Results for 'Yigal Levin'

955 found
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  1.  14
    War and peace in Jewish tradition: from the biblical world to the present: the Third Annual Conference of the Israel Heritage Department Ariel, Israel.Yigal Levin & Amnon Shapira (eds.) - 2012 - New York: Routledge.
    War and peace in the Bible -- Theoretical aspects of war in rabbinic thought -- War and peace in modern Jewish thought and practice -- Israel, war, ethics and the media.
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  2. Change blindness blindness: The metacognitive error of overestimating change-detection ability.Daniel T. Levin, Nausheen Momen, Sarah B. Drivdahl & Daniel J. Simons - 2000 - Visual Cognition 7 (1):397-412.
  3.  74
    Introduction to special issue of Cognition on lexical and conceptual semantics.Beth Levin & Steven Pinker - 1991 - Cognition 41 (1-3):1-7.
  4. Is the Generality Problem too General?Michael Levin - 2002 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (1):87-97.
    Reliabilism holds that knowledge is true belief reliably caused. Reliabilists should say something about individuating processes; critics deny that the right degree of generality can be specified without arbitrariness. It is argued that this criticism applies as well to processes mentioned in scientific explanations. The gratuitous puzzles created thereby show that the “generality problem” is illusory.
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  5.  22
    The Analysis of Compression in Poetry.Samuel R. Levin - 1971 - Foundations of Language 7 (1):38-55.
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  6. Could love be like a heatwave?: Physicalism and the subjective character of experience.Janet Levin - 1986 - Philosophical Studies 49 (March):245-61.
  7. The evidential status of philosophical intuition.Janet Levin - 2004 - Philosophical Studies 121 (3):193-224.
    Philosophers have traditionally held that claims about necessities and possibilities are to be evaluated by consulting our philosophical intuitions; that is, those peculiarly compelling deliverances about possibilities that arise from a serious and reflective attempt to conceive of counterexamples to these claims. But many contemporary philosophers, particularly naturalists, argue that intuitions of this sort are unreliable, citing examples of once-intuitive, but now abandoned, philosophical theses, as well as recent psychological studies that seem to establish the general fallibility of intuition.In the (...)
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  8.  24
    Democracy for Realists: Why Elections Do Not Produce Responsive Government.Michael Levin - 2016 - The European Legacy 23 (6):717-718.
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  9.  29
    The Biophysics of Regenerative Repair Suggests New Perspectives on Biological Causation.Michael Levin - 2020 - Bioessays 42 (2):1900146.
    Evolution exploits the physics of non‐neural bioelectricity to implement anatomical homeostasis: a process in which embryonic patterning, remodeling, and regeneration achieve invariant anatomical outcomes despite external interventions. Linear “developmental pathways” are often inadequate explanations for dynamic large‐scale pattern regulation, even when they accurately capture relationships between molecular components. Biophysical and computational aspects of collective cell activity toward a target morphology reveal interesting aspects of causation in biology. This is critical not only for unraveling evolutionary and developmental events, but also for (...)
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  10.  63
    Antiquity’s Missive to Transhumanism.Susan B. Levin - 2017 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 42 (3):278-303.
    To reassure those concerned about wholesale discontinuity between human existence and posthumanity, transhumanists assert shared ground with antiquity on vital challenges and aspirations. Because their claims reflect key misconceptions, there is no shared vision for transhumanists to invoke. Having exposed their misuses of Prometheus, Plato, and Aristotle, I show that not only do transhumanists and antiquity crucially diverge on our relation to ideals, contrast-dependent aspiration, and worthy endeavors but that illumining this divide exposes central weaknesses in transhumanist argumentation. What is (...)
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  11.  45
    A world of difference: The fundamental opposition between transhumanist “welfarism” and disability advocacy.Susan B. Levin - 2023 - Bioethics 37 (8):779-789.
    From the standpoint of disability advocacy, further exploration of the concept of well-being stands to be availing. The notion that “welfarism” about disability, which Julian Savulescu and Guy Kahane debuted, qualifies as helpful is encouraged by their claim that welfarism shares important commitments with that advocacy. As becomes clear when they apply their welfarist frame to procreative decisions, endorsing welfarism would, in fact, sharply undermine it. Savulescu and Kahane's Principle of Procreative Beneficence—which reflects transhumanism, or advocacy of radical bioenhancement—morally requires (...)
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  12.  25
    The paradox of conservative bioethics.Yuval Levin - forthcoming - Bulletin of Medical Ethics.
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  13. Taking type-b materialism seriously.Janet Levin - 2008 - Mind and Language 23 (4):402-425.
    Abstract: Type-B materialism is the thesis that though phenomenal states are necessarily identical with physical states, phenomenal concepts have no a priori connections to physical or functional concepts. Though type-B materialists have invoked this conceptual independence to counter a number of well-known arguments against physicalism (e.g. the conceivability of zombies, the ignorance of Mary, the existence of an 'explanatory gap'), anti-physicalists have raised objections to this strategy. My aim here is to defend type-B materialism against these objections, by arguing that (...)
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  14.  29
    Associative effects of information framing.Irwin P. Levin - 1987 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 25 (2):85-86.
  15.  47
    (1 other version)Wiping the slate clean: A lexical semantic exploration.Beth Levin & Malka Rappaport Hovav - 1991 - Cognition 41 (1-3):123-151.
  16.  45
    What Klein’s “Semantic Gradient” Does and Does Not Really Show: Decomposing Stroop Interference into Task and Informational Conflict Components.Yulia Levin & Joseph Tzelgov - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  17. Justice in the Flesh.David Michael Levin - 1990 - In Galen A. Johnson & Michael Bradley Smith, Ontology and alterity in Merleau-Ponty. Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
     
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  18.  67
    Consciousness and the Origins of Thought.Janet Levin - 1998 - Philosophical Review 107 (4):644.
    In this thoughtful, rich, and extremely ambitious book, Norton Nelkin develops a "Scientific Cartesian" theory of sensation and perception, consciousness, conceptual content, and concept formation. The theory is Cartesian primarily because its account of mental states is realist, individualist, and internalist; Nelkin also holds, with Descartes, that perceptions are spontaneous judgments and that at least some of our concepts are innate. But, unlike Descartes, Nelkin rejects dualism and treats the mind as something that can be studied by the same methods (...)
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  19.  93
    Induction and Husserl's theory of eidetic variation.David Michael Levin - 1968 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 29 (1):1-15.
  20.  44
    Molecular bioelectricity in developmental biology: New tools and recent discoveries.Michael Levin - 2012 - Bioessays 34 (3):205-217.
    Significant progress in the molecular investigation of endogenous bioelectric signals during pattern formation in growing tissues has been enabled by recently developed techniques. Ion flows and voltage gradients produced by ion channels and pumps are key regulators of cell proliferation, migration, and differentiation. Now, instructive roles for bioelectrical gradients in embryogenesis, regeneration, and neoplasm are being revealed through the use of fluorescent voltage reporters and functional experiments using well‐characterized channel mutants. Transmembrane voltage gradients (Vmem) determine anatomical polarity and function as (...)
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  21.  16
    6. Decline and Fall: Ocularcentrism in Heidegger's Reading of the History of Metaphysics.David Michael Levin - 1993 - In Modernity and the Hegemony of Vision. University of California Press. pp. 186-217.
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  22.  64
    Change blindness blindness as visual metacognition.Daniel T. Levin - 2002 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 9 (5-6):111-30.
    Many experiments have demonstrated that people fail to detect seemingly large visual changes in their environment. Despite these failures, most people confidently predict that they would see changes that are actually almost impossible to see. Therefore, in at least some situations visual experience is demonstrably not what people think it is. This paper describes a line of research suggesting that overconfidence about change detection reflects a deeper metacognitive error founded on beliefs about attention and the role of meaning as a (...)
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  23.  49
    Aesthetic movements of embodied minds: between Merleau-Ponty and Deleuze.Kasper Levin - 2016 - Continental Philosophy Review 49 (2):181-202.
    Animating Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenological idea of the body as a pre-reflective organizing principle in perception, consciousness and language has become a productive and popular endeavor within philosophy of mind during the last two decades. In this context Merleau-Ponty’s descriptions of an embodied mind has played a central role in the attempts to naturalize phenomenological insights in relation to cognitive science and neuropsychological research. In this dialogue the central role of art and aesthetics in phenomenology has been neglected or at best (...)
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  24. Analytic functionalism and the reduction of phenomenal states.Janet Levin - 1991 - Philosophical Studies 61 (March):211-38.
  25. The ontological dimension of embodiment: Heidegger's thinking of being.David Michael Levin - 1999 - In Simon Critchley, The Body: Classic and Contemporary Readings. Blackwell.
     
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  26.  40
    Emotion, utility maximization, and ecological rationality.Yakir Levin & Itzhak Aharon - 2014 - Mind and Society 13 (2):227-245.
    This paper examines the adequacy of an evolutionary-oriented notion of rationality—ecological rationality—that has recently been proposed in economics. Ecological rationality is concerned with what it is rational to do, and in this sense is a version of what philosophers call ‘practical rationality’. Indeed, the question of the adequacy of ecological rationality as it is understood in the paper, is the question of whether ecological rationality is a genuine notion of practical rationality. The paper first explicates and motivates the notion of (...)
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  27.  78
    Equality of opportunity.Michael E. Levin - 1981 - Philosophical Quarterly 31 (123):110-125.
  28. Introduction.Beth Levin & Steven Pinker - 1992 - In Beth Levin & Steven Pinker, Lexical & conceptual semantics. Cambridge, Ma.: Blackwell.
     
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  29. Language, Concepts, and Worlds: Three Domains of Metaphor.Samuel R. Levin - 1993 - In Andrew Ortony, Metaphor and Thought. Cambridge University Press. pp. 112-123.
     
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  30. Why we believe in other minds.Michael Levin - 1984 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 44 (March):343-59.
  31.  55
    Unlimited plasticity of embodied, cognitive subjects: a new playground for the UAL framework.Michael Levin - 2021 - Biology and Philosophy 36 (2):1-5.
    Birch, Ginsburg, and Jablonka lay out a very convincing case for an important transition marker: unlimited associative learning. Especially welcome are the empirical predictions. I focus here not on the question of how to infer phenomenal consciousness from this behavioral metric, but on possible novel applications of this useful and fundamental framework. Specifically, I highlight two aspects of biology that are often not considered in philosophy of mind approaches that focus on natural species and evolutionary time scales. These are the (...)
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  32.  47
    The Future of Knowing and Values: Information Technologies and Plato's Critique of Rhetoric.Susan B. Levin - 2017 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 50 (2):153-177.
    The most contentious issue in current debates about human enhancement is whether it properly belongs to human aspiration to outstrip our human ceiling in cognition and longevity so radically that the result would not be improved human beings but instead "posthumans." Transhumanists answer strongly in the affirmative and hence vigorously support our directing available and foreseeable technologies to that end. According to Nick Bostrom, transhumanism is "an outgrowth of secular humanism and the Enlightenment." Our "ceasing to be human is [not] (...)
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  33. What’s in a Name?Susan B. Levin - 1995 - Ancient Philosophy 15 (1):91-115.
  34.  16
    Positivity effect and decision making in ageing.Fedor Levin, Susann Fiedler & Bernd Weber - forthcoming - Cognition and Emotion:1-15.
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  35. Pornography, Hate Speech, and Their Challenge to Dworkin's Egalitarian Liberalism.Abigail Levin - 2009 - Public Affairs Quarterly 23 (4):357-373.
    Contemporary egalitarian liberals—unlike their classical counterparts—have lived through many contentious events where the right to freedom of expression has been tested to its limits—the Skokie, Illinois, skinhead marches, hate speech incidents on college campuses, Internet pornography and hate speech sites, Holocaust deniers, and cross-burners, to name just a few. Despite this contemporary tumult, freedom of expression has been nearly unanimously affirmed in both the U.S. jurisprudence and philosophical discourse. In what follows, I will examine Ronald Dworkin's influential contemporary justification for (...)
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  36. Causation, Foreseeability, and Norms.Levin Güver & Markus Https://Orcidorg Kneer - 2023 - Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society 45:888–895.
    A growing body of literature has revealed ordinary causal judgement to be sensitive to normative factors, such that a norm-violating agent is regarded more causal than their non-norm-violating counterpart. In this paper, we explore two competing explanations for this phenomenon: the Responsibility View and the Bias View. The Bias View, but not the Responsibility View, predicts features peripheral to the agent’s responsibility to impact causal attributions. In a series of three preregistered experiments (N = 1162), we present new evidence that (...)
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  37. Freud's Early Psychology of the Neuroses: A Historical Perspective.K. LEVIN - 1978
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  38.  63
    Aristotle's Theory of Metaphor.Samuel R. Levin - 1982 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 15 (1):24 - 46.
  39.  82
    Metaphilosophy and Free Will.Yakir Levin - 1998 - Philosophical Review 107 (4):630.
    In Metaphilosophy and Free Will, Richard Double seeks to establish two theses: Disputes over free will are in principle unsolvable, since they stem from incommensurable metaphilosophical views and principles. Given a metaphilosophy which takes philosophy to be continuous with science, free will is not an objective feature of reality. Double defines free choices as "choices that, unless some excusing condition obtains, are sufficient to qualify their agents as morally responsible for the actions those choices produce and as warranting reactive attitudes". (...)
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  40. You Can Always Count on Reliabilism.Michael Levin - 1997 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 57 (3):607-617.
    This article considers some recent objections to reliabilism, particularly those of Susan Haack in Evidence and Inquiry. Haack complains that reliabilism solves the “ratification” problem trivially, making it analytic that evidence relates to truth; this paper defends an analytic solution to this problem. It argues as well that reliabilism is not tacitly committed to “evidentialism.” Familiar counterexamples to and repairs of reliabilism are reviewed, with an eye to finding their rationale. Finally, it suggests that the underlying dispute between reliabilism and (...)
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  41. A consideration of the socially and emotionally constituted nature of agent knowledge.Lee B. Levin - 1995 - In Edith Kuiper & Jolande Sap, Out of the margin: feminist perspectives on economics. New York: Routledge. pp. 74.
     
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  42.  76
    Abortion, personhood, and vagueness.DavidS Levin - 1985 - Journal of Value Inquiry 19 (3):197-209.
  43. Is racial discrimination special?Michael E. Levin - 1981 - Journal of Value Inquiry 15 (3):225-234.
  44.  28
    Jewish bioethics?Mark Levin & Ira Birnbaum - 2000 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 25 (4):469 – 484.
    "Jewish Bioethics" as currently formulated has been criticized as being of parochial concern, drawing on obscure methodology, employing an authoritarian (and, to the modern mind, unintelligible) method of discourse and as being of little relevance to the wider community. We analyze Jewish bioethics in terms of rule and principle theory and demonstrate that it is based on rational consideration and reproducible reasoning. This approach allows methodological and terminological translation into a Western method of discourse that, in turn, has much to (...)
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  45.  68
    Social Class and Medical Decisionmaking: A Neglected Topic in Bioethics.Betty Wolder Levin & Nina Glick Schiller - 1998 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 7 (1):41-56.
    As part of an effort to look at for bioethicists interested in clinical decisionmaking, Erik Parens, the editor of this special section, asked us to look at social class. When we began our research for this paper, we were surprised to find that although bioethicists have written much on social class and such macrolevel issues as access to healthcare and the distribution of scarce resources, and have paid some attention to the effects of class on patient-provider relationships, bioethicists have written (...)
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  46.  13
    Adversarial Dynamics in Centralized Versus Decentralized Intelligent Systems.Levin Brinkmann, Manuel Cebrian & Niccolò Pescetelli - forthcoming - Topics in Cognitive Science.
    Artificial intelligence (AI) is often used to predict human behavior, thus potentially posing limitations to individuals’ and collectives’ freedom to act. AI's most controversial and contested applications range from targeted advertisements to crime prevention, including the suppression of civil disorder. Scholars and civil society watchdogs are discussing the oppressive dangers of AI being used by centralized institutions, like governments or private corporations. Some suggest that AI gives asymmetrical power to governments, compared to their citizens. On the other hand, civil protests (...)
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  47. How philosophical errors impede freedom.Michael Levin - 1999 - Journal of Libertarian Studies 14 (1; SEAS WIN):125-134.
     
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  48.  36
    Eryximachus' Tale: The Symposium's Role in Plato's Critique of Medicine.Susan B. Levin - 2009 - Apeiron 42 (4):275-308.
  49.  13
    Introduction.Donna E. Levin - 2017 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 45 (s1):8-10.
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  50. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at.Michael Levin - 1985 - Behaviorism 13 (2):125-136.
    Many philosophers believe that the faculty of introspection, and the subjective states revealed in introspection, present difficulties to materialism. This paper argues that introspection can be construed physicalistically, and that the states introspected need not be imbued with phenomenally self-revealing qualities. The central argument is that introspected states are identified in terms of (but the terms denoting them not defined in terms of) the external circumstances in which they occur. It is also argued that this broadly behaviorist perspective can be (...)
     
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