75 found
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  1.  50
    Discrimination and learning without awareness: A metholodological survey and evaluation.Charles W. Eriksen - 1960 - Psychological Review 67 (5):279-300.
  2.  56
    Operationism and the concept of perception.Wendell R. Garner, Harold W. Hake & Charles W. Eriksen - 1956 - Psychological Review 63 (3):149-159.
  3. Moral progress: Recent developments.Hanno Sauer, Charlie Blunden, Cecilie Eriksen & Paul Rehren - 2021 - Philosophy Compass 16 (10):e12769.
    Societies change over time. Chattel slavery and foot-binding have been abolished, democracy has become increasingly widespread, gay rights have become established in some countries, and the animal rights movement continues to gain momentum. Do these changes count as moral progress? Is there such a thing? If so, how should we understand it? These questions have been receiving increasing attention from philosophers, psychologists, biologists, and sociologists in recent decades. This survey provides a systematic account of recent developments in the understanding of (...)
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  4. Pistols, pills, pork and ploughs: the structure of technomoral revolutions.Jeroen Hopster, Chirag Arora, Charlie Blunden, Cecilie Eriksen, Lily Frank, Julia Hermann, Michael Klenk, Elizabeth O'Neill & Steffen Steinert - 2025 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 68 (2):264-296.
    The power of technology to transform religions, science, and political institutions has often been presented as nothing short of revolutionary. Does technology have a similarly transformative influence on societies’ morality? Scholars have not rigorously investigated the role of technology in moral revolutions, even though existing research on technomoral change suggests that this role may be considerable. In this paper, we explore what the role of technology in moral revolutions, understood as processes of radical group-level moral change, amounts to. We do (...)
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  5. Recent Work on Moral Revolutions.Michael Klenk, Elizabeth O’Neill, Chirag Arora, Charlie Blunden, Cecilie Eriksen, Lily Frank & Jeroen Hopster - 2022 - Analysis 82 (2):354-366.
    In the last few decades, several philosophers have written on the topic of moral revolutions, distinguishing them from other kinds of society-level moral change. This article surveys recent accounts of moral revolutions in moral philosophy. Different authors use quite different criteria to pick out moral revolutions. Features treated as relevant include radicality, depth or fundamentality, pervasiveness, novelty and particular causes. We also characterize the factors that have been proposed to cause moral revolutions, including anomalies in existing moral codes, changing honour (...)
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  6.  1
    Introduction: The Making of The Anatomy of Plants.Christoffer Basse Eriksen & Pamela Mackenzie - 2023 - Centaurus 65 (4):685-706.
    In this introduction to Nehemiah Grew's seminal 17th-century publication The Anatomy of Plants (1682), we discuss the various influences on and impacts of Grew's innovative approach to studying plant life. We offer a review of the current literature on Grew and argue for the importance of his work in its contribution to fields ranging from microscopy to agriculture and from comparative anatomy to scientific illustration. The articles included in this special issue on “The Making of The Anatomy of Plants” are (...)
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  7. Moral Change: Dynamics, Structure, and Normativity.Cecilie Eriksen - 2020
     
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  8.  47
    An electromyographic examination of response competition.Charles W. Eriksen, Michael G. H. Coles, L. R. Morris & William P. O’Hara - 1985 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 23 (3):165-168.
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  9.  9
    Pistols, pills, pork and ploughs: the structure of technomoral revolutions.J. K. G. Hopster, C. Arora, C. Blunden, C. Eriksen, L. E. Frank, J. S. Hermann, M. B. O. T. Klenk, E. R. H. O’Neill & S. Steinert - 2025 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 68 (2):264-296.
    The power of technology to transform religions, science, and political institutions has often been presented as nothing short of revolutionary. Does technology have a similarly transformative influence on societies’ morality? Scholars have not rigorously investigated the role of technology in moral revolutions, even though existing research on technomoral change suggests that this role may be considerable. In this paper, we explore what the role of technology in moral revolutions, understood as processes of radical group-level moral change, amounts to. We do (...)
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  10.  91
    The Dynamics of Moral Revolutions – Prelude to Future Investigations and Interventions.Cecilie Eriksen - 2019 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 22 (3):779-792.
    What drives moral revolutions like the legal abolition of slavery and women’s right to vote? The importance of having an answer to this question lies in the hope of it being able to help us create moral progress in the future. This can be changing harmful practices and traditions like honour killing, child marriage, genital mutilation and political corruption. Furthermore, a wrong or insufficient picture of the dynamics of change, held by e.g. politicians or NGOs and incorporated into laws and (...)
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  11.  39
    Colouring flowers: books, art, and experiment in the household of Margery and Henry Power.Christoffer Basse Eriksen & Xinyi Wen - 2023 - British Journal for the History of Science 56 (1):21-43.
    This article examines the early modern household's importance for producing experimental knowledge through an examination of the Halifax household of Margery and Henry Power. While Henry Power has been studied as a natural philosopher within the male-dominated intellectual circles of Cambridge and London, the epistemic labour of his wife, Margery Power, has hitherto been overlooked. From the 1650s, this couple worked in tandem to enhance their understanding of the vegetable world through various paper technologies, from books, paper slips and recipe (...)
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  12. Use of a delayed signal to stop a visual reaction-time response.Joseph S. Lappin & Charles W. Eriksen - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 72 (6):805.
  13.  26
    Magnifying the first points of life: Harvey and Descartes on generation and scale.Christoffer Basse Eriksen - 2022 - History of Science 60 (4):524-545.
    In this essay, I study the contested role of magnification as an observational strategy in the generation theories of William Harvey and René Descartes. During the seventeenth century, the grounds under the discipline of anatomy were shifting as knowledge was increasingly based on autopsia and observation. Likewise, new theories of generation were established through observations of living beings in their smallest state. But the question formed: was it possible to extend vision all the way down to the first points of (...)
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  14.  27
    Retinal locus and acuity in visual information processing.Charles W. Eriksen & Derek W. Schultz - 1977 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 9 (2):81-84.
  15.  46
    Rate of information processing in visual perception: Some results and methodological considerations.Charles W. Eriksen & Terry Spencer - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 79 (2p2):1.
  16.  32
    The Embodied Descartes: Contemporary Readings of L’Homme.Charles Wolfe, Christoffer Eriksen & Barnaby Hutchins - 2016 - In Stephen Gaukroger & Delphine Antoine-Mahut, Descartes' Treatise on Man and Its Reception. Springer.
    A certain reading of Descartes, which we refer to as ‘the embodied Descartes’, is emerging from recent scholarship on L’Homme, in keeping with the interpretive trend which emphasizes Descartes’s identity as a natural philosopher. This reading complicates our understanding of Descartes’s philosophical project: far from strictly separating human minds from bodies, the embodied Descartes keeps them tightly integrated, while animal bodies behave in ways quite distinct from those of other pieces of extended substance. Here, we identify three categories of embodiment (...)
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  17.  30
    Contextual Ethics: Taking the Lead from Wittgenstein and Løgstrup on Ethical Meaning and Normativity.Cecilie Eriksen - 2020 - SATS 21 (2):141-158.
    A prominent trend in moral philosophy today is the interest in the rich textures of actual human practices and lives. This has prompted engagements with other disciplines, such as anthropology, history, literature, law and empirical science, which have produced various forms ofcontextual ethics. These engagements motivate reflections on why and how context is important ethically, and such metaethical reflection is what this article undertakes. Inspired by the work of the later Wittgenstein and the Danish theologian K.E. Løgstrup, I first describe (...)
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  18.  40
    Multidimensional stimulus differences and accuracy of discrimination.Charles W. Eriksen & Harold W. Hake - 1955 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 50 (3):153.
  19.  47
    What’s Reality Got to Do with It? Wittgenstein, Empirically Informed Philosophy, and a Missing Methodological Link.Cecilie Eriksen - 2022 - Nordic Wittgenstein Review 11.
    “Don’t think, but look!” (Wittgenstein 2009: § 66). This insistient advice has served as methodological inspiration for several influential thinkers in the broad range of ‘empirically informed’ philosophy, which has flourished over the last decades. There is, however, a worrisome tension between Wittgenstein’s work and these turns to practices, history, science, field work, and everyday life: Wittgenstein is in general doing something different from what the thinkers who claim to be inspired by him are doing. An argument for the legitimacy (...)
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  20.  25
    Selective attention: Noise suppression or signal enhancement?Charles W. Eriksen & James E. Hoffman - 1974 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 4 (6):587-589.
  21.  37
    Absolute judgments as a function of stimulus range and number of stimulus and response categories.Charles W. Eriksen & Harold W. Hake - 1955 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 49 (5):323.
  22.  52
    Implicit speech: Mechanism in perceptual encoding?Charles W. Eriksen, Martin D. Pollack & William E. Montague - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 84 (3):502.
  23.  31
    Subception: Fact or artifact?Charles W. Eriksen - 1956 - Psychological Review 63 (1):74-80.
  24.  56
    Contextual Ethics – Developing Conceptual and Theoretical Approaches.Cecilie Eriksen & Anne-Marie Søndergaard Christensen - 2020 - SATS 21 (2):81-84.
    A prominent trend in moral philosophy today is the interest in the rich textures of actual human practices and lives. This has prompted engagements with other disciplines, such as anthropology, history, literature, law and empirical science, which have produced various forms of contextual ethics. These engagements motivate reflections on why and how context is important ethically, and such metaethical reflection is what this article undertakes. Inspired by the work of the later Wittgenstein and the Danish theologian K.E. Løgstrup, I first (...)
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  25.  53
    Temporal course of selective attention.Charles W. Eriksen & James F. Collins - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 80 (2p1):254.
  26. The collapse of mechanism and the rise of sensibility: science and the shaping of modernity, 1680–1760.Christoffer Basse Eriksen & Charles T. Wolfe - 2016 - Intellectual History Review 26 (4):561-564.
    review essay on Gaukroger, Collapse of Mechanism and Rise of Sensibility (OUP).
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  27.  8
    Peber, ingefær, nelliker og muskatnød: Koloniale materialer og naturhistorisk ekspertise i Antoni van Leeuwenhoeks mikroskopiske observationer.Christoffer Basse Eriksen - forthcoming - Slagmark - Tidsskrift for Idéhistorie.
    I takt med at det naturhistoriske vidensideal i løbet af 1600-tallet i højere grad blev knyttet til observationer, eksperimenter og andre former for direkte kontakt med naturens fænomener, fremkom den naturhistoriske ekspert som en vigtig videnskabelig aktør. I denne artikel viser jeg, hvordan den hollandske mikroskopist Antoni van Leeuwenhoek indgik som ekspert i to umiddelbart væsensforskellige netværk, nemlig det engelske videnskabelige selskab Royal Society og det Nederlandske Ostindiske Handelskompagni (VOC). Hvor Royal Society havde som sit erklærede formål at skabe ny, (...)
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  28.  7
    Apricots, Plums, and Garden Beans: Reassembling Nehemiah Grew's Collection of Plants.Christoffer Basse Eriksen - 2023 - Centaurus 65 (4):767-791.
    Nehemiah Grew is rightly lauded as one of the first and most sophisticated promoters of the discipline of plant anatomy—the observation and representation of the insides of plants. Overlooked so far, though, are his activities as a plant collector. In this paper, I reconstruct Grew's plant-collection practices from his first medical garden, through his incorporation of specimens from the Royal Society's repository, and to its expansion through his support of intercontinental plant-gathering missions. These activities gave Grew access both to fresh, (...)
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  29.  34
    (1 other version)Moral certainties – subjective, objective, objectionable?Hans-Johann Glock, Cecilie Eriksen, Julia Hermann, Neil O'Hara & Nigel Pleasants - 2022 - In [no title]. pp. 171-191.
    The idea of moral certainties is venerable, highly contentious, and nevertheless alive. What I call “hinge ethics” (in analogy to hinge epistemology) combines three currents – meta-ethical concerns about the scope and limits of moral knowledge and objectivity, the idea of limits of doubt as articulated in On Certainty, and sympathies for Wittgensteinian ideas about ethics. This essay critically assesses hinge ethics, focusing on Nigel Pleasants’ work. My main objection is not that Wittgensteinian ideas about certainty cannot be transferred from (...)
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  30.  30
    Anchor effects in absolute judgments.Charles W. Eriksen & Harold W. Hake - 1957 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 53 (2):132.
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  31.  17
    Redaktionelt forord.Christoffer Basse Eriksen, Nicolai von Eggers & Mathias Hein Jessen - 2015 - Slagmark - Tidsskrift for Idéhistorie 72:9-15.
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  32.  30
    Pattern changes in rapid serial visual presentation tasks without strategic shifts.Juan Botella & Charles W. Eriksen - 1991 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 29 (2):105-108.
  33.  40
    Storage and decay characteristics of nonattended auditory stimuli.Charles W. Eriksen & Harold J. Johnson - 1964 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 68 (1):28.
  34.  75
    Effects of failure stress upon skilled performance.Richard S. Lazarus & Charles W. Eriksen - 1952 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 43 (2):100.
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  35.  49
    Each Other’s World, Each Other’s Fate—Løgstrup’s Conception of Basic Trust.Anne-Marie Søndergaard Christensen & Cecilie Eriksen - 2021 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 29 (1):24-43.
    Since the publication of Annette Baier’s agenda-setting article entitled ‘Trust and Antitrust’, trust has become an increasingly popular topic, not only in moral philosophy and epistemology but als...
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  36.  53
    Winds of Change: The Later Wittgenstein’s Conception of the Dynamics of Change.Cecilie Eriksen - 2020 - Nordic Wittgenstein Review 9.
    The theme of change is one of the most prominent traits of Wittgenstein’s later work, and his writings have inspired many contemporary thinkers’ discussions of changes in e.g. concepts, ‘aspect-seeing’, practices, worldviews, and forms of life. However, Wittgenstein’s conception of the dynamics of change has not been investigated in its own right. The aim of this paper is to investigate which understanding of the dynamics of changes can be found in the later Wittgenstein’s work. I will argue that what emerges (...)
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  37.  27
    Cognitive factors in heart rate conditioning.Bishwa B. Chatterjee & Charles W. Eriksen - 1962 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 64 (3):272.
  38.  26
    Aging adults and rate of memory scan.Charles W. Eriksen, Roy M. Hamlin & Connie Daye - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 1 (4):259-260.
  39.  23
    An analysis of certain factors responsible for nonmonotonic backward masking functions.Charles W. Eriksen, James F. Collins & Thomas S. Greenspon - 1967 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 75 (4):500.
  40.  13
    An experimental analysis of subception.C. W. Eriksen - 1956 - American Journal of Psychology 69:625-34.
  41.  19
    Binocular summation over time in the perception of form at brief durations.Charles W. Eriksen & Thomas S. Greenspon - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 76 (3p1):331.
  42.  30
    Cavell's Challenge. Cynicism and Moral Realism in Light of the Later Wittgenstein.Cecilie Eriksen - 2018 - Res Cogitans 13 (2).
    Legitimacy challenges are part of human societies. Whenever we recognise a person, law, ideal or institution as authoritative, questions can be raised about their legitimacy. Why follow this law? Why strive to honour this moral ideal? If such questions are repeatedly raised, they pose an undermining threat to the authorities in question. This is good if the challenged law or ideal is harmful, but problematic, if it is beneficial. Where the first kind of legitimacy challenges are raised by ethical pioneers (...)
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  43.  14
    Er det overhovedet demokratisk at stemme?Christoffer Basse Eriksen & Nicolai von Eggers - 2015 - Slagmark - Tidsskrift for Idéhistorie 72:145-146.
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  44.  22
    Individual differences in defensive forgetting.Charles W. Eriksen - 1952 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 44 (6):442.
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  45.  25
    Independence in the perception of simultaneously presented forms at brief durations.Charles W. Eriksen & Joseph S. Lappin - 1967 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 73 (3):468.
  46.  30
    Identification of forms at brief durations when seen in apparent motion.Charles W. Eriksen & Robert L. Colegate - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 84 (1):137.
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  47.  27
    Independence of successive inputs and uncorrelated error in visual form perception.Charles W. Eriksen - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 72 (1):26.
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  48.  30
    Identification versus same-different judgment: An interpretation in terms of uncorrelated perceptual error.Charles W. Eriksen, Harry L. Munsinger & Thomas S. Greenspon - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 72 (1):20.
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  49.  19
    Location of objects in a visual display as a function of the number of dimensions on which the objects differ.Charles W. Eriksen - 1952 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 44 (1):56.
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  50.  29
    Object location in a complex perceptual field.Charles W. Eriksen - 1953 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 45 (2):126.
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