Results for 'ontological significance'

951 found
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  1.  14
    The Ontological Significance of the Riemannian Manifold.Jeong Woo Lee - 2019 - EPOCH AND PHILOSOPHY 30 (2):163-197.
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  2.  72
    The ontological significance of negation.Rosamond Kent Sprague - 1947 - Journal of Philosophy 44 (7):179-184.
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  3. Ontologically significant aggregation: Process structural realism (PSR).Joseph E. Earley - 2008 - In Michel Weber and Will Desmond, Handbook of Whiteheadian Process Thought. De Gruyter. pp. 2--179.
    Combinations of molecules, of biological individuals, or of chemical processes can produce effects that are not simply attributable to the constituents. Such non-redundant causality warrants recognition of those coherences as ontologically significant whenever that efficacy is relevant. With respect to such interaction, the effective coherence is more real than are the components. This ontological view is a variety of structural realism and is also a kind of process philosophy. The designation ‘process structural realism’ (PSR) seems appropriate.
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  4. The Ontological Significance of Inscrutability.Matti Eklund - 2007 - Philosophical Topics 35 (1-2):115-134.
    I shall here discuss some matters related to the so-called radical indeterminacy or inscrutability arguments due to, e.g., Willard v. O. Quine, Hilary Putnam, John Wallace and Donald Davidson.1 These are arguments that, on the face of it, demonstrate that there is radical indeterminacy in what the expressions in a theory refer to and in what the ontology of the theory is. I will use “inscrutability argument” as a general label for these arguments. My main topic – after I have (...)
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  5. The Ontological Significance of Foundherentism.Ryan Wasser - unknown
    From a pragmatic standpoint, there is great utility in proffering a theoretical "third way" to a traditionally binary problem, even if that third way is no more complicated than harnessing the strengths of two competing positions, and mitigating their weaknesses in an attempt to resolve the issue at hand. In continental philosophy, Ricour gained notoriety by utilizing such an approach in his treatment of the Gadamer and Habermas debates; Susan Haack achieved similar renown in her attempt to bridge the divide (...)
     
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  6. The Ontological Significance of Constitution.Amie L. Thomasson - 2013 - The Monist 96 (1):54-72.
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  7.  34
    The ontological significance of the lebenswelt.Thomas P. Hohler - 1972 - Research in Phenomenology 2 (1):177-184.
    Variables are among the most ubiquitous of technical expressions in scientific discourse. But what exactly do they express, and of what relevance are they to ontology? Since variables are analogous to pronouns and descriptive phrases in certain nonreferential occurrences, an answer to these questions can be sought in the semantics of these expressions. I offer an intentional account wherein variables and their natural language counterparts are understood wholly in terms of the sortal content they express.
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  8.  40
    Ontological significance of the dream world.Gordon Globus - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (6):619-620.
  9.  50
    The Ontological Significance of Anselm's "Proslogion".Sylvia Fleming Crocker - 1972 - Modern Schoolman 50 (1):33-56.
  10.  31
    The Ontological Significance of Deleuze and Guattari's Concept of the Body Without Organs.Ronald M. Carrier - 1998 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 29 (2):189-206.
  11.  43
    The Ontological Significance of the History of Science.Olga Stoliarova - 2015 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 9 (1):140-165.
  12. The Ontological Significance Of Variables.Tomis Kapitan - 2002 - Metaphysica 3 (1).
    The use of single letters in displaying patterns, functions, generalizations, and unknowns, dominates mathematical expression, and for that reason, appears in every domain of theoretical and technical discourse employing even the slightest bit of mathematical language. These variables, as they have come to be called, are the very mark of abstract power and precision, ingenious tools for expressing functionality and valid formulae and, thereby, for providing solutions to types of problems as well as facilitating the calculation of unknowns. Compare, for (...)
     
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  13.  7
    Heidegger on the ontological significance of the principle of noncontradiction.François Jaran - forthcoming - Southern Journal of Philosophy.
    The aim of this article is to break down to its principal arguments the abundant material recently published in Heidegger's Gesamtausgabe related to a conference given in December 1932 on the principle of noncontradiction (PNC). I will first highlight the importance in phenomenology of a correct interpretation of the PNC and then explain Heidegger's general strategy toward logical principles during the 1920s. After showing that Heidegger's 1932 interpretation of the PNC still pertains to Being and Time's fundamental ontology, I will (...)
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  14. Unsettling Encounters: On the Ontological Significance of Habitual Racism.Tyler Loveless - 2022 - Puncta 5 (4):128-143.
    The richness of the term “unsettling” has made it readily employable for phenomenological accounts of racism in philosophy of race literature; yet, the term has been left largely under-theorized. Here, I argue that unsettling encounters can be said to occur when the unfamiliar other has come into contact with the boundary of one’s existential home. For many white people, interracial interactions produce an (often unwarranted) feeling of physical danger, but as I hope to show, this habitual (mis)perception of such encounters (...)
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  15. On Taking Causal Criteria to be Ontologically Significant.Richard T. Hull - 1973 - Behavior and Philosophy 1 (2):65.
  16.  52
    Heidegger and the ontological significance of the work of art.Daniel E. Palmer - 1998 - British Journal of Aesthetics 38 (4):394-411.
  17.  31
    Protecting Persons from Animal Bites: the Case for the Ontological Significance of Persons.David B. Hershenov - 2020 - Philosophia 48 (4):1437-1446.
    Eric Olson criticizes Lynne Baker’s constitution account of persons on the grounds that personhood couldn’t be ontologically significant as nothing new comes into existence with the acquisition of thought. He claims that for something coming to function as a thinker is no more ontologically significant than something coming to function as a locomotor when a motor is added to it. He levels two related charges that there’s no principled answer about when and where constitution takes place rather than an already (...)
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  18.  53
    (1 other version)Naturalism or Ontological Significance? Physicalism and Fundamental Mentality: A Historical Approach.Hamed Bikaraan-Behesht - 2022 - Journal of Philosophical Investigations at University of Tabriz 16 (38):154-185.
    Most physicalists believe that physicalism is a thesis that denies the existence of fundamental mentality either as a substance or as a property. Therefore, since most physicalists also endorse a posteriori physicalism, according to them, if the future physical theory posits fundamental mentality as a fundamental physical concept, then physicalism will be falsified. In contrast, there are those who believe that the core idea of physicalism is an ontological deference to science (especially physics); the idea that is usually called (...)
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  19.  22
    Symposium: On the Ontological Significance of the Löwenheim-Skolem Theorem.John R. Myhill - 1955 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 20 (1):64-64.
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  20.  13
    Divine Esse Without Ontological Significance.Jameson Cockerell - forthcoming - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association.
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  21. Merleau-Ponty’s conception of the body as a field of structuralisation and its ontological significance.Jan Halák - 2015 - Filosoficky Casopis 63 (2):175-196.
    [In Czech] Merleau-Ponty’s analyses of the pathology of perception show “objective” and “subjective” events have sense for the living body only in relation to its whole equilibrium, that is, to how it organises itself overall and how it thus “meets” those events. If we apply this conception to Husserl’s example of two mutually-touching hands of one body we must then state not that we perceive here a coincidence of certain subjective sensations with certain objective qualities, but rather that my body, (...)
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  22. Silence: The Phenomenon and Its Ontological Significance.Bernard P. Dauenhauer - 1982 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 13 (4):229-230.
  23.  28
    The Mythological Aspect of Plato’s Phaedo as Disclosing the Soul’s Ontological Significance.Marina Marren & Kevin C. Marren - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (3):89.
    This essay offers an interpretation of Plato’s Phaedo, which proceeds in two parts: (1) methodological interpretation of myth and (2) application of the method to the analysis of the soul. The paper claims that the myths in this dialogue are not limited to the explicitly mythical sections but that the entirety of the Phaedo—including the arguments that it presents—is saturated with myth. Through this interpretive lens, the soul, as it appears in the Phaedo, ceases to be characterized as a mere (...)
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  24.  15
    The little crystalline seed: the ontological significance of mise en abyme in post-Heideggerian thought.Iddo Dickmann - 2019 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    Mise en abyme is a term from literary theory denoting a work that doubles itself within itself, for example a story placed within a story or a play within a play. Proliferating in experimental fiction in midcentury France, this technique had a strong impact on contemporary literary theory, but also, as this book project argues, on post-Heideggerian and post-structuralist philosophy. The Little Crystalline Seed focuses on how three of these thinkers invoke the concept of mise en abyme in order to (...)
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  25. Why conceptual rigour matters to philosophy: On the ontological significance of algebraic quantum field theory. [REVIEW]Meinard Kuhlmann - 2010 - Foundations of Physics 40 (9-10):1625-1637.
    I argue that algebraic quantum field theory (AQFT) permits an undisturbed view of the right ontology for fundamental physics, whereas standard (or Lagrangian) QFT offers different mutually incompatible ontologies.My claim does not depend on the mathematical inconsistency of standard QFT but on the fact that AQFT has the same concerns as ontology, namely categorical parsimony and a clearly structured hierarchy of entities.
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  26. Ontological categories: their nature and significance.Jan Westerhoff - 2005 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The concept of an ontological category is central to metaphysics. Metaphysicians argue about which category of existence an object should be assigned to, whether one category can be reduced to another one, or whether there might be different equally adequate systems of categorization. Answers to these questions presuppose a clear understanding of what precisely an ontological category is, and Jan Westerhoff now provides the first in-depth analysis. After examining a variety of attempted definitions, he proceeds to argue for (...)
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  27.  22
    Silence: The Phenomenon and its Ontological Significance, by Bernard P. Dauenhauer.George J. Agich - 1985 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 16 (1):105-105.
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  28. Bernard Dauenhauer, Silence: The Phenomenon and its Ontological Significance Reviewed by.Don Ihde - 1982 - Philosophy in Review 2 (2/3):78-81.
     
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  29.  49
    Bernard P. Dauenhauer, Silence: the phenomenon and its ontological significance.Y. Sayer - 1994 - Revue Philosophique De Louvain 92 (1):116-116.
  30.  23
    Correction to: Heisenbergian explanation and Husserlian evidence: ontological significance in idealized language.Kevin Mager - 2022 - Continental Philosophy Review 55 (3):407-407.
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  31.  26
    Heisenbergian explanation and Husserlian evidence: ontological significance in idealized language.Kevin Mager - 2021 - Continental Philosophy Review 54 (4):521-540.
    In contemporary philosophy of science many theories of explanation are rooted in positivist or post-positivists accounts of explanation. This paper attempts to ground a phenomenological account of scientific explanation by using the works of Werner Heisenberg and Patrick Heelan. To explain something for Heisenberg is to describe what can be intersubjectively observed and conceptualized in an adequate language. However, this needs to be qualified, as not any adequate account will do. While Heisenberg thinks that Kant is right to think that (...)
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  32.  24
    Ontological Categories:Their Nature and Significance: Their Nature and Significance.Jan Westerhoff - 2005 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    The concept of an ontological category is central to metaphysics. Metaphysicians argue about which category an object should be assigned to, whether one category can be reduced to another one, or whether there might be different equally adequate systems of categorization. Answers to these questions presuppose a clear understanding of what precisely an ontological category is, an issue which is rarely addressed; Jan Westerhoff presents the first in-depth analysis both of the use made of ontological categories in (...)
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  33. "Overcoming Ontological Transcendence: The Hermeneutic Significance of Heidegger's 'On the Essence of Ground'" (unpublished 2009).Matthew C. Halteman - manuscript
    Though commentators have paid little thematic attention to Heidegger’s 1928 treatise “On the Essence of Ground” (OEG), recently available subsequent writings suggest that Heidegger himself saw OEG as a pivotal step on the way to “overcoming” his analysis of fundamental ontological transcendence. Among these writings is a set of rarely discussed lettered notes originally scribbled into his personal copy of OEG in which Heidegger offers a point-for-point deconstruction of the treatise’s fundamental ontological interpretation of transcendence. I argue that (...)
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  34. Assessing Ontologies: The Question of Human Origins and Its Ethical Significance.Daniel Cohnitz & Barry Smith - 2003 - In Edmund Runggaldier, Christian Kanzian & Josef Quitterer, Persons: An Interdisciplinary Approach. öbvhpt. pp. 243--259.
    In their paper “Sixteen Days” Barry Smith and Berit Brogaard try to answer the question: when does a human being begin to exist? In this paper we will address some methodological issues connected with this exercise in ontology. We shall begin by sketching the argument of “Sixteen Days”. We shall then attempt to characterize what is special about the ontological realism of “Sixteen Days” as contrasted to the linguistic constructivism which represents the more dominant current in contemporary analytic philosophy. (...)
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  35.  64
    Berry George D. W.. Symposium: On the ontological significance of the Löwenheim-Skolem theorem. Academic freedom, logic, and religion , University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia 1953, pp. 39–55. [REVIEW]A. R. Turquette - 1955 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 20 (1):63-63.
  36.  66
    Myhill John R.. Symposium: On the ontological significance of the Löwenheim-Skolem theorem. Academic freedom, logic, and religion , University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia 1953, pp. 57–70. [REVIEW]A. R. Turquette - 1955 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 20 (1):64-64.
  37. Bernard P. Dauenhauer, "Silence: The Phenomenon and Its Ontological Significance". [REVIEW]Robert J. Dostal - 1982 - Man and World 15 (1):103.
  38.  40
    Listening to Silence Speak. Review of "Silence: The Phenomenon and Its Ontological Significance" by Bernard P. Dauenhauer. [REVIEW]Stephen Skousgaard - 1982 - Research in Phenomenology 12 (1):221.
  39.  83
    The significance of a non-reductionist ontology for the discipline of mathematics: A historical and systematic analysis. [REVIEW]D. F. M. Strauss - 2010 - Axiomathes 20 (1):19-52.
    A Christian approach to scholarship, directed by the central biblical motive of creation, fall and redemption and guided by the theoretical idea that God subjected all of creation to His Law-Word, delimiting and determining the cohering diversity we experience within reality, in principle safe-guards those in the grip of this ultimate commitment and theoretical orientation from absolutizing or deifying anything within creation. In this article my over-all approach is focused on the one-sided legacy of mathematics, starting with Pythagorean arithmeticism (“everything (...)
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  40.  68
    The ontological and moral significance of persons.Jason T. Eberl - 2017 - Scientia et Fides 5 (2):217-236.
    Many debates in arenas such as bioethics turn on questions regarding the moral status of human beings at various stages of biological development or decline. It is often argued that a human being possesses a fundamental and inviolable moral status insofar as she is a “person”; yet, it is contested whether all or only human beings count as persons. Perhaps there are non-human person, and perhaps not every human being satisfies the definitional criteria for being a person. A further question, (...)
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  41.  30
    The Significance of a Non-Reductionist Ontology for the Discipline of Physics: A Historical and Systematic Analysis.D. F. M. Strauss - 2010 - Axiomathes 20 (1):53-80.
    An overview of the history of the concept of matter highlights the fact that alternative modes of explanation were successively employed. With the discovery of irrational numbers the initial conviction of the Pythagorean School collapsed and was replaced by an exploration of space as a principle of understanding. This legacy dominated the medieval period and had an after-effect well into modernity—for both Descartes and Kant still characterized matter in spatial terms. However, even before Galileo the mechanistic world view slowly entered (...)
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  42. (1 other version)The ontological status of persons.Lynne Rudder Baker - 2002 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (2):370-388.
    Throughout his illustrious career, Roderick Chisholm was concerned with the nature of persons. On his view, persons are what he called ‘entia per se.’ They exist per se, in their own right. I too have developed an account of persons—I call it the ‘Constitution View’—an account that is different in important ways from Chisholm’s. Here, however, I want to focus on a thesis that Chisholm and I agree on: that persons have ontological significance in virtue of being persons. (...)
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  43.  21
    “Retrospective Significance”: On Reparations, Ontological Incoherence and Living in a Catastrophe.Rinaldo Walcott - 2022 - Critical Philosophy of Race 10 (2):198-219.
    This paper attempts to articular a notion of a Black ontological order or form experienced through a set of conditions that seek to produce a coherent incoherent blackness. I argue that Black being is one that is only known through an external essential imposition of a Euro-American narrative of what I call global niggerdom in which all Black people are made the same through post-Enlightenment modernist antiblack logics. The conditions, identifications, and practices that constitute global niggerdom, however, only hold (...)
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  44.  2
    Dialogue and Relational Ontology: Rethinking the Significance of the Second-Person Perspective.Claudia Welz - 2025 - Neue Zeitschrift für Systematicsche Theologie Und Religionsphilosophie 67 (1):1-7.
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  45. The ontological reappropriation of phronēsis.Christopher P. Long - 2002 - Continental Philosophy Review 35 (1):35-60.
    Ontology has been traditionally guided by sophia, a form of knowledge directed toward that which is eternal, permanent, necessary. This tradition finds an important early expression in the philosophical ontology of Aristotle. Yet in the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle's intense concern to do justice to the world of finite contingency leads him to develop a mode of knowledge, phronsis, that implicitly challenges the hegemony of sophia and the economy of values on which it depends. Following in the tradition of the early (...)
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  46.  59
    The Significance of the New Edition of Subjekt und Dasein and the Fundamental Ontology of Language.Parvis Emad - 1986 - Heidegger Studies 2:141-151.
  47. Ontological categories: Their nature and significance – Jan Westerhoff.Panayot Butchvarov - 2007 - Philosophical Quarterly 57 (227):301–303.
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  48.  81
    The nature and significance of social ontology.Frank Hindriks & Francesco Guala - 2023 - Synthese 201 (4):1-22.
    We propose a bridge-builder perspective on social ontology. Our point of departure is that an important task of philosophy is to provide the bigger picture. To this end, it should investigate folk views and determine whether and how they can be preserved once scrutinized from the perspective of the sciences. However, the sciences typically present us with a fragmented picture of reality. Thus, an important intermediate step is to integrate the most promising social scientific theories with one another. In addition (...)
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  49. Ontological security and the emotional significance of sovereignty.Nina C. Krickel-Choi - 2023 - In Hannes Černy & Janis Grzybowski, Variations on sovereignty: contestations and transformations from around the world. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  50.  61
    The Religious Significance of the Ontological Argument.Philip E. Devine - 1975 - Religious Studies 11 (1):97 - 116.
    I discuss the religious implications of accepting the ontological argument as sound. in particular, i attempt to show in detail how the argument fails to validate religious belief.
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