAT-2#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>33 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/DORMAT-2"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Maxwell's attempts to arrive at non-speculative foundations for the kinetic theory.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Dorling" href="/s/Jon%20Dorling"><span class='name'>Jon Dorling</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">1970</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A</i> 1 (3):229-248.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-DORMAT-2"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/science-logic-and-mathematics' rel='section'>Science, Logic, and Mathematics</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/thermodynamics-and-statistical-mechanics' rel='section'>Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-physical-science' rel='section'>Philosophy of Physical Science</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=DORMAT-2&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1016%2F0039-3681(70)90011-7"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/DORMAT-2'>(3 more)</a>   <div id="la-DORMAT-2" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('DORMAT-2')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-DORMAT-2" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('DORMAT-2','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/DORMAT-2"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 3 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-DORMAT-2"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eMILTFD' onclick="ee('click','MILTFD')" onmouseover="ee('over','MILTFD')" onmouseout="ee('out','MILTFD')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/MILTFD#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>78 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/MILTFD"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>The False Dasein: From Heidegger To Sartre and Psychoanalysis1.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Mills" href="/s/Jon%20Mills"><span class='name'>Jon Mills</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">1997</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Journal of Phenomenological Psychology</i> 28 (1):42-65.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">The analysis of Dasein's struggle for authenticity will be the main focus of this article. By virtue of Dasein's ontological predispositions, selfhood is subjected to inauthentic existential modalities already constitutive of its Being. In the case of the false Dasein, fallenness is exacerbated in that Dasein constricts its comportment primarily to the modes of the inauthentic, thereby abdicating its potentiality-for-Being. The false Dasein results from ontical encounters within pre-existing deficient ontological conditions of Being-in-the-world that are thrust upon selfhood as its<span id="MILTFD-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("MILTFD-abstract2").show();$("MILTFD-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="MILTFD-abstract2" style="display:none"> facticity. These deficient ontological structures predispose Dasein to develop intrapsychic psychological deficits that further contribute to Dasein's false existence. Through the medium of Heidegger's existential ontology, Sartrean bad faith, and psychoanalysis, I will demonstrate that the throes of selfhood encompass a dialectical course meandering through experiential modes of authenticity and falsehood, in which this very process itself is an authentic enterprise, that is, it is the necessary constitutional structure of Dasein itself as Being-toward-becoming its possibilities. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("MILTFD-abstract2").hide();$("MILTFD-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-MILTFD"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/jean-paul-sartre' rel='section'>Jean-Paul Sartre</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/continental-philosophy' rel='section'>Continental Philosophy</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/martin-heidegger' rel='section'>Martin Heidegger</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/continental-philosophy' rel='section'>Continental Philosophy</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/phenomenology' rel='section'>Phenomenology</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/continental-philosophy' rel='section'>Continental Philosophy</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=MILTFD&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1163%2F156916297x00022"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/MILTFD'>(5 more)</a>   <div id="la-MILTFD" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('MILTFD')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-MILTFD" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('MILTFD','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/MILTFD"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 3 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-MILTFD"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eWISTSA-2' onclick="ee('click','WISTSA-2')" onmouseover="ee('over','WISTSA-2')" onmouseout="ee('out','WISTSA-2')" class='entry'><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/WISTSA-2"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>The scope and goals of economic science.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon D. Wisman" href="/s/Jon D.%20Wisman"><span class='name'>Jon D. Wisman</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">1990</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> In Don Lavoie (ed.), <i><a href="https://philpapers.org/rec/LAVEAH">Economics and hermeneutics</a></i>. New York: Routledge. pp. 113--33.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-WISTSA-2"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/issues-in-the-philosophy-of-economics' rel='section'>Issues in the Philosophy of Economics</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-social-science' rel='section'>Philosophy of Social Science</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/social-and-political-philosophy' rel='section'>Social and Political Philosophy</a></div> </div><div class="options"><div id="la-WISTSA-2" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('WISTSA-2')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-WISTSA-2" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('WISTSA-2','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/WISTSA-2"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 2 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-WISTSA-2"></span></div></div></li> </ol> </div> <div id='prevNextHtml' class='centered'><center><table><td><span class='prevNext'><i class="glyphicon glyphicon-triangle-left"></i></td><td>1 — 50 / 943</td><td><span class='prevNext'><span title='Next page' class='clickable pager-btn' onclick='goToNextPage()'><i class="glyphicon glyphicon-triangle-right"></i></span></span></td></table></center></div> </div> </div> </div> <!-- frame col-md9 --> <div class="col-md-3 nopadding-xs nopadding-sm nopadding-right"> <div class="panel panel-default hidden-sm hidden-xs"> <div class="panel-body"> <form name="expform"> <div class="sideBox"> <div class="sideBoxH">Export</div> <div class="sideBoxC"> <select name="expf" class="expf" id="expf" onChange="$j('.expLimit').show()"> <option value=''>Format</option> <option value='htm'>Formatted text</option><option value='txt'>Plain text</option><option value='bib'>BibTeX</option><option value='zot'>Zotero</option><option value='enw'>EndNote</option><option value='ris'>Ref Manager</option></select> <div id='expLimit' class='expLimit' style="display:none; margin-top:5px"> Limit to <input class='expLimitI' type="text" id="expLimitI" size="3" value="500"> items. <input style="margin-top:5px" class='' type="button" value="Export" onclick=" if ($j('.expf:visible').val()) { $j('#ap-format').val($j('.expf:visible').val()); $j('#ap-limit').val($j('.expLimitI:visible').val()); refreshWith($('allparams')); } else { alert('You must first choose a format.') } "> </div> </div> <!-- sideB[M#EoxC --> </div> <!-- sideBox --> </form> <form id="moreOptions" name="more"> <div class="sideBox"> <div class="sideBoxH">Filters</div> <div class="sideBoxC filters-box"> <input class='checkbox' type='checkbox' name='proOnly' id='proOnly' onClick="createCookie('proOnly',this.checked ? 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