Results for 'Michelle Reidel'

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  1.  11
    If Students Don’t Feel it, They Won’t Learn it: Early Career Secondary Social Studies Educators Plan for Emotional Engagement.Michelle Reidel & Cinthia Salinas - 2024 - Journal of Social Studies Research 48 (2):87-101.
    This qualitative case study examines early career social studies educators’ knowledge of the role of emotion in teaching and learning. More specifically, we examine how our efforts to expand social studies educators’ understanding of emotion, shifted their perception of the role of emotion in learning social studies content and how they can use this knowledge to plan instruction. Prior to beginning their “emotion education,” all participants described the role of emotion in teaching and learning as important for relationship-building and as (...)
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  2. How to Think about Zeugmatic Oddness.Michelle Liu - 2024 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 15 (4):1109-1132.
    Zeugmatic oddness is a linguistic intuition of oddness with respect to an instance of zeugma, i.e. a sentence containing an instance of a homonymous or polysemous word being used in different meanings or senses simultaneously. Zeugmatic oddness is important for philosophical debates as philosophers often use it to argue that a particular philosophically interesting expression is ambiguous and that the phenomenon referred to by the expression is disunified. This paper takes a closer look at zeugmatic oddness. Focusing on relevant psycholinguistic (...)
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  3.  11
    Sozialethik als Kritik.Michelle Becka, Bernhard Emunds, Johannes Eurich, Gisela Kubon-Gilke, Torsten Meireis & Matthias Möhring-Hesse (eds.) - 2020 - Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgellschaft.
    Kritisiert wird gegenwärtig viel - und auch Kritik wird kritisiert. In dieser Situation sucht dieser Sammelband auszuweisen, wie in einer christlichen Sozialethik Kritik betrieben wird: Sie zielt auf die Kritik der Unvernunft der die Menschen bestimmenden, zugleich von Menschen geschaffenen Ordnungen der Gesellschaft- und dies im Interesse an vernünftigeren Ordnungen ihres Zusammenlebens. Gesellschaftskritik als Vollzug praktischer Rationalität gibt es freilich nicht ohne Herrschaftskritik und nicht ohne Kritik von Ausschluss und Subalternität. Ausdrücklich wird in diesem Band der neutrale Vollzug »der Vernunft« (...)
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  4. Public Wrongs and the 'Criminal Law's Business': When Victims Won't Share.Michelle Dempsey - 2011 - In Rowan Cruft, Matthew H. Kramer & Mark R. Reiff (eds.), Crime, punishment, and responsibility: the jurisprudence of Antony Duff. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  5.  8
    Cherished Comedy: Appreciative Listening and Positive Humor.Michelle M. Matter - 2021 - Listening 56 (2):157-166.
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  6.  1
    Reply to Mislavsky et al.: sometimes people really are averse to experiments.Michelle Meyer, Patrick Heck, Geoffrey Holtzman, Stephen Anderson, William Cai, Duncan Watts & Christopher Chabris - 2019 - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116 (48):23885–6.
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  7.  41
    The Mind-Body Politic.Michelle Maiese & Robert Hanna - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    Building on contemporary research in embodied cognition, enactivism, and the extended mind, this book explores how social institutions in contemporary neoliberal nation-states systematically affect our thoughts, feelings, and agency. Human beings are, necessarily, social animals who create and belong to social institutions. But social institutions take on a life of their own, and literally shape the minds of all those who belong to them, for better or worse, usually without their being self-consciously aware of it. Indeed, in contemporary neoliberal societies, (...)
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  8.  61
    Online education as a “Mental Institution”.Michelle Maiese - 2021 - Philosophical Psychology 34 (2):277-299.
    Work on situated cognition and affectivity holds that cognitive and affective processes always occur within, depend upon, and, perhaps, are even partially constituted by the surrounding social and environmental contexts. What some philosophers call a ‘mental institution’ consists of various tools and technologies that help people to solve a particular problem and scaffold their cognitive and affective processes in various ways. Examples include legal systems, scientific practice, and educational systems. I propose that insofar as it centers around technology and involves (...)
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  9.  4
    Les nouvelles frontières de l'intégrité académique.Michelle Bergadaà (ed.) - 2023 - Caen: Éditions EMS, management et société.
    Cet ouvrage prolonge et complète la construction des sciences de l'intégrité entamée avec le livre L'urgence de l'intégrité académique paru chez le même éditeur en 2021. Le débat s'est poursuivi lors du 2e Colloque International de l'IRAFPA (Coimbra, Portugal, 16-18 juin 2022). Les onze contributions les plus abouties du congrès ont été retenues dans ce volume pour leur capacité à répondre à la question de savoir ce qu'étaient ces nouvelles frontières de l'intégrité dans un monde académique en mutation"--Cover page 4.
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  10.  22
    Storytelling and globalization: The complex narratives of netwar.Michelle Shumate, J. Alison Bryant & Peter R. Monge - 2005 - Emergence: Complexity and Organization 7.
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  11.  45
    The Given: Experience and its Content.Michelle Montague - 2016 - Oxford: Oxford University Press UK.
    What is given to us in conscious experience? The Given is an attempt to answer this question and in this way contribute to a general theory of mental content. The content of conscious experience is understood to be absolutely everything that is given to one, experientially, in the having of an experience. Michelle Montague focuses on the analysis of conscious perception, conscious emotion, and conscious thought, and deploys three fundamental notions in addition to the fundamental notion of content: the (...)
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  12.  16
    Making Heteronormative Reconciliations: The Story of Romantic Love, Sexuality, and Gender in Mixed-Orientation Marriages.Michelle Wolkomir - 2009 - Gender and Society 23 (4):494-519.
    As a central organizing institution in society, marriage presents an idealized package for sociosexual relations that reproduces and intertwines gender power dynamics and heterosexual desire. This package is sustained, in part, by the ideology of romantic love—a set of beliefs that constructs only a particular configuration of sexual and gender practices as natural, normal, and right. Drawing on interviews with 45 people, this study examines how people negotiate marital relationships that do not fit into this normative configuration— mixed-orientation marriages. Participants' (...)
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  13. Temporal indexicals and the passage of time.Michelle Beer - 1988 - Philosophical Quarterly 38 (151):158-164.
  14.  79
    (1 other version)The Fearlessness of Courage.Michelle E. Brady - 2005 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 43 (2):189-211.
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  15.  15
    Work—Family Policies and Poverty for Partnered and Single Women in Europe and North America.Michelle J. Budig, Stephanie Moller & Joya Misra - 2007 - Gender and Society 21 (6):804-827.
    Work—family policy strategies reflect gendered assumptions about the roles of men and women within families and therefore may lead to significantly different outcomes, particularly for families headed by single mothers. The authors argue that welfare states have adopted strategies based on different assumptions about women's and men's roles in society, which then affect women's chances of living in poverty cross-nationally. The authors examine how various strategies are associated with poverty rates across groups of women and also examine more directly the (...)
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  16.  43
    Daydreams and nap dreams: Content comparisons.Michelle Carr & Tore Nielsen - 2015 - Consciousness and Cognition 36:196-205.
  17.  22
    Blobel and Sabatini’s “Beautiful Idea”: Visual Representations of the Conception and Refinement of the Signal Hypothesis.Michelle Lynne LaBonte - 2017 - Journal of the History of Biology 50 (4):797-833.
    In 1971, Günter Blobel and David Sabatini proposed a novel and quite speculative schematic model to describe how proteins might reach the proper cellular location. According to their proposal, proteins destined to be secreted from the cell contain a “signal” to direct their release. Despite the fact that Blobel and Sabatini presented their signal hypothesis as a “beautiful idea” not grounded in experimental evidence, they received criticism from other scientists who opposed such speculation. Following the publication of the 1971 model, (...)
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  18.  15
    Feminist Visions for Women in a New Era: An Interview with Peggy Antrobus.Michelle Rowley & Peggy Antrobus - 2007 - Feminist Studies 33 (1):64-87.
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  19.  6
    Interment: re-framing the death of the Red Location Museum building.Michelle Smith - 2016 - Kronos 1 (1):155-173.
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  20.  48
    Individual differences in cognitive control processes and their relationship to emotion regulation.Michelle A. Hendricks & Tony W. Buchanan - 2016 - Cognition and Emotion 30 (6).
  21.  36
    Is it Cute or Does it Count? Learning to Teach for Meaningful Social Studies in Elementary Grades.Michelle Bauml - 2016 - Journal of Social Studies Research 40 (1):55-69.
    Using a framework of conceptual and practical tools ( Grossman et al., 2000 ), this study explores ways in which a social studies methods course affected beginning teachers’ beliefs and pedagogical approaches for meaningful social studies instruction in elementary grades. Participants included 75 preservice teachers who completed open-ended questionnaires before and after the course, and again one year later as student teachers. Three participants were observed teaching social studies lessons during student teaching to determine how the methods course impacted their (...)
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  22.  31
    ‘Helping Australia Grow’: supermarkets, television cooking shows, and the strategic manufacture of consumer trust.Michelle Phillipov - 2016 - Agriculture and Human Values 33 (3):587-596.
    From farmers’ markets to primetime television cooking shows, notions of ‘knowing where our food comes from’ and ‘reconnecting’ with the sources of our food are now central to a range of contemporary cultural movements and popular media texts. While these ideas have primarily been mobilized by those with activist commitments to ethical and sustainable food production, they are also increasingly appearing in the media and marketing strategies of large agribusiness and retailing corporations, including those of the major Australian supermarkets. This (...)
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  23.  36
    Focusing on Ethics and Broadening our Intellectual Base.Michelle Greenwood & R. Edward Freeman - 2017 - Journal of Business Ethics 140 (1):1-3.
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  24. Group Agency Meets Metaethics: How to Craft a More Compelling Form of Normative Relativism.Michelle M. Dyke - 2020 - In Russ Shafer-Landau (ed.), Oxford Studies in Metaethics Volume 15. Oxford University Press. pp. 219-240.
    The author argues that well-known forms of relativism are unable to accommodate, at once, a set of three highly intuitive theses about the distinctive character of moral reasons. Yet the author argues it is possible to formulate a novel form of normative relativism that has the power to accommodate these claims. The proposed view combines the relativist idea that the normative facts are attitude-dependent with the insight that there are non-human agents to which it makes sense to attribute the kinds (...)
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  25.  4
    Maria Antonaccio , A Philosophy to Live By . Reviewed by.Michelle Mahoney - 2015 - Philosophy in Review 35 (2):56-58.
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  26.  7
    Finding more on the mat: how I grew better, wiser and stronger through yoga.Michelle Berman Marchildon - 2015 - Chino Valley, AZ: Hohm Press.
    "Based on the true life experiences of a recovering corporate executive, award-winning journalist, yogi, wife, mother and survivor of fifty years of life.".
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  27. Alimentação e literatura : Eça de Queiroz e a cozinha burguesa d'A cidade e as serras.Michelle Medeiros & Alex Galeno - 2013 - In Maria da Conceição de Almeida Moura & Alex Galeno (eds.), Ensaios de complexidade 3. Natal: EDUFRN, Editora da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte.
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  28. Objecting to experiments that compare two unobjectionable policies or treatments.Michelle Meyer, Patrick Heck, Geoffrey Holtzman, Stephen Anderson, William Cai, Duncan Watts & Christopher Chabris - 2019 - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116 (22):10723–8.
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  29.  56
    Interpretation of Faces: A Cross-cultural Study of a Prediction from Fridlund's Theory.Michelle S. M. Yik - 1999 - Cognition and Emotion 13 (1):93-104.
  30.  9
    Treating infertility as a missing capability, not a disease: a capability approach.Michelle Jessica Bayefsky & Arthur Caplan - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Ethics.
    Infertility patients and patient advocates have long argued for classifying infertility as a disease, in the hopes that this recognition would improve coverage for and access to fertility treatment. However, for many fertility patients, including older women, single women and same-sex couples, infertility does not represent a true disease state. Therefore, while calling infertility a ‘disease’ may seem politically advantageous, it might actually exclude patients with ‘social’ or ‘relational’ infertility from treatment. What is needed is a new conceptual framing of (...)
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  31.  57
    Epistemic instrumentalism and the problem of epistemic blame.Michelle M. Dyke - 2024 - Synthese 204 (110):1-18.
    In this paper, I draw attention to the phenomenon of warranted epistemic blame in order to pose a challenge for most forms of epistemic instrumentalism, which is the view that all of the demands of epistemic normativity are requirements of instrumental rationality. Because of the way in which the instrumentalist takes the force of one’s epistemic reasons to derive from one’s own individually held ends, the instrumentalist faces unique difficulties in explaining our standing to blame one another for violations of (...)
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  32.  35
    Anorexia Nervosa, Bodily Alienation, and Authenticity.Michelle Maiese - 2024 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 15 (3):773-793.
    Existing phenomenological accounts of anorexia nervosa suggest that various forms of bodily alienation and distorted bodily self-consciousness are common among subjects with this condition. Subjects often experience a sense of distance or estrangement from their body and its needs and demands. What is more, first-person reports and existing qualitative research reveal struggles with authenticity and a search for identity. Is there a connection between the two? I argue that to gain a fuller understanding of anorexia nervosa, how it is experienced (...)
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  33.  19
    Patients as Experts, Participatory Sense-Making, and Relational Autonomy.Michelle Maiese - 2024 - Critica 56 (167):71-100.
    Although mental health professionals traditionally have been viewed as sole experts and decision-makers, there is increasing awareness that the experiential knowledge of former patients can make an important contribution to mental health practices. I argue that current patients likewise possess a kind of expertise, and that including them as active participants in diagnosis and treatment can strengthen their autonomy and allow them to build up important habits and skills. To make sense of these agential benefits and describe how patients might (...)
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  34.  5
    (1 other version)System and Training in Descartes' Meditations in In Memoriam: Albert Hofstadter 1910-1989.Michelle Beyssade - 1988 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 13 (1):97-114.
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  35.  33
    The Ethics of Allocating Uterine Transplants.Michelle J. Bayefsky & Benjamin E. Berkman - 2016 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 25 (3):350-365.
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  36.  61
    White Supremacy as an affective milieu.Michelle Maiese - 2022 - Topoi 41 (5):905-915.
    Some critical philosophers of race have argued that whiteness can be understood as a technology of affect and that white supremacy is comprised partly of unconscious habits that result in racialized perception. In an effort to deepen our understanding of the affective and bodily dimensions of white supremacy and the ways in which affective habits are socially produced, I look to insights from situated affectivity. Theorists in this field maintain that affective experience is not simply a matter of felt inner (...)
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  37.  39
    Perceptions of Plagiarism by STEM Graduate Students: A Case Study.Michelle Leonard, David Schwieder, Amy Buhler, Denise Beaubien Bennett & Melody Royster - 2015 - Science and Engineering Ethics 21 (6):1587-1608.
    Issues of academic integrity, specifically knowledge of, perceptions and attitudes toward plagiarism, are well documented in post-secondary settings using case studies for specific courses, recording discourse with focus groups, analyzing cross-cultural education philosophies, and reviewing the current literature. In this paper, the authors examine the perceptions of graduate students in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics disciplines at the University of Florida regarding misconduct and integrity issues. Results revealed students’ perceptions of the definition and seriousness of potential academic misconduct, knowledge of (...)
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  38.  31
    Autistics appear different, but also are different, and this should be valued.Michelle Dawson & Tyler Cowen - 2019 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42.
    We agree that autistics’ unusual overt behaviors don't necessarily mean reduced social motivation. But Jaswal & Akhtar maintain that, while autistics may appear socially uninterested, their social interest is in fact typical and indeed must be to avoid multiple poor outcomes. This problematic idealization of social typicality deflects attention from important differences in autistic cognition and interests, which should be valued.
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  39. Perception and cognitive phenomenology.Michelle Montague - 2017 - Philosophical Studies 174 (8):2045-2062.
    In this paper I consider the uses to which certain psychological phenomena—e.g. cases of seeing as, and linguistic understanding—are put in the debate about cognitive phenomenology. I argue that we need clear definitions of the terms ‘sensory phenomenology’ and ‘cognitive phenomenology’ in order to understand the import of these phenomena. I make a suggestion about the best way to define these key terms, and, in the light of it, show how one influential argument against cognitive phenomenology fails.
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  40.  86
    Fichte's Theory of Drives.Michelle Kosch - 2021 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 59 (2):247-269.
  41. The logic, intentionality, and phenomenology of emotion.Michelle Montague - 2009 - Philosophical Studies 145 (2):171-192.
    My concern in this paper is with the intentionality of emotions. Desires and cognitions are the traditional paradigm cases of intentional attitudes, and one very direct approach to the question of the intentionality of emotions is to treat it as sui generis—as on a par with the intentionality of desires and cognitions but in no way reducible to it. A more common approach seeks to reduce the intentionality of emotions to the intentionality of familiar intentional attitudes like desires and cognitions. (...)
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  42.  34
    “There is Nothing Fun About Pain”: A Critical Phenomenology of Games for Chronic Pain.Michelle Charette - 2023 - Philosophy and Technology 37 (1):1-23.
    This article examines the gamification of health applications designed to help patients manage chronic pain. Through description of one such program and in-depth interviewing, I describe why gamified pain applications are appealing to patients living with chronic pain. Individuals living with chronic pain are especially disposed to try novel pain management technologies due to the in-control and out-of-control paradox of pain (Leder, 2016). These applications are seductive not only due to this embodied phenomenon, but also because gamification taps into the (...)
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  43.  22
    Des Méditations métaphysiques aux Méditations de philosophie première. Pourquoi retraduire Descartes ?Michelle Beyssade & Jean-Marie Beyssade - 1989 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 94 (1):23 - 36.
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  44.  14
    Chemical Pathology in the Movies: Extraordinary Measures, directed by Tom Vaughan, 2010.Michelle Muscat - 2016 - Journal of Medical Humanities 37 (3):345-346.
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  45. Contempt as a moral attitude.Michelle Mason - 2003 - Ethics 113 (2):234-272.
    Despite contemporary moral philosophers' renewed attention to the moral significance of emotions, the attitudinal repertoire with which they equip the mature moral agent remains stunted. One attitude moral philosophers neglect (if not disown) is contempt. While acknowledging the nastiness of contempt, I here correct the neglect by providing an account of the moral psychology of contempt. In the process, I defend the moral propriety of certain tokens of properly person-focused contempt against some prominent objections -- among them, objections stemming from (...)
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  46. Cognitive phenomenology and conscious thought.Michelle Montague - 2016 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 15 (2):167-181.
    How does mental content feature in conscious thought? I first argue that for a thought to be conscious the content of that thought must conscious, and that one has to appeal to cognitive phenomenology to give an adequate account of what it is for the content of a thought to be conscious. Sensory phenomenology cannot do the job. If one claims that the content of a conscious thought is unconscious, one is really claiming that there is no such thing as (...)
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  47.  17
    Teaching about Health Disparities: Pedagogy, Curriculum, and Learning Theory.Michelle J. Clarke, Shannon Laughlin-Tommaso & Amy Seegmiller Renner - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (9):18-20.
    Berger and Miller argue that contemporary medical education directed toward “cultural competency” fails to address the structural inequities and systemic racism underpinning health dispariti...
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  48.  34
    The social value of clinical research.Michelle Gjl Habets, Johannes Jm van Delden & AnneLien L. Bredenoord - 2014 - BMC Medical Ethics 15 (1):66.
    International documents on ethical conduct in clinical research have in common the principle that potential harms to research participants must be proportional to anticipated benefits. The anticipated benefits that can justify human research consist of direct benefits to the research participant, and societal benefits, also called social value. In first-in-human research, no direct benefits are expected and the benefit component of the risks-benefit assessment thus merely exists in social value. The concept social value is ambiguous by nature and is used (...)
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  49.  28
    The Moral Psychology of Contempt.Michelle Mason (ed.) - 2018 - Rowman & Littlefield International.
    This volume is the first to bring together original work by leading philosophers and psychologists in an examination of the moral psychology of contempt.
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  50. Against propositionalism.Michelle Montague - 2007 - Noûs 41 (3):503–518.
    'Propositionalism' is the widely held view that all intentional mental relations-all intentional attitudes-are relations to propositions or something proposition-like. Paradigmatically, to think about the mountain is ipso facto to think that it is F, for some predicate 'F'. It seems, however, many intentional attitudes are not relations to propositions at all: Mary contemplates Jonah, adores New York, misses Athens, mourns her brother. I argue, following Brentano, Husserl, Church and Montague among others, that the way things seem is the way they (...)
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