Results for 'John L. Hennessey'

962 found
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  1.  10
    George Montandon, the Ainu and the theory of hologenesis.John L. Hennessey - 2022 - Science in Context 35 (2):133-151.
    ArgumentIn 1909, Italian zoologist Daniele Rosa (1857–1944) proposed a radical new evolutionary theory: hologenesis, or simultaneous, pan-terrestrial creation and evolution driven primarily by internal factors. Hologenesis was widely ignored or rejected outside Italy, but Swiss-French anthropologist George Montandon (1879–1944) eagerly embraced and developed the theory. An ambitious careerist, Montandon’s deep investment in an obscure and unpopular theory is puzzling. Today, Montandon is best known for his virulent antisemitism and active collaboration with the Nazi occupation of France at the end of (...)
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  2. (1 other version)Contemporary theories of knowledge.John L. Pollock - 1986 - London: Hutchinson.
    This new edition of the classic Contemporary Theories of Knowledge has been significantly updated to include analyses of the recent literature in epistemology.
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  3. Knowledge and Justification.John L. Pollock - 1974 - Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. Edited by John Pollock.
    Princeton University Press, 1974. This book is out of print, but can be downloaded as a pdf file (5 MB).
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  4.  14
    Justification and defeat.John L. Pollock - 1994 - Artificial Intelligence 67 (2):377-407.
  5.  62
    How to Build a Person: A Prolegomenon.John L. Pollock - 1989 - MIT Press.
    Pollock describes an exciting theory of rationality and its partial implementation in OSCAR, a computer system whose descendants will literally be persons.
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  6. Prolegomena to a Philosophy of Religion.John L. Schellenberg - 2005 - Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
    "There is no attempt here to lay down as inviolable or to legislate certain ways of looking at things or ways of proceeding for philosophers of religion, only proposals for how to deal with a range of basic issues-proposals that I hope will ignite much fruitful discussion and which, in any case, I shall take as a basis for my own ongoing work in the field."-from the Preface Providing an original and systematic treatment of foundational issues in philosophy of religion, (...)
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  7.  87
    Nomic Probability and the Foundations of Induction.John L. Pollock - 1990 - New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press.
    In this book Pollock deals with the subject of probabilistic reasoning, making general philosophical sense of objective probabilities and exploring their ...
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  8. How to do things with words.John L. Austin - 1962 - Oxford [Eng.]: Clarendon Press. Edited by Marina Sbisá & J. O. Urmson.
    For this second edition, the editors have returned to Austin's original lecture notes, amending the printed text where it seemed necessary.
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  9. Higher-Order Logic and Type Theory.John L. Bell - 2022 - Cambridge University Press.
    This Element is an exposition of second- and higher-order logic and type theory. It begins with a presentation of the syntax and semantics of classical second-order logic, pointing up the contrasts with first-order logic. This leads to a discussion of higher-order logic based on the concept of a type. The second Section contains an account of the origins and nature of type theory, and its relationship to set theory. Section 3 introduces Local Set Theory, an important form of type theory (...)
     
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  10.  16
    (1 other version)The logical foundations of goal-regression planning in autonomous agents.John L. Pollock - 1998 - Artificial Intelligence 106 (2):267-334.
  11. The 'possible worlds' analysis of counterfactuals.John L. Pollock - 1976 - Philosophical Studies 29 (6):469 - 476.
  12.  18
    How to reason defeasibly.John L. Pollock - 1992 - Artificial Intelligence 57 (1):1-42.
  13.  24
    Peripherally presented and unreported words may bias the perceived meaning of a centrally fixated homograph.John L. Bradshaw - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 103 (6):1200.
  14.  38
    Meaning and the Moral Sciences.John L. Koethe - 1979 - Philosophical Review 88 (3):460.
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  15.  98
    Criteria and our knowledge of the material world.John L. Pollock - 1967 - Philosophical Review 76 (1):28-60.
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  16. M l.John L. Bell - unknown
    A weak form of intuitionistic set theory WST lacking the axiom of extensionality is introduced. While WST is too weak to support the derivation of the law of excluded middle from the axiom of choice, we show that beefing up WST with moderate extensionality principles or quotient sets enables the derivation to go through.
     
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  17. Processing symbolic information from a visual display: Interference from an irrelevant directional cue.John L. Craft & J. Richard Simon - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 83 (3p1):415.
  18.  12
    Trauma and the Ontology of the Modern Subject: Historical Studies in Philosophy, Psychology, and Psychoanalysis.John L. Roberts & Kareen R. Malone - 2017 - Routledge.
    Recent scholarship has inquired into the socio-historical, discursive genesis of trauma. Trauma and the Ontology of the Modern Subject, however, seeks what has not been actualized in trauma studies - that is, how the necessity and unassailable intensity of trauma is fastened to its historical emergence. We must ask not only what trauma means for the individual person's biography, but also what it means to be the historical subject of trauma. In other words, how does being human in this current (...)
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  19.  79
    Doing and Deserving: Essays in the Theory of Responsibility.John L. Carafides - 1972 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 33 (2):284-285.
  20. (1 other version)Hermann Weyl on intuition and the continuum.John L. Bell - 2000 - Philosophia Mathematica 8 (3):259-273.
    Hermann Weyl, one of the twentieth century's greatest mathematicians, was unusual in possessing acute literary and philosophical sensibilities—sensibilities to which he gave full expression in his writings. In this paper I use quotations from these writings to provide a sketch of Weyl's philosophical orientation, following which I attempt to elucidate his views on the mathematical continuum, bringing out the central role he assigned to intuition.
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  21.  11
    Optimum Tools for Community Health.John L. McKnight - 1984 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 4 (4):340-344.
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  22.  11
    What We Learned From the Oil Crisis of 1973: A 30-Year Retrospective.John L. Roeder - 2005 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 25 (2):166-169.
    Thirty years ago, the Arab Oil Embargo caused us to stop taking gasoline for granted and caused the author to start teaching students about the importance of energy in our lives. This retrospective shows the same general patterns discerned from a 20-year retrospective a decade ago: a sharp decrease in energy use following each of the two energy crises of the 1970s and a decline in the rate at which energy use increased in the years following. Yet the United States (...)
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  23. (1 other version)Introduction to connectionism.John L. Tienson - 1987 - Southern Journal of Philosophy (Suppl.) 1:1-16.
  24.  46
    Hermann Weyl.John L. Bell - 2010 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger.
  25.  11
    The Indexical Voice: Communication of Personal States and Traits in Humans and Other Primates.John L. Locke - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Many studies of primate vocalization have been undertaken to improve our understanding of the evolution of language. Perhaps, for this reason, investigators have focused on calls that were thought to carry symbolic information about the environment. Here I suggest that even if these calls were in fact symbolic, there were independent reasons to question this approach in the first place. I begin by asking what kind of communication system would satisfy a species’ biological needs. For example, where animals benefit from (...)
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  26. Reading the Bible with the Dead: What You Can Learn from the History of Exegesis that You Can't Learn from Exegesis Alone.John L. Thompson - 2007
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  27.  39
    Ignorance: A Case for Scepticism.John L. Koethe - 1978 - Philosophical Review 87 (1):154.
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  28.  25
    Organization of abilities and the development of intelligence.John L. Horn - 1968 - Psychological Review 75 (3):242-259.
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  29. Defeasible Reasoning and Degrees of Justification.Pollock † & L. John - 2010 - Argument and Computation 1 (1):7-22.
  30.  49
    The quantum theoretical concept of measurement.John L. McKnight - 1957 - Philosophy of Science 24 (4):321-330.
    As a preliminary to the modern theory of measurement with which this paper is chiefly concerned, it is desirable to review a few of the characteristics and implications of classical physics to illustrate the far reaching changes that have taken place in our conception of nature as the result of the development of quantum mechanics.
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  31.  15
    Aristoteles: Eine Einführung in sein Philosophieren.John L. Ackrill - 1985 - De Gruyter.
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  32.  64
    A theory of direct inference.John L. Pollock - 1983 - Theory and Decision 15 (1):29-95.
  33.  33
    John B. Murphy, Theodore Roosevelt, and the W. B. Saunders Company.John L. Dusseau - 1989 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 32 (2):212.
  34.  25
    Oppositions and paradoxes: philosophical perplexities in science and mathematics.John L. Bell - 2016 - Peterborough, Ontario, Canada: Broadview Press.
    Since antiquity, opposed concepts such as the One and the Many, the Finite and the Infinite, and the Absolute and the Relative, have been a driving force in philosophical, scientific, and mathematical thought. Yet they have also given rise to perplexing problems and conceptual paradoxes which continue to haunt scientists and philosophers. In Oppositions and Paradoxes, John L. Bell explains and investigates the paradoxes and puzzles that arise out of conceptual oppositions in physics and mathematics. In the process, Bell (...)
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  35.  43
    Procedural Epistemology — At the Interface of Philosophy and AI.John L. Pollock - 1999 - In John Greco & Ernest Sosa (eds.), The Blackwell Guide to Epistemology. Malden, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 383–414.
    Epistemology is about how we can know the various things we claim to know. Epistemology is driven by attempts to answer the question, “How do you know?” This gives rise to investigations on several different levels. At the lowest level, philosophers investigate particular kinds of knowledge claims. Thus we find theories of perceptual knowledge (“How do you know the things you claim to know directly on the basis of perception?”), theories of induction and abduction (“How do you know the general (...)
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  36.  27
    Double trouble: An evolutionary cut at the dichotomy pie.John L. Bradshaw & Norman C. Nettleton - 1981 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (1):79-91.
  37. Epistemology and Probability.John L. Pollock - 1983 - Noûs 17 (1):65.
    Probability is sometimes regarded as a universal panacea for epistemology. It has been supposed that the rationality of belief is almost entirely a matter of probabilities. Unfortunately, those philosophers who have thought about this most extensively have tended to be probability theorists first, and epistemologists only secondarily. In my estimation, this has tended to make them insensitive to the complexities exhibited by epistemic justification. In this paper I propose to turn the tables. I begin by laying out some rather simple (...)
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  38.  47
    Evaluative cognition.John L. Pollock - 2001 - Noûs 35 (3):325–364.
    Cognitive agents form beliefs representing the world, evaluate the world as represented, form plans for making the world more to their liking, and perform actions executing the plans. Then the cycle repeats. This is the doxastic-conative loop, diagrammed in figure one.1 Both human beings and the autonomous rational agents envisaged in AI are cognitive agents in this sense. The cognition of a cognitive agent can be subdivided into two parts. Epistemic cognition is that kind of cognition responsible for producing and (...)
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  39.  42
    Four Kinds of Conditionals.John L. Pollock - 1975 - American Philosophical Quarterly 12 (1):51 - 59.
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  40.  39
    Thinking about an Object.John L. Pollock - 1980 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 5 (1):487-500.
  41.  47
    The stability of reference over time.John L. Koethe - 1982 - Noûs 16 (2):243-252.
  42. Whole and part in mathematics.John L. Bell - 2004 - Axiomathes 14 (4):285-294.
    The centrality of the whole/part relation in mathematics is demonstrated through the presentation and analysis of examples from algebra, geometry, functional analysis,logic, topology and category theory.
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  43.  52
    Practical reasoning in Oscar.John L. Pollock - 1995 - Philosophical Perspectives 9:15-48.
  44.  23
    Paradoxes of Knowledge.John L. Koethe - 1978 - Philosophical Review 87 (4):651.
  45. The Discipline of Pure Reason.S. J. John L. Treloar - 1982 - Idealistic Studies 12 (1):35-55.
    The present study is the result of two questions which arose in dealing with the Critique of Pure Reason. What is the relationship of the “Doctrine of Method” to the “Doctrine of Elements?” Does the “Doctrine of Method” tell us anything important about Kant and his philosophy? It will be the contention of this paper that the second half of the Critique relies heavily on the “Doctrine of Elements,” and is a natural expansion of the first half of the Critique. (...)
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  46. The Apostle of God: Paul and the Promise of Abraham.John L. White - 1999
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  47.  41
    The career and conversion of Dio Chrysostom.John L. Moles - 1978 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 98:79-100.
  48.  26
    Paulo Freire: pedagogue of liberation.John L. Elias - 1994 - Malabar, Fla.: Krieger Pub. Co..
    Presenting an analytical and critical study of the contemporary adult educator, Paulo Freire, this book deals with all aspects of his thought, placing at the centre of consideration his educational philosophy.
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  49. Causal probability.John L. Pollock - 2002 - Synthese 132 (1-2):143 - 185.
    Examples growing out of the Newcomb problem have convinced many people that decision theory should proceed in terms of some kind of causal probability. I endorse this view and define and investigate a variety of causal probability. My definition is related to Skyrms' definition, but proceeds in terms of objective probabilities rather than subjective probabilities and avoids taking causal dependence as a primitive concept.
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  50.  28
    (1 other version)My injury, your blood.John L. Coulehan - 2005 - Hastings Center Report 35 (1):10-11.
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