Results for 'Sascha Wolfer'

230 found
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  1.  11
    Is More Always Better? Testing the Addition Bias for German Language Statistics.Sascha Wolfer - 2023 - Cognitive Science 47 (9):e13339.
    This replication study aims to investigate a potential bias toward addition in the German language, building upon previous findings of Winter and colleagues who identified a similar bias in English. Our results confirm a bias in word frequencies and binomial expressions, aligning with these previous findings. However, the analysis of distributional semantics based on word vectors did not yield consistent results for German. Furthermore, our study emphasizes the crucial role of selecting appropriate translational equivalents, highlighting the significance of considering language‐specific (...)
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  2.  24
    Testing the Relationship between Word Length, Frequency, and Predictability Based on the German Reference Corpus.Alexander Koplenig, Marc Kupietz & Sascha Wolfer - 2022 - Cognitive Science 46 (6):e13090.
    Cognitive Science, Volume 46, Issue 6, June 2022.
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  3.  72
    Scanning the “Fringe” of consciousness: What is felt and what is not felt in intuitions about semantic coherence.Sascha Topolinski & Fritz Strack - 2009 - Consciousness and Cognition 18 (3):608-618.
    In intuitions concerning semantic coherence participants are able to discriminate above chance whether a word triad has a common remote associate or not . These intuitions are driven by increased fluency in processing coherent triads compared to incoherent triads, which in turn triggers a brief and short positive affect. The present work investigates which of these internal cues, fluency or positive affect, is the actual cue underlying coherence intuitions. In Experiment 1, participants liked coherent word triads more than incoherent triads, (...)
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  4.  50
    Matching between oral inward–outward movements of object names and oral movements associated with denoted objects.Sascha Topolinski, Lea Boecker, Thorsten M. Erle, Giti Bakhtiari & Diane Pecher - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 31 (1):3-18.
  5.  37
    The Icarus Project: A Counter Narrative for Psychic Diversity.Sascha Altman DuBrul - 2014 - Journal of Medical Humanities 35 (3):257-271.
    Over the past 12 years, I’ve had the good fortune of collaborating with others to create a project which challenges and complicates the dominant biopsychiatric model of mental illness. The Icarus Project, founded in 2002, not only critiqued the terms and practices central to the biopsychiatric model, it also inspired a new language and a new community for people struggling with mental health issues in the 21st century. The Icarus Project believes that humans are meaning makers, that meaning is created (...)
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  6.  38
    Can I cut the Gordian tnok? The impact of pronounceability, actual solvability, and length on intuitive problem assessments of anagrams.Sascha Topolinski, Giti Bakhtiari & Thorsten M. Erle - 2016 - Cognition 146 (C):439-452.
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  7.  33
    A processing fluency-account of funniness: Running gags and spoiling punchlines.Sascha Topolinski - 2014 - Cognition and Emotion 28 (5):811-820.
  8.  32
    The face of fluency: Semantic coherence automatically elicits a specific pattern of facial muscle reactions.Sascha Topolinski, Katja U. Likowski, Peter Weyers & Fritz Strack - 2009 - Cognition and Emotion 23 (2):260-271.
  9.  82
    Corporate Social Performance, Firm Size, and Organizational Visibility: Distinct and Joint Effects on Voluntary Sustainability Reporting.Sascha Raithel & Philipp Schreck - 2018 - Business and Society 57 (4):742-778.
    This study investigates the distinct and joint effects of corporate social performance, firm size, and visibility on a company’s decision to disclose sustainability-related information through sustainability reports. It seeks to provide more nuanced explanations for why certain companies tend to extensively report on their sustainability performance. First, while prior studies have predominantly focused on environmental reporting, the current analysis considers comprehensive sustainability reports that include both environmental and social issues. Second, the article argues that the effects of two important antecedents (...)
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  10. A Deeper Look at the "Neural Correlate of Consciousness".Sascha Benjamin Fink - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
    A main goal of the neuroscience of consciousness is: find the neural correlate to conscious experiences (NCC). When have we achieved this goal? The answer depends on our operationalization of “NCC.” Chalmers (2000) shaped the widely accepted operationalization according to which an NCC is a neural system with a state which is minimally sufficient (but not necessary) for an experience. A deeper look at this operationalization reveals why it might be unsatisfactory: (i) it is not an operationalization of a correlate (...)
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  11.  41
    Immediate truth – Temporal contiguity between a cognitive problem and its solution determines experienced veracity of the solution.Sascha Topolinski & Rolf Reber - 2010 - Cognition 114 (1):117-122.
  12.  35
    The Logic of Digital Utopianism.Sascha Dickel & Jan-Felix Schrape - 2017 - NanoEthics 11 (1):47-58.
    With the Internet’s integration into mainstream society, online technologies have become a significant economic factor and a central aspect of everyday life. Thus, it is not surprising that news providers and social scientists regularly offer media-induced visions of a nearby future and that these horizons of expectation are continually expanding. This is true not only for the Web as a traditional media technology but also for 3D printing, which has freed modern media utopianism from its stigma of immateriality. Our article (...)
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  13. Phenomenal Precision and Some Possible Pitfalls – A Commentary on Ned Block.Sascha Benjamin Fink - 2015 - Open MIND.
    Ground Representationism is the position that for each phenomenal feature there is a representational feature that accounts for it. Against this thesis, Ned Block (The Puzzle of Phenomenal Precision, 2015) has provided an intricate argument that rests on the notion of “phenomenal precision”: the phenomenal precision of a percept may change at a different rate from its representational counterpart. If so, there is then no representational feature that accounts for a specific change of this phenomenal feature. Therefore, Ground Representationism cannot (...)
     
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  14. Prostitution and the Good of Sex.Sascha Settegast - 2018 - Social Theory and Practice 44 (3):377-403.
    On some accounts, prostitution is just another form of casual sex and as such not particularly harmful in itself, if regulated properly. I claim that, although casual sex in general is not inher-ently harmful, prostitution in fact is. To show this, I defend an account of sex as joint action characteristically aimed at sexual enjoyment, here understood as a tangible experience of com-munity among partners, and argue that prostitution fails to achieve this good by incentivizing partners to mistreat each other. (...)
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  15. Praktischer Hylemorphismus: Ansätze zu einer Theorie praktischen Wissens im Anschluss an McDowell.Sascha Settegast - 2024 - In Jens Kertscher & Philipp Richter (eds.), Praktisches Wissen: Konzeptueller Rahmen und logische Geographie eines grundlegenden Begriffs der Praktischen Philosophie. Baden-Baden: Nomos. pp. 71-116.
    The paper aims to give an account of practical knowledge by outlining a hylomorphic and conceptualist account of intentional action in analogy to McDowell's conceptualist account of experience. On this view, practical concepts provide the ideal or formal structure that unifies a manifold of bodily movements into a single intentional action, and hence intentional actions are structured conceptually. -/- - §1 sets out the basic features of this view in contrast to a common dualistic or two-component view of practical knowledge, (...)
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  16.  29
    Corrugator activity confirms immediate negative affect in surprise.Sascha Topolinski & Fritz Strack - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6:108172.
    The emotion of surprise entails a complex of immediate responses, such as cognitive interruption, attention allocation to, and more systematic processing of the surprising stimulus. All these processes serve the ultimate function to increase processing depth and thus cognitively master the surprising stimulus. The present account introduces phasic negative affect as the underlying mechanism responsible for this switch in operating mode. Surprising stimuli are schema-discrepant and thus entail cognitive disfluency, which elicits immediate negative affect. This affect in turn works like (...)
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  17.  75
    Psychedelics Favour Understanding Rather Than Knowledge.Sascha Benjamin Fink - 2022 - Philosophy and the Mind Sciences 3.
    Chris Letheby argues in Philosophy of Psychedelics that psychedelics and knowledge are compatible. Psychedelics may cause new mental states, some of which can be states of knowledge. But the influence of psychedelics is largely psychological, and not all psychological processes are epistemic. So I want to build on the distinction between processes of discovery and processes of justification to criticise some aspects of Letheby’s epistemology of psychedelics. Unarguably, psychedelics can elicit processes of discovery. Yet, I hold, they can hardly contribute (...)
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  18. Das Relativismusproblem in der Tugendethik.Sascha Settegast - 2015 - In Dominic Harion & Peter Welsen (eds.), Der lange Weg der Interpretation. Perspektiven auf Paul Ricoeurs hermeneutische Phänomenologie. Regensburg: S. Roderer. pp. 37-70.
  19.  64
    Necker’s smile: Immediate affective consequences of early perceptual processes.Sascha Topolinski, Thorsten M. Erle & Rolf Reber - 2015 - Cognition 140 (C):1-13.
    Current theories assume that perception and affect are separate realms of the mind. In contrast, we argue that affect is a genuine online-component of perception instantaneously mirroring the success of different perceptual stages. Consequently, we predicted that the success (failure) of even very early and cognitively encapsulated basic visual Processing steps would trigger immediate positive (negative) affective responses. To test this assumption, simple visual stimuli that either allowed or obstructed early visual processing stages without participants being aware of this were (...)
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  20.  15
    Europa! Europa?: The Avant-Garde, Modernism and the Fate of a Continent.Sascha Bru, Jan Baetens, Benedikt Hjartarson, Peter Nicholls, Tania Ørum & Hubert van den Berg (eds.) - 2009 - Walter de Gruyter.
    Biographical note: Sascha Bru, Genth University, Belgium; Peter Nicholls, University of Sussex, UK.
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  21.  57
    Look who's talking! Varieties of ego-dissolution without paradox.Sascha Benjamin Fink - 2020 - Philosophy and the Mind Sciences 1 (I):1-36.
    How to model non-egoic experiences – mental events with phenomenal aspects that lack a felt self – has become an interesting research question. The main source of evidence for the existence of such non-egoic experiences are self-ascriptions of non-egoic experiences. In these, a person says about herself that she underwent an episode where she was conscious but lacked a feeling of self. Some interpret these as accurate reports, but this is questionable. Thomas Metzinger, Rocco Gennaro, and Charles Foster have hinted (...)
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  22.  33
    Functional neuroimaging of human vocalizations and affective speech.Sascha Frühholz, David Sander & Didier Grandjean - 2014 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (6):554-555.
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  23.  61
    Spheres: Towards a Techno-Social Ontology of Place/s.Sascha Rashof - 2018 - Theory, Culture and Society 35 (6):131-152.
    This review presents a systematic reading of Peter Sloterdijk’s Spheres trilogy, as part of a larger project to develop a techno-social ontology of place/s. Arguing against universalising theories of time and space, including Sloterdijk’s own conception of Spheres as ‘Being and Space’, this essay reads the trilogy through a ‘platial’ framework. While commenting on some of the shortcomings of the official English translations, the three volumes are being worked through methodically – Bubbles (micro spherology), Globes (macro spherology) and Foams (plural (...)
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  24. Fineness of grain and the hylomorphism of experience.Sascha Settegast - 2023 - Synthese 201 (6):1-29.
    A central objection to McDowell’s conceptualism about empirical content concerns the fine-grained phenomenology of experience, which supposedly entails that the actual content of experience cannot be matched in its particularity by our concepts. While McDowell himself has answered this objection in recourse to the possibility of demonstrative concepts, his reply has engendered a plethora of further objections and is widely considered inadequate. I believe that McDowell’s critics underestimate the true force of his reply because they tend to read unrecognized empiricist (...)
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  25.  19
    Corporate human rights responsibility and multinationality in emerging markets - a legal perspective for corporate governance and responsibility.Sascha Dominik Bachmann & Vijay Pereira - 2014 - International Journal of Business Governance and Ethics 9 (1):52.
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  26.  13
    Herausforderung Biomedizin: gesellschaftliche Deutung und soziale Praxis.Sascha Dickel, Martina Franzen & Christoph Kehl (eds.) - 2011 - Bielefeld: Transcript.
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  27.  10
    The phraseology of the contemporary fiction in the PhraseoBase’s corpora and applications.Sascha Diwersy, Laetitia Gonon, Vannina Goossens, Olivier Kraif, Iva Novakova, Julie Sorba & Ilaria Vidotto - 2021 - Corpus 22.
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  28.  23
    Size-topology correlations in disk packings: terminal bidispersity in order–disorder transitions.Sascha Hilgenfeldt - 2013 - Philosophical Magazine 93 (31-33):4018-4029.
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  29.  26
    From the Devil to the impostor: theological contributions to the idea of imposture.Sascha Salatowsky - 2018 - Intellectual History Review 28 (1):61-78.
    The philosophical allegation of imposture levelled by the Radical Enlightenment at Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad – the three founders of the monotheistic religions – has a complex theological history. Strange as it may sound, it is an idea closely connected to some of the “dangerous” debates conducted by scholastic theologians. Some of these theologians described divine omnipotence in a manner that prompted the vexed question of whether God can deceive us. Of course, no theologian doubted that God could and yet (...)
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  30.  14
    Unitarian materialism. Christoph Stegmann, Joseph Priestley, and their concepts of matter and soul.Sascha Salatowsky - 2020 - Intellectual History Review 30 (1):7-29.
    This paper describes the affinities between Socinian and Unitarian materialism. Based on different philosophical traditions, the Socinian Christoph Stegmann and the Unitarian Joseph Priestley developed a strong “system of materialism” which fit very well with Christian doctrines and the Bible. The conviction that the whole man is material and therefore mortal became the common basis for these radical thinkers. Stegmann formulated within the Aristotelian tradition a “non-reductive” materialism in which matter, not form, became the fundamental principle of all living things. (...)
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  31.  8
    Zwischen Hinrichtung und Duldung.Sascha Salatowsky - 2015 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 63 (1).
    The debates on toleration in the Confessional Age have not caught the interest of proponents of historical philosophy. Normally, they tend to locate the writings of Pierre Bayle or John Locke as the origins of modern philosophy. “Why?” one may ask. Perhaps the predominately religiously motivated discourse between theologians simply seems too remote. In this study, however, I attempt to demonstrate that a clear separation between theological and purely philosophical arguments was inconceivable in the 16th and 17th century. I will (...)
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  32.  17
    A forgotten people.Sascha Talmor - 1993 - History of European Ideas 17 (6):775-784.
  33.  16
    In Memorium.Sascha Talmor - 2004 - The European Legacy 9 (4):437.
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  34. (1 other version)Locke and Glanvill: A Comparison.Sascha Talmor - 1978 - The Locke Newsletter 9:101-120.
  35.  55
    Scepticism and belief in the supernatural.Sascha Talmor - 1980 - Heythrop Journal 21 (2):137–152.
    THE OBJECT OF THIS ARTICLE IS TO SHOW THAT SCEPTICISM IS NOT ALWAYS USED TO CHALLENGE BELIEFS: IT IS SOMETIMES USED TO "FOSTER" CERTAIN BELIEFS. GLANVILL’S SCEPTICISM REGARDING OUR KNOWLEDGE OF NATURAL CAUSES IS BASED ON THE WEAKNESS AND LIMITATIONS OF HUMAN UNDERSTANDING. BUT THIS ALLOWS HIM TO ARGUE FOR THE EQUAL POSSIBILITY OF BOTH NATURAL AND NON-NATURAL CAUSES, AND THUS OPENS THE DOOR TO BELIEF IN THE SUPERNATURAL. HUME, HOWEVER, WHOSE SCEPTICISM IS ALSO BASED ON THE LIMITATIONS OF THE (...)
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  36.  31
    The aesthetic judgment and its criteria of value.Sascha Talmor - 1969 - Mind 78 (309):102-115.
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  37.  20
    The bridge on the Drina.Sascha Talmor - 1995 - History of European Ideas 21 (2):247-260.
  38.  8
    Eratosthenes von Kyrene als Mathematiker und Philosoph.Ernst Paul Wolfer - 1954 - Groningen,: Noordhoff.
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  39.  8
    "Geschwätzige Philosophie": Thomas Hobbes' Kritik an Aristoteles.Benedikt Wolfers - 1991 - Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann.
  40.  15
    No Sex, Cursing and Politics: Adult Views of Inappropriate Facebook Posts.Loreen Wolfer - 2017 - Journal of Human Values 23 (2):116-128.
    With the increasing popularity of Facebook among adult users and the diverse social networks, especially based on age, that adults form on Facebook, it is important to examine what adult Facebook users have seen on Facebook and deem inappropriate. Previous studies only address college students and most of them involve hypothetical post-scenarios. This study addresses these gaps by examining 190 adult Facebook users from a northeastern Pennsylvania university and asking them to identify the top three types of posts they have (...)
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  41.  30
    Adaptation to recent conflict in the classical color-word Stroop-task mainly involves facilitation of processing of task-relevant information.Sascha Purmann & Stefan Pollmann - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9:119973.
    To process information selectively and to continuously fine-tune selectivity of information processing are important abilities for successful goal-directed behavior. One phenomenon thought to represent this fine-tuning are conflict adaptation effects in interference tasks, i.e. reduction of interference after an incompatible trial and when incompatible trials are frequent. The neurocognitive mechanisms of these effects are currently only partly understood and results from brainimaging studies so far are mixed. In our study we validate and extend recent findings by examining adaption to recent (...)
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  42.  66
    Commentary: The Concept of a Bewusstseinskultur.Sascha Benjamin Fink - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9:351152.
    Thomas Metzinger has diagnosed the need for a Bewusstseinskultur, a ‘consciousness culture’: a culturally implemented way in which a society as a whole engages with the dawning natural science of consciousness, with phenomenal experiences themselves, and with our increasing capability to manipulate them. A Bewusstseinskultur is an achievement, built by a society-wide orientation on empirical evidence, thorough scientific theorizing and rational deliberation. It affects a broad range of issues from animal ethics, drug policy, end-of-life-care, and robo-ethics to post-humanism. However, this (...)
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  43.  17
    Contextual interference processing during fast categorisations of facial expressions.Sascha Frühholz, Sina A. Trautmann-Lengsfeld & Manfred Herrmann - 2011 - Cognition and Emotion 25 (6):1045-1073.
    We examined interference effects of emotionally associated background colours during fast valence categorisations of negative, neutral and positive expressions. According to implicitly learned colour–emotion associations, facial expressions were presented with colours that either matched the valence of these expressions or not. Experiment 1 included infrequent non-matching trials and Experiment 2 a balanced ratio of matching and non-matching trials. Besides general modulatory effects of contextual features on the processing of facial expressions, we found differential effects depending on the valance of target (...)
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  44.  79
    The analysis of intuition: Processing fluency and affect in judgements of semantic coherence.Sascha Topolinski & Fritz Strack - 2009 - Cognition and Emotion 23 (8):1465-1503.
  45.  67
    Why Care beyond the Square? Classical and Extended Shapes of Oppositions in Their Application to „Introspective Disputes“.Sascha Benjamin Fink - 2016 - In Jean-Yves Béziau & Gianfranco Basti (eds.), The Square of Opposition: A Cornerstone of Thought (Studies in Universal Logic). Cham, Switzerland: Birkhäuser. pp. 325-337.
    So called “shapes of opposition”—like the classical square of opposition and its extensions—can be seen as graphical representations of the ways in which types of statements constrain each other in their possible truth values. As such, they can be used as a novel way of analysing the subject matter of disputes. While there have been great refinements and extensions of this logico-topological tool in the last years, the broad range of shapes of opposition are not widely known outside of a (...)
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  46. Introspective disputes deflated: The case for phenomenal variation.Sascha Benjamin Fink - 2018 - Philosophical Studies 175 (12):3165-3194.
    Sceptics vis-à-vis introspection often base their scepticism on ‘phenomenological disputes’, ‘introspective disagreement’, or ‘introspective disputes’ (Kriegel, 2007; Bayne and Spener, 2010; Schwitzgebel, 2011): introspectors massively diverge in their opinions about experiences, and there seems to be no method to resolve these issues. Sceptics take this to show that introspection lacks any epistemic merit. Here, I provide a list of paradigmatic examples, distill necessary and sufficient conditions for IDs, present the sceptical argument encouraged by IDs, and review the two main strategies (...)
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  47. Revolution Reconsidered: the Three Avant-Garde Traditions.Sascha Bru - 2023 - In Polona Tratnik (ed.), The European Avant-Garde – A Hundred Years Later. Boston: BRILL.
     
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  48. Prototyping evidence : how artifacts demonstrate technological futures.Sascha Dickel - 2022 - In Sarah Ehlers & Stefan Esselborn (eds.), Evidence in action between science and society: constructing, validating and contesting knowledge. New York, NY: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group.
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  49.  12
    Concerning'Topicalization in child language'.Sascha Felix - 1975 - Foundations of Language 13 (1):41-55.
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  50.  16
    Fromme Skepsis und die Ideologie der Philosophen: Methoden und Resultate der Philosophiekritik des Abū Hāmid al-Ġazālī.Sascha Jürgens - 2004 - In Steffen Greschonig & Christine S. Sing (eds.), Ideologien zwischen Lüge und Wahrheitsanspruch. Wiesbaden: Deutscher Universitäts-Verlag. pp. 27--47.
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