Results for 'Karl Hartfelder'

932 found
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  1.  21
    Briefwechsel des Beatus Rhenanus. Gesammelt und herausgegeben von Dr. Adalbert Horawitz und Dr. Karl Hartfelder. Leipzig. (Teubner.) 1886. 8°. 28 Mk. [REVIEW]H. J. - 1887 - The Classical Review 1 (5-6):167-.
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  2.  35
    Hartfelder's Melanchthoniana Paedagogiga Melanchthoniana Paedagogica: gesammelt und erklärt von Dr Karl Hartfelder: pp. lxviii + 287. Leipzig: Teubner. 1892. 8 Mk. [REVIEW]J. Bass Mullinger - 1892 - The Classical Review 6 (09):412-.
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  3.  8
    The Nuclear Arms Race: A Soviet Emigré's Perspective.Hermann Hartfeld - 1988 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 5 (1):28-30.
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  4. Conjectures and Refutations: The Growth of Scientific Knowledge.Karl Raimund Popper - 1962 - London, England: Routledge.
    The way in which knowledge progresses, and especially our scientific knowledge, is by unjustified anticipations, by guesses, by tentative solutions to our problems, by conjectures. These conjectures are controlled by criticism: that is, by attempted refutations, which include severely critical tests. They may survive these tests; but they can never be positively justified: they can neither be established as certainly true nor even as 'probable'. Criticism of our conjectures is of decisive importance: by bringing out our mistakes it makes us (...)
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  5. The poverty of historicism.Karl Raimund Popper - 1960 - London,: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
    Hailed on publication in 1957 as "probably the only book published this year that will outlive the century," this is a brilliant of the idea that there are ...
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  6. The Poverty of Historicism.Karl R. Popper - 1957 - Philosophy 35 (135):357-358.
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  7. Husserl-Chronik: Denk- und Lebensweg Edmund Husserls.Karl Schuhmann - 1977 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 42 (4):828-828.
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  8.  78
    The anatomy of choice: active inference and agency.Karl Friston, Philipp Schwartenbeck, Thomas FitzGerald, Michael Moutoussis, Timothy Behrens & Raymond J. Dolan - 2013 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  9. Sprachtheorie.Karl Bühler - 1936 - Erkenntnis 6 (1):65-68.
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  10.  87
    Active inference and free energy.Karl Friston - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (3):212-213.
    Why do brains have so many connections? The principles exposed by Andy Clark provide answers to questions like this by appealing to the notion that brains distil causal regularities in the sensorium and embody them in models of their world. For example, connections embody the fact that causes have particular consequences. This commentary considers the imperatives for this form of embodiment.
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  11.  46
    (1 other version)Die Krise der Psychologie.Karl Bühler - 1926 - Kant Studien 31 (1-3):455-526.
  12.  14
    Diskurs und Verantwortung: das Problem des Übergangs zur postkonventionellen Moral.Karl-Otto Apel - 1975 - Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp.
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  13. Should the teleosemanticist be afraid of semantic indeterminacy?Karl Bergman - 2021 - Mind and Language (N/A).
    The teleosemantic indeterminacy problem has generated much discussion but no consensus. One possible solution is to accept indeterminacy as a real feature of some representations. I call this view “indeterminacy realism.” In this paper, I argue that indeterminacy realism should be treated as a serious option. By drawing an analogy with vagueness, I try to show that accepting the reality of indeterminacy would not be catastrophic for teleosemantics. I further argue that there are positive reasons to endorse indeterminacy realism. I (...)
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  14.  7
    Die Krise der Psychologie.Karl Bühler - 1927 - Gustav Fischer.
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  15. Sprachpragmatik und Philosophie.Karl-Otto Apel - 1985 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 47 (3):528-529.
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  16. Mental Faculties and Powers and the Foundations of Hume’s Philosophy.Karl Schafer - 2024 - In Sebastian Bender & Dominik Perler (eds.), Powers and Abilities in Early Modern Philosophy. New York, NY: Routledge.
    With respect to the topic of “powers and abilities,” most readers will associate David Hume with his multi-pronged critique of traditional attempts to make robust explanatory use of those notions in a philosophical or scientific context. But Hume’s own philosophy is also structured around the attribution to human beings of a variety of basic faculties or mental powers – such as the reason and the imagination, or the various powers involved in Hume’s account of im- pressions of reflection and the (...)
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  17. The force of fictional discourse.Karl Bergman & Nils Franzen - 2022 - Synthese 200 (6).
    Consider the opening sentence of Tolkien’s The Hobbit: In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit. By writing this sentence, Tolkien is making a fictional statement. There are two influential views of the nature of such statements. On the pretense view, fictional discourse amounts to pretend assertions. Since the author is not really asserting, but merely pretending, a statement such as Tolkien’s is devoid of illocutionary force altogether. By contrast, on the alternative make-believe view, fictional discourse prescribes that (...)
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  18. Philosophical Faith and Revelation.Karl Jaspers & E. B. Ashton - 1967 - Philosophy 44 (167):76-77.
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  19. Locke's theory of appropriation.Karl Olivecrona - 1974 - Philosophical Quarterly 24 (96):220-234.
  20.  73
    The changing cultural context of the institute on religion in an age of science and zygon.Karl E. Peters - 2014 - Zygon 49 (3):612-628.
    Since Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science was founded 49 years ago and since one of its co-publishers, the Institute on Religion in an Age of Science (IRAS), was founded 60 years ago, there have been significant developments in their various cultural contexts—in science, in religion, in culture, in academia, and in the science and religion dialogue. This article is a personal remembrance and reflection that compares the context of IRAS in 1954 when it was first organized with the context (...)
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  21. (1 other version)Living with semantic indeterminacy: The teleosemanticist's guide.Karl Bergman - 2024 - Mind and Language.
    Teleosemantics has an indeterminacy problem. In an earlier publication, I argued that teleosemanticists may afford to be realists about indeterminacy, pointing to the phenomenon of vagueness as a case of really-existing semantic indeterminacy. Here, I continue that project by proposing two criteria of adequacy that a semantically indeterminate theory should meet: a criterion of theoretical adequacy and a criterion of extensional adequacy. I present reasons to think that indeterminate versions of teleosemantics can meet these criteria. I end by discussing vagueness, (...)
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  22. Internalism and culpable irrationality.Karl Bergman - 2024 - Erkenntnis:1-21.
    According to internalism about rationality, the ir/rationality of a subject depends only on how things appear from her subjective perspective. According to culpabilism, rationality is a normative standard such that violations of rationality are (at least sometimes) blameworthy. According to a classical line of reasoning, culpabilism entails internalism. I argue that, to the contrary, culpabilism entails that internalism is false. The internalist cannot accommodate the possibility of culpable irrationality.
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  23. Irreversibility; or, entropy since 1905.Karl R. Popper - 1957 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 8 (30):151-155.
  24. Mechanism, organism, and society: Some models in natural and social science.Karl W. Deutsch - 1951 - Philosophy of Science 18 (3):230-252.
    Men think in terms of models. Their sense organs abstract the events which touch them; their memories store traces of these events as coded symbols; and they may recall them according to patterns which they learned earlier, or recombine them in patterns that are new. In all this, we may think of our thought as consisting of symbols which are put in relations or sequences according to operating rules. Both symbols and operating rules are acquired, in part directly from interaction (...)
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  25.  39
    Long live the King! Beginnings loom larger than endings of past and recurrent events.Karl Halvor Teigen, Gisela Böhm, Susanne Bruckmüller, Peter Hegarty & Olivier Luminet - 2017 - Cognition 163 (C):26-41.
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  26.  45
    Causal dispositions + sensory experience = intentionality.Karl Pfeifer - 1987 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10 (4):757.
  27. Way to Wisdom: An Introduction to Philosophy.Karl Jaspers & Ralph Manheim - 1954 - Philosophy 29 (109):176-178.
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  28. Kapital.Karl Marx - unknown
     
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  29.  34
    Brain and the composition of conscious experience. Of deep and surface structure; frames of reference; episode and executive; models and monitors.Karl H. Pribram - 1999 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 6 (5):19-42.
    In the context of this publication on blindsight, I want to address further the brain processes critically responsible for organizing our conscious experience. As in a previous related publication , I am restricting myself to brain and conscious experience, not the fuller topic of ‘consciousness’ as this might be determined by genetic and environmental factors, nor as it is defined in Eastern traditions and in esoteric Western religion and philosophy. For my thoughts on this broader topic the reader is referred (...)
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  30.  50
    Non-prioritized belief revision based on distances between models.Karl Schlechta - 1997 - Theoria 63 (1-2):34-53.
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  31.  25
    Reason and Existenz: five lectures.Karl Jaspers - 1997 - Milwaukee: Marquette University Press.
    With the publication of Reason and Existenz, originally delivered as a series of five lectures at the University of Groningen in 1935, one of the most important of Jaspers's philosophic works is made available to the English-speaking world. It concerns itself with a general statement of the principal philosophic categories which have given uniqueness to Jaspers's thinking: existence, freedom, and history, and the limit-situations of death, suffering, and sin. Written shortly after Jaspers's major systematic work and before his analysis of (...)
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  32.  57
    (1 other version)Phenomenology and epistemology of consciousness of objects.Karl Duncker - 1946 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 7 (4):505-542.
  33. Husserl and Indian thought.Karl Schuhmann - 1992 - In D. P. Chattopadhyaya, Lester Embree & Jitendranath Mohanty (eds.), Phenomenology and Indian Philosophy. New Delhi: State University of New York Press.
  34. Kant and Motivational Externalism.Karl Ameriks - 2006 - In Moralische Motivation. Kant und die Alternativen. Hamburg: Felix Meiner. pp. 3-22.
     
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  35. Whatever Became of Sin?Karl Menninger - 1973
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  36.  68
    Religion and an evolutionary theory of knowledge.Karl E. Peters - 1982 - Zygon 17 (4):385-415.
    . This paper outlines an evolutionary theory of knowledge involving not only conceptual but also behavioral and experiential knowledge. It suggests human knowledge is continuous at the behavioral and experiential level with that of nonhuman animals. By contrasting an evolutionary understanding of ultimate reality with the more traditional, personalistic understanding, the paper shows how an evolutionary epistemology applies to religion in terms of both general and special revelation. Finally, the paper explores how one might respond to the problem of religious (...)
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  37.  8
    (1 other version)A Brief History of Fascist Lies: by Federico Finchelstein, Berkeley, University of California Press, 2020, 138 pp., $19.95T/£16.99.Karl Schweizer - 2021 - The European Legacy 27 (1):98-101.
    A companion piece to Federico Finchelstein’s From Fascism to Populism in History, this generally well-written but otherwise problematic work, presents a conceptual history of “lying” with fa...
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  38.  19
    Reciprocity and the Guaranteed Income.Karl Widerquist - 1999 - Politics and Society 27 (3):387-402.
    This paper argues that a guaranteed income is not only consistent with the principle of reciprocity but is required for reciprocity. This conclusion follows from a three-part argument. First, if a guaranteed income is in place, all individuals have the same opportunity to live without working. Therefore, those who choose not to work do not take advantage of a privilege that is unavailable to everyone else. Second, in the absence of an unconditional income, society is, in effect, applying the principle, (...)
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  39.  29
    Metaphor as Key to Understanding the Thought of Other Speech Communities.Karl H. Potter - 1989 - In Richard Rorty (ed.), Review of I nterpreting Across Boundaries: New Essays in Comparative Philosophy. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 19-35.
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  40.  27
    Doctrine and Agrument in Indian Philosophy.Karl H. Potter - 1966 - Philosophy East and West 16 (1):89-94.
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  41. Philosophy and the Meaning of Life.Karl Britton - 1971 - Philosophy 46 (175):70-71.
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  42. Advaita Vedanta Up to Samkara and His Pupils.Karl H. Potter - 1981 - Motilal Banarsidass.
     
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  43.  16
    Approximation quality of the hypervolume indicator.Karl Bringmann & Tobias Friedrich - 2013 - Artificial Intelligence 195 (C):265-290.
  44.  89
    A Christian naturalism: Developing the thinking of Gordon Kaufman.Karl E. Peters - 2013 - Zygon 48 (3):578-591.
    This essay develops a theological naturalism using Gordon Kaufman's nonpersonal idea of God as serendipitous creativity in contrast to the personal metaphorical theology of Sallie McFague. It then develops a Christian theological naturalism by using Kaufman's idea of historical trajectories, specifically Jesus trajectory1 and Jesus trajectory2. The first is the trajectory in the early Christian church assuming a personal God in the framework of Greek philosophy that results in the Trinity. The second is the naturalistic-humanistic trajectory of creativity (God) that (...)
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  45.  41
    Saving Experience in an Age of Science.Karl E. Peters - 2007 - Zygon 42 (4):825-828.
  46.  42
    Darwinism as a Metaphysical Research Programme.Karl Popper - 2009 - In Michael Ruse (ed.), Philosophy After Darwin: Classic and Contemporary Readings. Princeton University Press. pp. 167-175.
  47.  20
    A Planetary Macroethics for Humankind: The Need, the Apparent Difficulty, and the Eventual Possibility.Karl-Otto Apel - 1991 - In Eliot Deutsch (ed.), Culture and Modernity: East-West Philosophic Perspectives. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 261-278.
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  48.  24
    Die symbolik der sprache.Karl Bühler - 1928 - Kant Studien 33 (1-2):405-409.
  49. Die Spiele der Menschen.Karl Groos - 1899 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 48:87-96.
     
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  50. Philosophie.Karl Jaspers & Jeanne Hersch - 1987 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 177 (4):526-526.
     
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