Results for ' early experience'

973 found
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  1.  23
    The influence of early experience on the frustration effect.Abram Amsel & Elizabeth C. Penick - 1962 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 63 (2):167.
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  2. Early experience and critical periods.Eric I. Knudsen - 1999 - In M. J. Zigmond & F. E. Bloom, Fundamental Neuroscience. pp. 637--654.
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  3.  29
    Early Experience with the ACA: Coverage Gains, Pooling of Risk, and Medicaid Expansion.Linda J. Blumberg & John Holahan - 2016 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 44 (4):538-545.
    We provide an overview of the characteristics of those who have gained insurance coverage due to the ACA as well as the characteristics of the remaining uninsured. We also describe the implications for the broader sharing of health care risks required under the law, and how they vary by individuals' health status. Finally, we assess the implications of state decisions to expand or not expand Medicaid eligibility under the law, how those decisions affect state finances, health care providers, residents, and (...)
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  4.  38
    Hemispheric laterality in animals and the effects of early experience.Victor H. Denenberg - 1981 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (1):1-21.
    A review of research with chicks, songbirds, rodents, and nonhuman primates indicates that the brain is lateralized for a number of behavioral functions. These findings can be understood in terms of three hypothetical brain processes derived from a brain model based on general systems theory: hemispheric activation, interhemispheric inhibition, and interhemispheric coupling.Left-hemisphere activation occurs in songbirds and nonhuman primates in response to salient auditory or visual input, or when a communicative output is required. The right hemisphere is activated in rats (...)
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  5.  57
    Turner: An early experiment with colour theory.Gerald E. Finley - 1967 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 30 (1):357-366.
  6. Early experience and cognitive organization.Barbara Landau - 2002 - In Lynn Nadel, Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. Macmillan.
     
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  7.  42
    Ethics Lessons From Seattle’s Early Experience With COVID-19.Denise M. Dudzinski, Benjamin Y. Hoisington & Crystal E. Brown - 2020 - American Journal of Bioethics 20 (7):67-74.
    Ethics consultants and critical care clinicians reflect on Seattle’s early experience as the United States’ first epicenter of COVID-19. We discuss ethically salient issues confronted at UW Medicin...
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  8.  57
    Rem sleep, early experience, and the development of reproductive strategies.Patrick McNamara, Jayme Dowdall & Sanford Auerbach - 2002 - Human Nature 13 (4):405-435.
    We hypothesize that rapid eye movement or REM sleep evolved, in part, to mediate sexual/reproductive behaviors and strategies. Because development of sexual and mating strategies depends crucially on early attachment experiences, we further hypothesize that REM functions to mediate attachment processes early in life. Evidence for these hypotheses comes from (1) the correlation of REM variables with both attachment and sexual/reproductive variables; (2) attachment-related and sex-related hormonal release during REM; (3) selective activation during REM of brain sites implicated (...)
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  9.  21
    Astrology and Copernicus's Early Experiences in the World of Renaissance Politics.Geoffrey Blumenthal - 2015 - Centaurus 57 (2):96-115.
    During most of Copernicus's life he was an inhabitant of political settings rather than scientific settings. His settings from 1492 to 1500 offered him a large amount of information about astrology. Most of Copernicus's known significant contacts at the Jagiellonian University had expertise in astrology, in some cases at national level. Information was available to Copernicus about the inaccuracies and the difficulties of astrological practice as well as about a notably successful astrologer-patron relationship. The experience of astrological practice that (...)
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  10.  21
    Spontaneous alternation and emotionality in rats with differential early experience.Richard H. O’Connell - 1974 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 4 (2):135-136.
  11.  41
    Early Experience and Behavior: The Psychobiology of Development. Edited by Grant Newton and Seymour Levine. Pp. xii + 785. (Charles Thomas, Springfield, Illinois, 1968.) Price $28.50. [REVIEW]P. D. Scott - 1969 - Journal of Biosocial Science 1 (1):88-92.
  12.  32
    Galileo's early experiments on projectile trajectories.R. H. Naylor - 1983 - Annals of Science 40 (4):391-395.
  13.  37
    Dissecting Trajectories: Galileo's Early Experiments on Projectile Motion and the Law of Fall.David Hill - 1988 - Isis 79 (4):646-668.
  14.  21
    The effect of some early experiences in the latent learning of adult rats.Richard Christie - 1952 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 43 (4):281.
  15.  10
    Arbitration in Brazil: The early experience.Paul Volken & Petar Sarcevic - 2009 - In Paul Volken & Petar Sarcevic, Yearbook of Private International Law: Volume Ii. Sellier de Gruyter.
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  16.  43
    Philosophical anthropology, ethics, and love: Toward a new religion and science dialogue.Christian Early - 2017 - Zygon 52 (3):847-863.
    Religion and science dialogues that orbit around rational method, knowledge, and truth are often, though not always, contentious. In this article, I suggest a different cluster of gravitational points around which religion and science dialogues might usefully travel: philosophical anthropology, ethics, and love. I propose seeing morality as a natural outgrowth of the human desire to establish and maintain social bonds so as not to experience the condition of being alone. Humans, of all animals, need to feel loved—defined as (...)
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  17.  16
    Temporal integration:Modification of the incentive value of a food reward by early experience with deprivation.K. Edward Renner - 1967 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 75 (3):400.
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  18.  18
    DNA synthesis in chromosomes: Implications of early experiments.J. Herbert Taylor - 1989 - Bioessays 10 (4):121-124.
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  19. A systematic, large-scale study of synaesthesia: implications for the role of early experience in lexical-colour associations.Anina N. Rich, John L. Bradshaw & Jason B. Mattingley - 2005 - Cognition 98 (1):53-84.
  20.  43
    Was it me when it happened too early? Experience of delayed effects shapes sense of agency.Carola Haering & Andrea Kiesel - 2015 - Cognition 136 (C):38-42.
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  21.  35
    Adverse Childhood Experiences Run Deep: Toxic Early Life Stress, Telomeres, and Mitochondrial DNA Copy Number, the Biological Markers of Cumulative Stress.Kathryn K. Ridout, Mariam Khan & Samuel J. Ridout - 2018 - Bioessays 40 (9):1800077.
    This manuscript reviews recent evidence supporting the utility of telomeres and mitochondrial DNA copy number (mtDNAcn) in detecting the biological impacts of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and outlines mechanisms that may mediate the connection between early stress and poor physical and mental health. Critical to interrupting the health sequelae of ACEs such as abuse, neglect, and neighborhood disorder, is the discovery of biomarkers of risk and resilience. The molecular markers of chronic stress exposure, telomere length and mtDNAcn, represent critical (...)
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  22.  24
    Is experimenting on an Immanent Level possible in RECE (Reconceptualizing Early Childhood Education)?Liane Mozère - 2012 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 12 (sup1):1-9.
    A professor’s experience of attending the 17th annual Reconceptualizing Early Childhood Education (RECE) Conference on pedagogies of hope demonstrates her desire to experiment on an immanent plane. As she looks back on her past experiences of depression, working in a revolutionary psychiatric clinic, experiencing a near catatonic state, and an action research study of women in early childhood education at the precipice of an immanent plane, the reader is led on their own journey to consider deeply the (...)
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  23.  19
    Experience Embodied: Early Modern Accounts of the Human Place in Nature.Anik Waldow - 2020 - New York: Oup Usa.
    By investigating conceptions of experience from Descartes to Kant, this book shows that one of the central questions of the early-modern period was how humans can instantiate in their actions the principles of rational moral agency, while at the same time responding with their bodies to the causal play of nature. Through the analysis of this question, the book draws attention to the bodily underpinnings of the ability to experience thoughts and feelings. It thus challenges overly subjectivist (...)
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  24.  45
    Some new documents on Royce's early experiences of communities.Frank M. Oppenheim - 1968 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 6 (4):381-385.
  25.  20
    Early Mendicant Mission in the New World: Discourses, Experiments, Realities.Bert Roest - 2013 - Franciscan Studies 71:197-217.
    This contribution starts out with discussing some of the preconditions that set the stage for thinking about New World mission and the role of the mendicant orders in it, which was partially self-assigned and partially expected. Among other things, these preconditions include the impact of mendicant master narratives of conversion and mission to the infidel from the later medieval period, the experiences with reconquista, and the confrontations with Muslims and Jews in newly conquered territories in Spain and North Africa. Against (...)
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  26. Early Motherhood and the Paschal Mystery: A Rahnerian Reflection on the Death and Rebirth Experiences of New Mothers.Cristina Lledo Gomez - 2011 - The Australasian Catholic Record 88 (2):131.
    Gomez, Cristina Lledo This article explores the idea that motherhood is an invitation to engage with the paschal mystery and can thus be a salvific experience in the lives of women. This is of even greater significance for a Christian mother who can explicitly name the experience as her own sharing in the paschal event of Jesus. This article will focus on crisis moments of motherhood in a contemporary Western context, exploring particularly the issues raised in first becoming (...)
     
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  27.  12
    The Human and the Ape: On the Contextualisation of Early Experiments in Ape Language Research.I. V. Utekhin - 2019 - Sociology of Power 31 (3):75-99.
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  28.  34
    Preferences of High- and Low-hope People for Self-referential Input.C. R. Snyder, Anne B. LaPointe, J. Jeffrey Crowson & Shannon Early - 1998 - Cognition and Emotion 12 (6):807-823.
    High-hope and low-hope research participants (males and females), as preselected on the basis of a dispositional self-report scale, choose freely between brief audiotaped messages that varied in depressive content. In the first experiment, the messages were of either positive or negative content. Highhope as compared to low-hope persons preferred listening to the positive tapes (no differences related to Gender), and this Hope main effect remained after the shared variance related to depression and positive and negative affectivity were removed. In a (...)
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  29.  40
    Experiment, Speculation, and Religion in Early Modern Philosophy ed. by Alberto Vanzo and Peter R. Anstey.Marcus P. Adams - 2020 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 58 (4):817-818.
    This edited volume will be of interest to specialists in the history of early modern philosophy and in the history and philosophy of science. It contains ten chapters related to the themes of experimental philosophy, speculative philosophy, and the relationships of both to religion. Most of the book considers these themes in the thought of six early modern philosophers, with a chapter for each of the following: Bacon, Boyle, Cavendish, Hobbes, Locke, and Newton. The remaining chapters focus upon (...)
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  30.  20
    Experiences of indigenous (Māori/Pasifika) early career academics.Georgina Tuari Stewart, Te Wai Barbarich-Unasa, Dion Enari, Cecelia Faumuina, Deborah Heke, Dion Henare, Taniela Lolohea, Megan Phillips, Hilda Port, Nimbus Staniland, Nooroa Tapuni, Rerekura Teaurere, Yvonne Ualesi, Leilani Walker, Nesta Devine & Jacoba Matapo - forthcoming - Educational Philosophy and Theory.
    This article presents narratives from 13 Indigenous early career academics (ECAs) at one university in Auckland, New Zealand. These experiences are likely to represent those of Indigenous Māori and Pasifika ECAs nationally, given the small, centralised nature of the national academy of Aotearoa New Zealand. The narratives contain testimony, fictionalised vignettes of experience, and poetic expressions. Meeting the demands of an academic role in one’s first years of working at a university is a big deal for anyone; the (...)
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  31.  21
    The Experience of Value. The Influence of Scheler on Sartre’s Early Ethics.Cristiano Vidali - 2022 - Phenomenology and Mind 23:96-107.
    Jean-Paul Sartre is often portrayed as a philosopher whose ethics would inevitably have subjectivist or relativist outcomes. Yet, even in Sartre’s early works there are several stances that blatantly belie this image, relying rather on an objectivist conception of value that he notably draws from Max Scheler. The aim of this paper is thus to investigate the influence of Scheler’s moral reflection on Sartre, arguing how it can represent an original and fruitful starting point to approach Sartrean ethics. To (...)
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  32. Rethinking Experience in Early Buddhism.Frank J. Hoffman - 1996 - In Frank J. Hoffman & Deegalle Mahinda, Pali Buddhism. Curzon Press.
  33.  12
    Learning Experiences and the Development of Critical Thinking in Students of Early Childhood Education at Public Universities – 2023.Consuelo Nora Casimiro Urcos, Walther Hernán Casimiro Urcos, Donatila Tobalino López, Lourdes Basilia Pareja Pérez, Elizabeth Mercedes Vegas Palomino & Enaidy Reinosa Navarro - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:211-226.
    Introduction: This study explores how learning experiences at public universities impact the development of critical thinking in early education students in 2023. Objective: To determine the influence of learning experiences on the critical thinking of early education students, identifying effective didactic strategies for its promotion. Methodology: Utilizing a quantitative approach, data were collected from 247 early education students across various public universities in Peru through structured surveys. These surveys were designed to measure students' perceptions of their learning (...)
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  34. Early Christian Experience.G. BORNKAMM - 1969
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  35.  73
    Experiences from a community advisory Board in the Implementation of early access to ART for all in Eswatini: a qualitative study.Charmaine Khudzie Mlambo, Eva Vernooij, Roos Geut, Eliane Vrolings, Buyisile Shongwe, Saima Jiwan, Yvette Fleming & Gavin Khumalo - 2019 - BMC Medical Ethics 20 (1):50.
    Engaging communities in community-based health research is increasingly being adopted in low- and middle-income countries. The use of community advisory boards is one method of practicing community involvement in health research. To date, few studies provide in-depth accounts of the strategies that CAB members use to practice community engagement. We assessed the perspectives, experiences and practices of the first local CAB in Eswatini, which was implemented as part of the MaxART Early Access to ART for All study. Trained Swazi (...)
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  36.  96
    Gestalt experiments and inductive observations: Konrad Lorenz's early epistemological writings and the methods of classical ethology.Ingo Brigandt - 2003 - Evolution and Cognition 9:157-170.
    Ethology brought some crucial insights and perspectives to the study of behavior, in particular the idea that behavior can be studied within a comparative-evolutionary framework by means of homologizing components of behavioral patterns and by causal analysis of behavior components and their integration. Early ethology is well-known for its extensive use of qualitative observations of animals under their natural conditions. These observations are combined with experiments that try to analyze behavioral patterns and establish specific claims about animal behavior. Nowadays, (...)
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  37.  86
    The Lived Experience of Early-Stage Alzheimer’s Disease: A Three-Year Longitudinal Phenomenological Case Study.Sirkka-Liisa Ekman, Petra Robinson & Barbro Giorgi - 2012 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 43 (2):216-238.
    The purpose of this study was to explore how one person experienced the early years of dementia as she was living through the pre-clinical and earlyclinical stages of Alzheimer’s disease. Interviews were held onfour occasions over a period of three years. The data were analyzed usingthe descriptive phenomenological psychological method, in which theresearcher approached the data from a caring perspective. The livedexperience of early-stage Alzheimer’s disease showed to be acomplex transitional phenomenon that involves a dynamic process of personaladjustment. (...)
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  38.  22
    Experiences of critical care nurses during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic.Dorothy James Moore, Denise Dawkins, Michelle DeCoux Hampton & Susan McNiesh - 2022 - Nursing Ethics 29 (3):540-551.
    Background: Critical care nurses have risked their lives and in some cases their families through hazardous duty during the COVID-19 pandemic and have faced multiple ethical challenges. Research/aim: The purpose of our study was to examine how critical care nurses coped with the sustained multi-faceted pressures of the critical care environment during the unchartered waters of the COVID-19 pandemic. It was anticipated that our study might reveal numerous ethical challenges and decision points. Research design: A qualitative descriptive study, utilizing an (...)
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  39.  20
    Early Adverse Caregiving Experiences and Preschoolers' Current Attachment Affect Brain Responses during Facial Familiarity Processing: An ERP Study.Melanie T. Kungl, Ina Bovenschen & Gottfried Spangler - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  40.  13
    Early lifetime experience of urban living predicts social attention in real world crowds.Thomas Maran, Alexandra Hoffmann & Pierre Sachse - 2022 - Cognition 225 (C):105099.
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  41. Experiment, Speculation and Religion in Early Modern Philosophy.Alberto Vanzo & Peter R. Anstey (eds.) - 2019 - New York: Routledge.
    Experimental philosophy was an exciting and extraordinarily successful development in the study of nature in the seventeenth century. Yet experimental philosophy was not without its critics and was far from the only natural philosophical method on the scene. In particular, experimental philosophy was contrasted with and set against speculative philosophy and, in some quarters, was accused of tending to irreligion. This volume brings together ten scholars of early modern philosophy, history and science in order to shed new light on (...)
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  42.  24
    Early Christian Experience[REVIEW]A. J. W. - 1971 - Review of Metaphysics 24 (4):742-742.
    Günther Bornkamm, a chief disciple of Rudolph Bultmann, has gathered together a number of his expository articles in this volume. The chapters deal generally with themes familiar to Bultmann's aficionados, concentrating heavily on Paul's Epistle to the Romans and other letters of Paul. The chapters are headed "God's Word and Man's Word in the New Testament," "Christ and the World in the Early Christian Message," "Faith and Reason in Paul," "The Revelation of God's Wrath," "Baptism and New Life in (...)
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  43. Educative experiences in early childhood : lessons from Dewey.Denise D. Cunningham & Donna Adair Breault - 2022 - In Lynn E. Cohen & Sandra Waite-Stupiansky, Theories of early childhood education: developmental, behaviorist, and critical. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  44.  51
    Experiments at the intersection of experimental history, technological inquiry, and conceptually driven analysis: A case study from early nineteenth-century France.Ursula Klein - 2005 - Perspectives on Science 13 (1):1-48.
    The paper examines differences of styles of experimentation in the history of science. It presents arguments for a historization of our historial and philosophical notion of "experimentation," which question the common view that "experimental philosophy" was the only style of experimentation in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. It argues, in particular, that "experimental history" and technological inquiry were accepted styles of academic experimentation at the time. These arguments are corroborated by a careful analysis of a case study, which (...)
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  45.  2
    To Begin so Early and to Persevere over a Long Period of Time.​ Reflections on Time on the Horizon of Human Experience in the Anonymus Iamblichi.Miriam Campolina Diniz Peixoto - 2024 - Peitho 15 (1):173-186.
    The interest of scholars in the Anonymous of Iamblichus has been oriented in two main ways: it focuses either on the problem of its dating and authorship, or on one or other of the many themes which seem to have been on the agenda of the investigation of its author. My interest is in this second way and I propose to examine the author’s conception of time on the horizon of human nature. What makes man truly man (ἀνὴρ ἀληθῶς ἀγαθός (...)
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  46.  37
    Introduction: Experimenting with Animals in the Early Modern Era. [REVIEW]Anita Guerrini & Domenico Bertoloni Meli - 2013 - Journal of the History of Biology 46 (2):167-170.
    The aim of this special issue is to address issues surrounding the use of live animals in experimental procedures in the pre-modern era, with a special emphasis on the technical, anatomical, and philosophical sides. Such use raises philosophical, scientific, and ethical questions about the nature of life, the reliability of the knowledge acquired, and animal suffering.
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  47.  10
    Identity-trajectories of early career researchers: unpacking the post-PhD experience.Lynn McAlpine - 2018 - London: Palgrave-Macmillan. Edited by Cheryl Amundsen.
    The book asks how we can make sense of career paths for PhD graduates, something that has rarely been systematically studied. It offers a coherent synthesis of the empirically-based insights that arose from the experiences of 48 early career researchers, who were participants in a 10-year qualitative longitudinal research program. The book has the power to inform other researchers’ conceptual and methodological approaches to the study of post-PhD career trajectories. The authors draw on the conceptual lens of ‘identity-trajectory’, which (...)
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  48.  25
    Physical and Psychological Childbirth Experiences and Early Infant Temperament.Carmen Power, Claire Williams & Amy Brown - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    ObjectiveTo examine how physical and psychological childbirth experiences affect maternal perceptions and experiences of early infant behavioural style.BackgroundUnnecessary interventions may disturb the normal progression of physiological childbirth and instinctive neonatal behaviours that facilitate mother–infant bonding and breastfeeding. While little is known about how a medicalised birth may influence developing infant temperament, high impact interventions which affect neonatal crying and cortisol levels could have longer term consequences for infant behaviour and functioning.MethodsA retrospective Internet survey was designed to fully explore maternal (...)
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  49. Experiments and Research Programmes. Revisiting Vitalism/Non-Vitalism Debate in Early Twentieth Century.Bijoy Mukherjee - 2012 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 2 (1):171-198.
    Debates in the philosophy of science typically take place around issues such as realism and theory change. Recently, the debate has been reformulated to bring in the role of experiments in the context of theory change. As regards realism, Ian Hacking’s contribution has been to introduce ‘intervention’ as the basis of realism. He also proposed, following Imre Lakatos, to replace the issue of truth with progress and rationality. In this context we examine the case of the vitalism — reductionism debate (...)
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  50.  29
    “The best and most practical philosophers”: Seamen and the authority of experience in early modern science.Philippa Hellawell - 2020 - History of Science 58 (1):28-50.
    Within the historiography of early modern science, trust and credibility have become synonymous with genteel identity. While we should not overlook the cultural values attached to social hierarchy and how it shaped the credibility of knowledge claims, this has limitations when thinking about how contemporaries regarded the origins of that knowledge and its location in different types of workers and skillsets. Using the example of seamen in the circles of the Royal Society, this article employs the category of (...), and by extension expertise, to illustrate how recognized forms of knowledge and skill acted as routes to credibility and authority in early modern science. It argues that, within the experimental community, the seaman’s authority derived from their direct experience of novel and remote phenomena and the cumulative effect of their wider experience. The accumulated experience they acquired from frequent practice, observation, and exposure translated into a form of “expertness” that rendered seamen trustworthy and credible observers and thinkers. The gentlemanly trust model does not accommodate nor acknowledge the ways the seaman’s direct and accumulated experience (and that of many other professional groups) were recognized and valued in inquiry and discourse. The article therefore sets out a new model for understanding trust, credibility, and authority in early modern science that can take us beyond a restrictive mono-model that locates trust in one sociocultural category to highlight the multiple, and sometimes competing, claims to epistemological authority. (shrink)
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