Results for 'Mikhail Mikhailovich Poroshkov'

988 found
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  1.  19
    On the problem of the structure-forming elements of Utopian Discourse and its specifics.Ekaterina Nikolaevna Gudilina & Mikhail Mikhailovich Poroshkov - forthcoming - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal).
    The subject of the research is utopian discourse, which unites all the variety of concepts related in one way or another to utopia, utopian dimension of reality and understanding of the Future (utopian element, utopian impulse, utopian optics, utopianism, utopian consciousness, utopian thinking, dystopia, etc.). Special attention is paid to the study of the explanatory and predictive potential of utopian discourse, identifying its boundaries and analysis of the relationship with ideological discourse. The conceptualization of utopian discourse is based on an (...)
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  2. Toward a Philosophy of the Act.Mikhail Mikhaĭlovich Bakhtin - 1993 - Austin: University of Texas Press. Edited by Michael Holquist & Vadim Liapunov.
    Rescued in 1972 from a storeroom in which rats and seeping water had severely damaged the fifty-year-old manuscript, this text is the earliest major work (1919-1921) of the great Russian philosopher M. M. Bakhtin. Toward a Philosophy of the Act contains the first occurrences of themes that occupied Bakhtin throughout his long career. The topics of authoring, responsibility, self and other, the moral significance of "outsideness," participatory thinking, the implications for the individual subject of having "no-alibi in existence," the difference (...)
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  3.  84
    Art and answerability: early philosophical essays.Mikhail Mikhaĭlovich Bakhtin - 1990 - Austin: University of Texas Press. Edited by Michael Holquist & Vadim Liapunov.
    The essays assembled here are all very early and differ in a number of ways from Bakhtin's previously published work.
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  4.  27
    Problems of Dostoevsky’s Poetics.Mikhail Mikhaĭlovich Bakhtin - 1984 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    This book is not only a major twentieth-century contribution to Dostoevsky’s studies, but also one of the most important theories of the novel produced in our century. As a modern reinterpretation of poetics, it bears comparison with Aristotle.“Bakhtin’s statement on the dialogical nature of artistic creation, and his differentiation of this from a history of monological commentary, is profoundly original and illuminating. This is a classic work on Dostoevsky and a statement of importance to critical theory.” Edward Wasiolek“Concentrating on the (...)
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  5.  18
    Identity crisis and social dissociation in control societies.Mikhail Mikhailovich Abramychev & Bogdan Yurievich Gromov - 2022 - Философия И Культура 7:96-108.
    The article is devoted to the problem of the naming crisis of modern society. The sequences by which the social and cultural history of the West is ordered, represented by the evolution of economics, technology, religion, forms of capital and wealth, communications, following the technological acceleration of time, coexist with each other, compete for primacy, creating a society of atomized subjects who have ceased to understand their place in the history of society. This situation is described in the article as (...)
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  6. Problemy razvitii︠a︡ nauki i nauchnogo tvorchestva.Russia Rostov on the Don & Mikhail Mikhailovich Karpov (eds.) - 1971 - Rostov n/D: Izd-vo Rost. un-ta.
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  7. Humans in the world of word-Mikhail Mikhailovich Bakhtin (1895-1975).T. S. Voropaj - 2002 - Filozofia 57 (9):651-666.
     
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  8.  31
    M. M. Bakhtin and the German proto-Romantic tradition.John Cook - 2020 - Studies in East European Thought 72 (1):59-81.
    This paper seeks to explore the relationship between Mikhail Mikhailovich Bakhtin’s theoretical apparatus and ideas of the immediate precursors of the Jena Romantik school of German Romanticism: Johann Georg Hamann (1730–1788) and Johann Gottfried Herder (1744–1803). In doing so, it examines the themes and treatments that are common to these two thinkers and Bakhtin, tracing the tradition of anti-systematic thought through Hamann, Nietzsche and Bakhtin, and the transmission of Herder’s philosophy of Bildung through the Russian cultural milieu and (...)
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  9. Elements of Moral Cognition: Rawls' Linguistic Analogy and the Cognitive Science of Moral and Legal Judgment.John Mikhail - 2009 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Is the science of moral cognition usefully modelled on aspects of Universal Grammar? Are human beings born with an innate 'moral grammar' that causes them to analyse human action in terms of its moral structure, with just as little awareness as they analyse human speech in terms of its grammatical structure? Questions like these have been at the forefront of moral psychology ever since John Mikhail revived them in his influential work on the linguistic analogy and its implications for (...)
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  10. Universal moral grammar: Theory, evidence, and the future.John Mikhail - 2007 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 11 (4):143 –152.
    Scientists from various disciplines have begun to focus attention on the psychology and biology of human morality. One research program that has recently gained attention is universal moral grammar (UMG). UMG seeks to describe the nature and origin of moral knowledge by using concepts and models similar to those used in Chomsky's program in linguistics. This approach is thought to provide a fruitful perspective from which to investigate moral competence from computational, ontogenetic, behavioral, physiological and phylogenetic perspectives. In this article, (...)
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  11. Intertextual analysis today.Mikhail Gasparov - 2002 - Sign Systems Studies 30 (2):645-651.
    Mikhail L. Gasparov. Intertextual analysis today. The paper provides a discussion about recent results and perspectives of intertextual analysis — the method that has been a contemporary with Tartu-Moscow school. The connections between the classical philological methods and intertextual analysis are described, together with specifying the concept of intertext and emphasizing the need for the correctness of a researcher, because such an analysis always carries a danger of overinterpretation. Several examples are used to illustrate how the imagination of a (...)
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  12.  68
    Fill In, Accept, Submit, and Prove that You Are not a Robot: Ubiquity as the Power of the Algorithmic Bureaucracy.Mikhail Bukhtoyarov & Anna Bukhtoyarova - 2024 - In Ljubiša Bojić, Simona Žikić, Jörg Matthes & Damian Trilling (eds.), Navigating the Digital Age. An In-Depth Exploration into the Intersection of Modern Technologies and Societal Transformation. Belgrade: Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory, University of Belgrade. pp. 220-243.
    Internet users fill in interactive forms with multiple fields, check/uncheck checkboxes, select options and agree to submit. People give their consents without keeping track of them. Dominance of the machine producing human consent is ubiquitous. Humanless bureaucratic procedures become embedded into routine usage of digital products and services automating human behavior. This bureaucracy does not make individuals wait in conveyor-like lines (which sometimes can cause a collective action), it patiently waits or suddenly pops up in an annoying message requiring immediate (...)
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  13.  72
    The Poverty of the Moral Stimulus.John Mikhail - 2007 - In Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (ed.), Moral Psychology, Volume 1: The Evolution of Morality: Adaptations and Innateness. MIT Press.
    One of the most influential arguments in contemporary philosophy and cognitive science is Chomsky's argument from the poverty of the stimulus. In this response to an essay by Chandra Sripada, I defend an analogous argument from the poverty of the moral stimulus. I argue that Sripada's criticism of moral nativism appears to rest on the mistaken assumption that the learning target in moral cognition consists of a series of simple imperatives, such as "share your toys" or "don't hit other children." (...)
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  14. Moral grammar and intuitive jurisprudence: A formal model of unconscious moral and legal knowledge.John Mikhail - 2009 - In B. H. Ross, D. M. Bartels, C. W. Bauman, L. J. Skitka & D. L. Medin (eds.), Psychology of Learning and Motivation, Vol. 50: Moral Judgment and Decision Making. Academic Press.
    Could a computer be programmed to make moral judgments about cases of intentional harm and unreasonable risk that match those judgments people already make intuitively? If the human moral sense is an unconscious computational mechanism of some sort, as many cognitive scientists have suggested, then the answer should be yes. So too if the search for reflective equilibrium is a sound enterprise, since achieving this state of affairs requires demarcating a set of considered judgments, stating them as explanandum sentences, and (...)
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  15.  26
    DNA microarrays in the clinic: infectious diseases.Vladimir Mikhailovich, Dmitry Gryadunov, Alexander Kolchinsky, Alexander A. Makarov & Alexander Zasedatelev - 2008 - Bioessays 30 (7):673-682.
    We argue that the most‐promising area of clinical application of microarrays in the foreseeable future is the diagnostics and monitoring of infectious diseases. Microarrays for the detection and characterization of human pathogens have already found their way into clinical practice in some countries. After discussing the persistent, yet often underestimated, importance of infectious diseases for public health, we consider the technologies that are best suited for the detection and clinical investigation of pathogens. Clinical application of microarray technologies for the detection (...)
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  16. Post-modernism and its” Contribution 'to Ending Violence Against Women.“.Katja Mikhailovich - 1996 - In Diane Bell & Renate Klein (eds.), Radically speaking: feminism reclaimed. North Melbourne, Vic.: Spinifex Press. pp. 339--45.
     
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  17.  31
    The Deep Problem with Voluntaristic Theories of Political Obligation.Mikhail Valdman - 2010 - American Philosophical Quarterly 47 (3):267-78.
    Voluntaristic theories of political obligation claim that a citizen's moral obligation to obey his state's laws is grounded in his voluntary undertakings or agreements. Two of this view's more popular varieties are consent theories and reciprocation theories, the former grounding a citizen's political obligation in a promise and the latter grounding it in the acceptance or the receipt of the benefits of social cooperation. A common objection to these theories is that they cannot justify political obligation because the actual relationship (...)
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  18. Exploitation and injustice.Mikhail Valdman - 2008 - Social Theory and Practice 34 (4):551--572.
    When is it immoral to take advantage of another person for one's own benefit? For some, such as Ruth Sample, John Roemer, and Will Kymlicka, the answer at least partly depends on whether what one takes advantage of is the fact that this person is, or has been, the victim of injustice. I argue, however, that whether person A wrongly exploits person B is wholly unrelated to whether A takes advantage of the fact that B is, or was, the victim (...)
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  19. From contexts to circumstances of evaluation: is the trade-off always innocuous?Mikhail Kissine - 2012 - Synthese 184 (2):199-216.
    Both context relativists and circumstance-of-evaluation relativists agree that the traditional semantic interpretation of some sentence-types fails to deliver the adequate truth-conditions for the corresponding tokens. But while the context relativists argue that the truth-conditions of each token depend on its context of utterance—each token being thus associated with a distinct intension—circumstance-of-evaluation relativists preserve a unique intension for all the tokens by placing circumstances of evaluations under the influence of a certain ‘point of view’. The main difference between the two approaches (...)
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  20. A theory of wrongful exploitation.Mikhail Valdman - 2009 - Philosophers' Imprint 9:1-14.
    My primary aims in this paper are to explain what exploitation is, when it’s wrong, and what makes it wrong. I argue that exploitation is not always wrong, but that it can be, and that its wrongness cannot be fully explained with familiar moral constraints such as those against harming people, coercing them, or using them as a means, or with familiar moral obligations such as an obligation to rescue those in distress or not to take advantage of people’s vulnerabilities. (...)
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  21.  16
    Predicate counterparts of modal logics of provability: High undecidability and Kripke incompleteness.Mikhail Rybakov - forthcoming - Logic Journal of the IGPL.
    In this paper, the predicate counterparts, defined both axiomatically and semantically by means of Kripke frames, of the modal propositional logics $\textbf {GL}$, $\textbf {Grz}$, $\textbf {wGrz}$ and their extensions are considered. It is proved that the set of semantical consequences on Kripke frames of every logic between $\textbf {QwGrz}$ and $\textbf {QGL.3}$ or between $\textbf {QwGrz}$ and $\textbf {QGrz.3}$ is $\Pi ^1_1$-hard even in languages with three (sometimes, two) individual variables, two (sometimes, one) unary predicate letters, and a single (...)
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  22. Rabelais and His World.Mikhail Bakhtin - unknown
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  23.  85
    Why will is not a modal.Mikhail Kissine - 2008 - Natural Language Semantics 16 (2):129-155.
    In opposition to a common assumption, this paper defends the idea that the auxiliary verb will has no other semantic contribution in contemporary English than a temporal shift towards the future with respect to the utterance time. Strong reasons for rejecting the idea that will quantifies over possible worlds are presented. Given the adoption of Lewis’s and Kratzer’s views on modality, the alleged ‘modal’ uses of will are accounted for by a pragmatic mechanism which restricts the domain of the covert (...)
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  24.  19
    From Utterances to Speech Acts.Mikhail Kissine - 2013 - Cambridge University Press.
    Most of the time our utterances are automatically interpreted as speech acts: as assertions, conjectures and testimonies; as orders, requests and pleas; as threats, offers and promises. Surprisingly, the cognitive correlates of this essential component of human communication have received little attention. This book fills the gap by providing a model of the psychological processes involved in interpreting and understanding speech acts. The theory is framed in naturalistic terms and is supported by data on language development and on autism spectrum (...)
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  25. The Fallacy of Semantic Minimalism.Mikhail Kissine - 2007 - Facta Philosophica 9 (1):23-35.
  26.  24
    A Treatise on Arab Music, Chiefly from a Work by Mikh'il Mesh'ḳah, of DamascusA Treatise on Arab Music, Chiefly from a Work by Mikhail Meshakah, of Damascus.Eli Smith, Mikhâil Meshâḳah & Mikhail Meshakah - 1847 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 1 (3):171.
  27.  20
    The phoenix of philosophy: Russian thought of the late Soviet period (1953-1991).Mikhail Epstein - 2019 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    This groundbreaking work by one of the world's foremost theoreticians of Russian literature, culture, and thought gives for the first time an extensive and detailed examination of the development of Russian thought during the late Soviet period. Countering the traditional view of an intellectual wilderness under the Soviet regime, Mikhail Epstein offers a systematic account of Russian thought in the second half of the 20th century. In doing so, he provides new insights into previously ignored areas such as Russian (...)
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  28.  24
    Spurious transcription factor binding: Non‐functional or genetically redundant?Mikhail Spivakov - 2014 - Bioessays 36 (8):798-806.
    Transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) on the DNA are generally accepted as the key nodes of gene control. However, the multitudes of TFBSs identified in genome‐wide studies, some of them seemingly unconstrained in evolution, have prompted the view that in many cases TF binding may serve no biological function. Yet, insights from transcriptional biochemistry, population genetics and functional genomics suggest that rather than segregating into ‘functional’ or ‘non‐functional’, TFBS inputs to their target genes may be generally cumulative, with varying degrees (...)
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  29.  79
    An information‐theoretic primer on complexity, self‐organization, and emergence.Mikhail Prokopenko, Fabio Boschetti & Alex J. Ryan - 2009 - Complexity 15 (1):11-28.
  30.  51
    CHRONOCIDE: Prologue to the Resurrection of Time.Mikhail Epshtein & Edward Skidelsky - 2003 - Common Knowledge 9 (2):186-198.
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  31. Integrat︠s︡ii︠a︡ nauki.Mikhail Grigorʹevich Chepikov - 1975
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  32. Metodologii︠a︡ i metodika kritiki sovremennoĭ burzhuaznoĭ filosofii i sot︠s︡iologii: [Sb. stateĭ].Mikhail I︠A︡kovlevich Korneev & A. I. Novikov (eds.) - 1978 - Leningrad: Izd-vo LGU.
     
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  33.  11
    Proekt prosveshchenii︠a︡: religii︠a︡, filosofii︠a︡, iskusstvo = The project of the Enlightenment: essays on religion, philosophy, and art.Mikhail Sergeev - 2004 - Moskva: Rossiĭskoe filosofskoe obshchestvo.
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  34.  8
    Thinking as a function and its decomposition into a Taylor series.Mikhail Strigin - 2022 - Философия И Культура 5:22-37.
    The paper hypothesizes the possibility of applying the mathematical construction of the Taylor series in the semantic space. Then symbolic forms, like some spiritual functions that display the immanent in semantic space and are explicated in the form of verbal constructions, can be tried to decompose into a Taylor series. The first terms of the Taylor series of thinking functions carry basic meanings that are conjectured by secondary forms, tertiary, etc., as in the case of the usual Taylor series, where (...)
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  35.  11
    Theory of Religious Cycles: Tradition, Modernity, and the Bahá’Í Faith.Mikhail Sergeev - 2015 - Boston: Brill | Rodopi.
    In _Theory of Religious Cycles: Tradition, Modernity and the Bahá’í Faith_ Mikhail Sergeev offers a new interpretation of the Soviet period of Russian history by developing a theory of religious cycles, which he applies to modernity and all major world religions.
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  36. Outsourcing self‐government.Mikhail Valdman - 2010 - Ethics 120 (4):761-790.
    I argue against the view that there is intrinsic value in making one's own decisions about the direction and shape of one's life.
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  37.  76
    A modal logic framework for reasoning about comparative distances and topology.Mikhail Sheremet, Frank Wolter & Michael Zakharyaschev - 2010 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 161 (4):534-559.
    We propose and investigate a uniform modal logic framework for reasoning about topology and relative distance in metric and more general distance spaces, thus enabling the comparison and combination of logics from distinct research traditions such as Tarski’s for topological closure and interior, conditional logics, and logics of comparative similarity. This framework is obtained by decomposing the underlying modal-like operators into first-order quantifier patterns. We then show that quite a powerful and natural fragment of the resulting first-order logic can be (...)
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  38.  8
    “Oh, how beautiful life is and how terrible death is!” (Th. Dobzhansky and religion).Mikhail B. Konashev - 2024 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 107 (C):25-32.
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  39.  13
    Taxometric evidence for a dimensional latent structure of hypnotic suggestibility.Mikhail Reshetnikov & Devin B. Terhune - 2022 - Consciousness and Cognition 98:103269.
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  40.  14
    La Propriété: Étude de Philosophie du Droit.Mikhaïl Xifaras - 2004 - Presses Universitaires de France.
    Pendant près de deux siècles, la " question sociale"s'est confondue avec la question de la propriété, ou plus exactement avec celle de sa légitimité. Tel auteur affirme que c'est l'âme de la législation. Tel autre que c'est le vol. On dispute de ses origines et de ses limites, parfois de son abolition. Mais à travers la violence de la querelle, partisans et détracteurs de l'institution s'en font la même idée : un droit absolu d'une personne sur une chose. Or il (...)
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  41.  30
    Edward Nelson.Mikhail G. Katz & Semen S. Kutateladze - 2015 - Review of Symbolic Logic 8 (3):607-610.
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  42.  24
    Complexity of finite-variable fragments of propositional modal logics of symmetric frames.Mikhail Rybakov & Dmitry Shkatov - forthcoming - Logic Journal of the IGPL.
  43.  7
    The Relationship Between the Individual and the Collective in the Social Philosophy of Georges Gurvitch.Mikhail Yu Zagirnyak - 2023 - Kantian Journal 42 (4):112-132.
    The relationship between the individual and society is the leitmotif of Georges Gurvitch’s work. Beginning from the early Russian-language books on the philosophy of law and ending with the works on sociology published in France and the USA at the final stage of his career, Gurvitch studied the individual person and collective units as interacting sides of the collective social subject. He sought to overcome the struggle between individualism and collectivism which found its ideological expression in the rivalry of the (...)
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  44.  1
    Razvitie poni︠a︡tiĭ i predmeta filosofii v istorii ee ucheniĭ.Mikhail Georgievich Makarov - 1982 - Leningrad: "Nauka," Leningradskoe otd-nie. Edited by B. A. Chagin.
  45.  22
    Major Themes in Modern Arabic Thought: An Anthology.Mona N. Mikhail & Trevor Le Gassick - 1982 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 102 (4):671.
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  46.  10
    Psikhicheskoe rasstroĭstvo: lekt︠s︡ii.Mikhail Reshetnikov - 2008 - Sankt-Peterburg: Vostochno-Evropeĭskiĭ institut psikhoanaliza.
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  47.  4
    Labirinty poznanii︠a︡.Mikhail Aleksandrovich Slemnev - 1988 - Minsk: Izd-vo "Universitetskoe".
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  48. Pozitivizm pred sudom zdravago razuma.Mikhail Andreevich Sokolov - 1897 - Tula,: Tip. I.D. Fortunatova.
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  49. Nekotorye filosofskie voprosy sovremennoĭ biologii.Mikhail Fedorovich Vedenov - 1965 - Edited by Kremi︠a︡nskiĭ, Viktor Izrailevich & [From Old Catalog].
     
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  50.  98
    Moral cognition and computational theory.John Mikhail - 2007 - In Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (ed.), Moral Psychology, Volume 3: The Neuroscience of Morality: Emotion, Brain Disorders, and Development. MIT Press.
    In this comment on Joshua Greene's essay, The Secret Joke of Kant's Soul, I argue that a notable weakness of Greene's approach to moral psychology is its neglect of computational theory. A central problem moral cognition must solve is to recognize (i.e., compute representations of) the deontic status of human acts and omissions. How do people actually do this? What is the theory which explains their practice?
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