Results for 'Gadi Alon'

968 found
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  1.  20
    Can AI-Based Decisions be Genuinely Public? On the Limits of Using AI-Algorithms in Public Institutions.Alon Harel & Gadi Perl - 2024 - Jus Cogens 6 (1):47-64.
    AI-based algorithms are used extensively by public institutions. Thus, for instance, AI algorithms have been used in making decisions concerning punishment providing welfare payments, making decisions concerning parole, and many other tasks which have traditionally been assigned to public officials and/or public entities. We develop a novel argument against the use of AI algorithms, in particular with respect to decisions made by public officials and public entities. We argue that decisions made by AI algorithms cannot count as public decisions, namely (...)
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  2.  28
    Culture and personal influences on cardiopulmonary resuscitation- results of international survey.Janet Ozer, Gadi Alon, Dmitry Leykin, Joseph Varon, Limor Aharonson-Daniel & Sharon Einav - 2019 - BMC Medical Ethics 20 (1):1-8.
    Background The ethical principle of justice demands that resources be distributed equally and based on evidence. Guidelines regarding forgoing of CPR are unavailable and there is large variance in the reported rates of attempted CPR in in-hospital cardiac arrest. The main objective of this work was to study whether local culture and physician preferences may affect spur-of-the-moment decisions in unexpected in-hospital cardiac arrest. Methods Cross sectional questionnaire survey conducted among a convenience sample of physicians that likely comprise code team members (...)
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  3.  17
    Reasoning, nonmonotonicity and learning in connectionist networks that capture propositional knowledge.Gadi Pinkas - 1995 - Artificial Intelligence 77 (2):203-247.
  4.  37
    Scholars in Households: Refiguring the Learned Habitus, 1480–1550.Gadi Algazi - 2003 - Science in Context 16 (1-2):9-42.
    ArgumentUntil the fifteenth century, celibacy was the rule among Christian scholars of northwestern Europe. Celibacy was a major element of the codified cultural representation of the scholar and his specific way of life, sustained by peculiar institutional arrangements and daily routines. Founding family households implied therefore a major reorganization of the scholar’s way of life. Broadly speaking, this involved refashioning the scholarly habitus, redefining social relations, and developing the necessary material infrastructure. The paper focuses on three aspects of this process (...)
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  5.  31
    Maimonides and the Epicurean Position on Providence.Gadi Charles Weber - 2015 - Review of Metaphysics 68 (3):545-572.
    In a sense Maimonides identifies his views on the subject of divine providence with those of Epicurus. He does so by implying an analogy between this Greek philosopher’s atheistic opinions and those put forth by Elihu in the Book of Job. Despite the fact that commentators have discussed Maimonides’ views on providence for eight hundred years the only one to refer to the connection between Elihu and Epicurus was Joseph Ibn Kaspi in the fourteenth century. One of the consequences of (...)
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  6. (1 other version)Some Problems with Reciprocity.Gadi Algazi - 2001 - Endoxa 15:43-50.
  7.  6
    Yedaʻ, safḳanut ṿe-honaʼah ʻatsmit =.Gadi Kravitz - 2019 - Ḥefah: Pardes, sifrut Ivrit mitḳademet.
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  8.  5
    Trakhṭ fun frier: herlikhe mesholim fun di gdoyle ha-doyres̀.Gadi Pollack - 2013 - [Brooklyn, N.Y.]: Ḳinder shpil.
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  9.  5
    Ṭrakhṭ oyf le-mayśeh: a zamlung fun mesholim fun gdoyle ha-doyres̀.Gadi Pollack - 2015 - Brooklyn, NY: Hoytsoes̀ Geṿaldig. Edited by R. Ḥ Shisha.
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  10.  23
    Oliver Wendell Holmes and the Culture of Conversation.Gadi Taub - 2003 - Common Knowledge 9 (2):346-346.
  11.  14
    Kepler’s labors: Figurations of scholarly work c. 1600.Gadi Algazi - 2023 - History of Science 61 (4):475-496.
    Kepler’s intricate trajectory, his self-reflective comments about the conditions of production of knowledge in his time, and the wealth of materials preserved make it possible to reconstruct a whole set of regimes of scholarly work around 1600, each with its typical mode of control, forms of subordination, temporal economy, and means of remuneration. Kepler’s maneuvering in this landscape was shaped by his attempts to carve out spaces for the kind of work he considered his very own – his “speculations” or (...)
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  12.  17
    The Decline in Task Performance After Witnessing Rudeness Is Moderated by Emotional Empathy—A Pilot Study.Gadi Gilam, Bar Horing, Ronny Sivan, Noam Weinman & Sean C. Mackey - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  13.  5
    Paḥad, ḥaraṭah u-mishʼelet lev: lamah manhigim ṿe-umot boḥrim ba-milḥamah = Fear, regret and wishful thinking: why leaders and nations choose war?Gadi Heimann - 2022 - Ḥevel Modiʻin: Devir.
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  14. A gantse mayśeh: loyṭ di mesholim fun gedoyle ha-doyres̀.Gadi Pollack - 2007 - Monroe, N.Y.: Ḳinder shpil. Edited by Yehoysef Shṿarṭts.
     
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  15. Funem baal ha-mayśeh: loyṭ di mesholim fun Baal Shem Ṭov ṿe-talmidaṿ.Gadi Pollack - 2009 - Monroe, N.Y.: Ḳinder shpil.
    Jewish parables from the Hasidic masters and their lessons are illustrated by the interactions of Fishel the beggar, the slick thief, the rich businessman, the fat governor, the Russian soldiers, and other village characters.
     
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  16.  6
    Sof mayśeh: loyṭ di mesholim fun magidim.Gadi Pollack - 2011 - [Monroe, N.Y.]: Ḳinder shpil.
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  17.  76
    Norbert Elias’s Motion Pictures: history, cinema and gestures in the process of civilization.Gadi Algazi - 2008 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 39 (3):444-458.
    Norbert Elias’s project in The process of civilization involved reconstructing invisible movement—both the slow tempoof long-term historical change and the modification of psychic structures and embodied dispositions. To do this, he resorted to uncommon devices: treating historical texts as constituting a series amenable to a rudimentary discourse analysis, he constructed an imagined ‘curve of civilization’ serving as an approximation of the hidden process of change. Elias’s curve was not supposed to represent single past states, but movement itself, its direction and (...)
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  18. Not by Imaginings Alone: On How Imaginary Worlds Are Established.Alon Chasid - 2021 - Journal of the American Philosophical Association 7 (2):195-212.
    This article explores the relation between belief-like imaginings and the establishment of imaginary worlds (often called fictional worlds). After outlining the various assumptions my argument is premised on, I argue that belief-like imaginings, in themselves, do not render their content true in the imaginary world to which they pertain. I show that this claim applies not only to imaginative projects in which we are instructed or intend to imagine certain propositions, but also to spontaneous imaginative projects. After arguing that, like (...)
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  19. Returning to life : trauma survivors' quest for reintegration.Gadi Maoz & Vered Arbit - 2011 - In Raya A. Jones, Body, mind and healing after Jung: a space of questions. New York, NY: Routledge. pp. 14.
  20. Scope dominance with upward monotone quantifiers.Alon Altman, Ya'Acov Peterzil & Yoad Winter - 2005 - Journal of Logic, Language and Information 14 (4):445-455.
    We give a complete characterization of the class of upward monotone generalized quantifiers Q1 and Q2 over countable domains that satisfy the scheme Q1 x Q2 y φ → Q2 y Q1 x φ. This generalizes the characterization of such quantifiers over finite domains, according to which the scheme holds iff Q1 is ∃ or Q2 is ∀ (excluding trivial cases). Our result shows that in infinite domains, there are more general types of quantifiers that support these entailments.
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  21.  72
    Assessment of knowledge about biobanking among healthcare students and their willingness to donate biospecimens.Leena Merdad, Lama Aldakhil, Rawan Gadi, Mourad Assidi, Salina Y. Saddick, Adel Abuzenadah, Jim Vaught, Abdelbaset Buhmeida & Mohammed H. Al-Qahtani - 2017 - BMC Medical Ethics 18 (1):32.
    Biobanks and biospecimen collections are becoming a primary means of delivering personalized diagnostics and tailoring individualized therapeutics. This shift towards precision medicine requires interactions among a variety of stakeholders, including the public, patients, healthcare providers, government, and donors. Very few studies have investigated the role of healthcare students in biobanking and biospecimen donations. The main aims of this study were to evaluate the knowledge of senior healthcare students about biobanks and to assess the students’ willingness to donate biospecimens and the (...)
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  22.  17
    The use of logic and argumentation in therapy of sex offenders.Dov Gabbay, Gadi Rozenberg & Lydia Rivlin - 2023 - Logic Journal of the IGPL 33 (1):1-35.
    This paper is intended first for the formal argumentation community (see https://comma.csc.liv.ac.uk/). This community develops logics and systems modelling argumentation and dialogues. The community is in search of major applications areas for their models. One such application area e.g. is Law. The message of this paper is that there is another major application area for formal argumentation. There is an international community of sex offender therapist that is well established and well funded, and their therapy methods use (methods that can (...)
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  23.  27
    Cultivating Curious and Creative Minds: The Role of Teachers and Teacher Educators, Part I.Annette D. Digby, Gadi Alexander, Carole G. Basile, Kevin Cloninger, F. Michael Connelly, Jessica T. DeCuir-Gunby, John P. Gaa, Herbert P. Ginsburg, Angela McNeal Haynes, Ming Fang He, Terri R. Hebert, Sharon Johnson, Patricia L. Marshall, Joan V. Mast, Allison W. McCulloch, Christina Mengert, Christy M. Moroye, F. Richard Olenchak, Wynnetta Scott-Simmons, Merrie Snow, Derrick M. Tennial, P. Bruce Uhrmacher, Shijing Xu & JeongAe You (eds.) - 2009 - R&L Education.
    Presents a plethora of approaches to developing human potential in areas not conventionally addressed. Organized in two parts, this international collection of essays provides viable educational alternatives to those currently holding sway in an era of high-stakes accountability.
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  24.  88
    Content-Free Pictorial Realism.Alon Chasid - 2007 - Philosophical Studies 135 (3):375-405.
    What is it for a picture to be more realistic, or more depictive, than another? Without committing to any thesis as to what depiction consists in, I show that degrees of depictiveness are grounded in a certain relation between two basic kinds of differences between pictures: configurational differences and content differences. A picture is thus more depictive just in case it is seen as having fewer nondepictive features, whereas a nondepictive feature is individuated through the susceptibility of the picture's configuration (...)
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  25.  80
    Imaginatively‐Colored Perception: Walton on Pictorial Experience.Alon Chasid - 2016 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 54 (1):27-47.
    This paper develops Kendall Walton's account of pictorial experience. Walton argues that the key feature of that experience is that it is imaginatively-penetrated experience. I argue that this idea, as put forward by Walton, has various shortcomings. After discussing these limitations, I suggest, on the basis of a more general phenomenon of cognitive penetration, a refinement of Walton's account. I then show how the revised account explains various features of pictorial experience. Specifically, I show that, given the manner in which (...)
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  26.  73
    Why only the state may inflict criminal sanctions: The case against privately inflicted sanctions: Alon Harel.Alon Harel - 2008 - Legal Theory 14 (2):113-133.
    Criminal sanctions are typically inflicted by the state. The central role of the state in determining the severity of these sanctions and inflicting them requires justification. One justification for state-inflicted sanctions is simply that the state is more likely than other agents to determine accurately what a wrongdoer justly deserves and to inflict a just sanction on those who deserve it. Hence, in principle, the state could be replaced by other agents, for example, private individuals. This hypothesis has given rise (...)
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  27. A phone in a basket looks like a knife in a cup: Role-filler independence in visual processing.Alon Hafri, Michael Bonner, Barbara Landau & Chaz Firestone - 2024 - Open Mind.
    When a piece of fruit is in a bowl, and the bowl is on a table, we appreciate not only the individual objects and their features, but also the relations containment and support, which abstract away from the particular objects involved. Independent representation of roles (e.g., containers vs. supporters) and “fillers” of those roles (e.g., bowls vs. cups, tables vs. chairs) is a core principle of language and higherlevel reasoning. But does such role-filler independence also arise in automatic visual processing? (...)
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  28. ha-Musar ha-ḥevrati mul ha-musar ha-ḳiyumi.Yona Alon - 1975 - Tel-Aviv: Alef.
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  29.  85
    Pictorial experience: not so special after all.Alon Chasid - 2014 - Philosophical Studies 171 (3):471-491.
    The central thesis (CT) that this paper upholds is that a picture depicts an object by generating in those who view the picture a visual experience of that object. I begin by presenting a brief sketch of intentionalism, the theory of perception in terms of which I propose to account for pictorial experience. I then discuss Richard Wollheim’s twofoldness thesis and explain why it should be rejected. Next, I show that the socalled unique phenomenology of pictorial experience is simply an (...)
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  30.  27
    Why Law Matters.Alon Harel - 2014 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
    Why Law Matters argues that public institutions and legal procedures are valuable and matter as such, irrespective of their instrumental value. Examining the value of rights, public institutions, and constitutional review, the book criticises instrumentalist approaches in political theory, claiming they fail to account for their enduring appeal.
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  31. Patterns and Trends in Entrepreneurship/SME Policy and Practice in Ten Economies.I. Alon - 2003 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 15 (4):85-86.
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  32.  60
    Outsourcing Violence?Alon Harel - 2011 - Law and Ethics of Human Rights 5 (2):396-413.
  33. In Defense of an Involuntary Polity: Comments on Otsukaʼs Vision of the Consensual Polity.Alon Harel - 2006 - Iyyun 55:310-316.
     
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  34.  15
    Combining Horn rules and description logics in CARIN.Alon Y. Levy & Marie-Christine Rousset - 1998 - Artificial Intelligence 104 (1-2):165-209.
  35.  8
    Political readings of Descartes in Continental thought.Alon Segev - 2019 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Home and exile -- Progress: Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Georges Sorel and Martin Heidegger -- Franz Baader: Cogitor Ergo Sum -- Edmund Husserl: the crisis of the European man -- Martin Heidegger: Homo Est Brutum Bestiale -- Franz Borkenau: Cartesianism and the exploitation of man and nature -- Franz Böhm: German philosophy at war with Cartesianism.
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  36. Constitutionalism and Justice.Alon Harel - 2019 - In Ester Herlin-Karnell & Matthias Klatt, Constitutionalism Justified: Rainer Forst in Discourse. New York: Oxford University Press, Usa.
  37.  26
    (1 other version)On the Irrelevance of Neuroscience to Moral Theory.Alon Harel - 2015 - Law and Ethics of Human Rights 9 (2):173-179.
    Journal Name: The Law & Ethics of Human Rights Issue: Ahead of print.
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  38.  40
    Reply.Alon Harel - 2018 - Jurisprudence 9 (1):159-168.
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  39. The Triadic Relational Structure of Responsibility: A Defence.Alon Harel - 2011 - In Rowan Cruft, Matthew H. Kramer & Mark R. Reiff, Crime, punishment, and responsibility: the jurisprudence of Antony Duff. New York: Oxford University Press.
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  40.  61
    Special Relativity Cannot Be Derived from Galilean Mechanics Alone.Alon Drory - 2013 - Foundations of Physics 43 (5):665-684.
    A recent paper suggested that if Galilean covariance was extended to signals and interactions, the resulting theory would contain such anomalies as would have impelled physicists towards special relativity even without empirical prompts. I analyze this claim. Some so-called anomalies turn out to be errors. Others have classical analogs, which suggests that classical physicists would not have viewed them as anomalous. Still others, finally, remain intact in special relativity, so that they serve as no impetus towards this theory. I conclude (...)
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  41. Filosofyah anṭropologit.Gdalia Alon - 1967 - [Tel Aviv]: [S.N.].
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  42.  13
    The Logic of Question and Answer and the Limits of Phenomenological Reduction: Collingwood, Heidegger, and Gadamer.Alon Segev - 2007 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 38 (3):318-328.
  43.  24
    The necessity of the second postulate in special relativity.Alon Drory - 2015 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 51:57-67.
  44.  13
    Verification of knowledge bases based on containment checking.Alon Y. Levy & Marie-Christine Rousset - 1998 - Artificial Intelligence 101 (1-2):227-250.
  45.  99
    Visual Experience: Cognitive Penetrability and Indeterminacy.Alon Chasid - 2014 - Acta Analytica 29 (1):119-130.
    This paper discusses a counterexample to the thesis that visual experience is cognitively impenetrable. My central claim is that sometimes visual experience is influenced by the perceiver’s beliefs, rendering her experience’s representational content indeterminate. After discussing other examples of cognitive penetrability, I focus on a certain kind of visual experience— that is, an experience that occurs under radically nonstandard conditions—and show that it may have indeterminate content, particularly with respect to low-level properties such as colors and shapes. I then explain (...)
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  46. Compositionality in visual perception.Alon Hafri, E. J. Green & Chaz Firestone - 2023 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e277.
    Quilty-Dunn et al.'s wide-ranging defense of the Language of Thought Hypothesis (LoTH) argues that vision traffics in abstract, structured representational formats. We agree: Vision, like language, is compositional – just as words compose into phrases, many visual representations contain discrete constituents that combine in systematic ways. Here, we amass evidence extending this proposal, and explore its implications for how vision interfaces with the rest of the mind.
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  47. The Absolute and the Failure to Think of the Ontological Difference Heidegger's Critique of Hegel.Alon Segev - 2008 - Studia Phaenomenologica 8:453-472.
    The aim of this paper is to examine Heidegger’s critique of Hegel and to determine whether it is justified. Heidegger claims that Hegel tries to reduce everything to a single absolute entity, to the absolute knowing subject. The result is the identification of being and nothing, as Hegel formulates it at the beginning of his Logic. Hegel identifies being with nothing because being has no references, no predicates, no properties. Heidegger agrees with Hegel that being and nothing are the same, (...)
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  48.  20
    Economic Culturalism: A comment on Dennis Mueller, Defining Citizenship.Alon Harel - 2002 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 3 (1).
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  49. Global Networks and Local Values, by The National Research Council, National Academy Press, 2001.I. Alon - 2005 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 18 (2):147.
  50. Imaginative immersion, regulation, and doxastic mediation.Alon Chasid - 2021 - Synthese 199 (3-4): 1-43.
    This paper puts forward an account of imaginative immersion. Elaborating on Kendall Walton’s thesis that imagining aims at the fictional truth, it first argues that imaginings are inherently rule- or norm-governed: they are ‘regulated’ by that which is presented as fictionally true. It then shows that an imaginer can follow the rule or norm mandating her to imagine the propositions presented as fictional truths either by acquiring explicit beliefs about how the rule (norm) is to be followed, or directly, without (...)
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