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Results for 'Alessandro Caviglia'

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  1.  13
    El don como principio crítico democratizador. Una reflexión sobre la crisis de la democracia.AlessandroCaviglia -2023 -Estudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 21:150-172.
    El texto versa sobre la crisis de la democracia y examina las posibilidades de la teoría de la reciprocidad para hacer frente a la misma. La teoría de la reciprocidad tiene un pie en el trabajo filosófico de Kant. Presentamos primero la relación entre crisis y crítica presente en su obra, para pasar a la rearticulación de la crítica en la teoría de la reciprocidad. Con ello, la democratización se presenta como un camino para hacer frente a la crisis. Puesto (...) que en tal terreno tienen un lugar central las redes de confianza y el don, examinaremos las capacidades que tales elementos ofrecen para hacer frente a la crisis. (shrink)
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  2.  16
    El constructivismo y la teoría moral kantiana. Un ensayo sobre la objetividad de las distinciones morales.AlessandroCaviglia -2022 -Estudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 20:33-53.
    El presente trabajo tiene como objetivo esclarecer la relación del constructivismo y la filosofía moral kantiana. En tal sentido comienza mostrando qué es el constructivismo moral y cómo es una posición en metaética que busca esclarecer la cuestión de la objetividad de los juicios morales de una mejor manera que las posiciones tradicionales en el campo: el realismo y el antirrealismo morales. Seguidamente aborda el constructivismo moral kantiano por ser una de las versiones más desarrolladas y estudiadas. De esta manera (...) se aclarará la relación que guarda el constructivismo con la crítica de la razón, la razón práctica y la autonomía moral de la persona. Finalmente, se presentan las conclusiones más relevantes del estudio. (shrink)
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  3.  266
    A Noetic Account of Explanation in Mathematics.William D’Alessandro &Ellen Lehet -forthcoming -Philosophical Quarterly.
    We defend a noetic account of intramathematical explanation. On this view, a piece of mathematics is explanatory just in case it produces understanding of an appropriate type. We motivate the view by presenting some appealing features of noeticism. We then discuss and criticize the most prominent extant version of noeticism, due to Inglis and Mejía Ramos, which identifies explanatory understanding with the possession of well-organized cognitive schemas. Finally, we present a novel noetic account. On our view, explanatory understanding arises from (...) meeting specific explanatory objectives. We defend a cluster-concept account of explanatory objectives and identify four important subfamilies within the relevant network of resemblance relations. The resulting view is objectivist (in the sense that it takes explanatory success to be a matter of observer-independent fact), broader in scope than why-question-based accounts, compatible with empirical findings on experts’ explanatory judgments, and capable of generalizing (with appropriate provisos) to scientific explanation as a whole. It thus fulfills Friedman’s half-century-old demand for a general and objectivist theory which accounts for the link between explanation and understanding. (shrink)
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  4.  938
    Large Language Models and Biorisk.William D’Alessandro,Harry R. Lloyd &Nathaniel Sharadin -2023 -American Journal of Bioethics 23 (10):115-118.
    We discuss potential biorisks from large language models (LLMs). AI assistants based on LLMs such as ChatGPT have been shown to significantly reduce barriers to entry for actors wishing to synthesize dangerous, potentially novel pathogens and chemical weapons. The harms from deploying such bioagents could be further magnified by AI-assisted misinformation. We endorse several policy responses to these dangers, including prerelease evaluations of biomedical AIs by subject-matter experts, enhanced surveillance and lab screening procedures, restrictions on AI training data, and access (...) controls on biomedical AI. We conclude with a suggestion about future research directions in bioethics. (shrink)
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  5.  771
    Deontology and Safe Artificial Intelligence.William D’Alessandro -forthcoming -Philosophical Studies:1-24.
    The field of AI safety aims to prevent increasingly capable artificially intelligent systems from causing humans harm. Research on moral alignment is widely thought to offer a promising safety strategy: if we can equip AI systems with appropriate ethical rules, according to this line of thought, they'll be unlikely to disempower, destroy or otherwise seriously harm us. Deontological morality looks like a particularly attractive candidate for an alignment target, given its popularity, relative technical tractability and commitment to harm-avoidance principles. I (...) argue that the connection between moral alignment and safe behavior is more tenuous than many have hoped. In general, AI systems can possess either of these properties in the absence of the other, and we should favor safety when the two conflict. In particular, advanced AI systems governed by standard versions of deontology need not be especially safe. (shrink)
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  6.  154
    Quantum metametaphysics.Alessandro Torza -2021 -Synthese 199 (3-4):1-25.
    Say that metaphysical indeterminacy occurs just when there is a fact such that neither it nor its negation obtains. The aim of this work is to shed light on the issue of whether orthodox quantum mechanics provides any evidence of metaphysical indeterminacy by discussing the logical, semantic, and broadly methodological presuppositions of the debate. I argue that the dispute amounts to a verbal disagreement between classical and quantum logicians, given Eli Hirsch’s account of substantivity; but that it need not be (...) so if Ted Sider’s naturalness-based account of substantivity is adopted instead. Given the latter approach, can anything be said in order to tip the balance of the dispute either way? Some prima facie reasonable constraints on naturalness entail that the classicist is right, and the quantum world is therefore determinate. Nevertheless, there are reasons for weakening those constraints, to the effect that the dispute remains very much open. Finally, I discuss alternative accounts of metaphysical indeterminacy, and argue that they are unsuitable for framing the quantum indeterminacy debate. (shrink)
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  7.  403
    Mature Intuition and Mathematical Understanding.William D'Alessandro &Irma Stevens -forthcoming -Journal of Mathematical Behavior.
    Mathematicians often describe the importance of well-developed intuition to productive research and successful learning. But neither education researchers nor philosophers interested in epistemic dimensions of mathematical practice have yet given the topic the sustained attention it deserves. The trouble is partly that intuition in the relevant sense lacks a usefully clear characterization, so we begin by offering one: mature intuition, we say, is the capacity for fast, fluent, reliable and insightful inference with respect to some subject matter. We illustrate the (...) role of mature intuition in mathematical practice with an assortment of examples, including data from a sequence of clinical interviews in which a student improves upon initially misleading covariational intuitions. Finally, we show how the study of intuition can yield insights for philosophers and education theorists. First, it contributes to a longstanding debate in epistemology by undermining epistemicism, the view that an agent’s degree of objectual understanding is determined exclusively by their knowledge, beliefs and credences. We argue on the contrary that intuition can contribute directly and independently to understanding. Second, we identify potential pedagogical avenues towards the development of mature intuition, highlighting strategies including adding imagery, developing associations, establishing confidence and generalizing concepts. (shrink)
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  8.  200
    I Contain Multitudes: A Typology of Digital Doppelgängers.William D’Alessandro,Trenton W. Ford &Michael Yankoski -2025 -American Journal of Bioethics 25 (2):132-134.
  9.  123
    Structural Pluralism.Alessandro Torza -2021 - In James Miller,The Language of Ontology. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 162-180.
    The chapter introduces and defends structural pluralism: the view that there is a plurality of ways of carving nature at the joints. The first part of the chapter argues that structural pluralism is able to meet a challenge to Ted Sider’s monism about joint-carving. The second part spells out the metaontological consequences of adopting structural pluralism, and shows that the view is compatible with a moderate form of deflationism about ontological disagreement. The third and last part fleshes out a number (...) of consequences of adopting structural pluralism, and suggests further applications of that view, including a reassessment of an influential argument against vague existence. (shrink)
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  10.  710
    Unrealistic Models in Mathematics.William D'Alessandro -2023 -Philosophers' Imprint 23 (#27).
    Models are indispensable tools of scientific inquiry, and one of their main uses is to improve our understanding of the phenomena they represent. How do models accomplish this? And what does this tell us about the nature of understanding? While much recent work has aimed at answering these questions, philosophers' focus has been squarely on models in empirical science. I aim to show that pure mathematics also deserves a seat at the table. I begin by presenting two cases: Cramér’s random (...) model of the prime numbers and the function field model of the integers. These cases show that mathematicians, like empirical scientists, rely on unrealistic models to gain understanding of complex phenomena. They also have important implications for some much-discussed theses about scientific understanding. First, modeling practices in mathematics confirm that one can gain understanding without obtaining an explanation. Second, these cases undermine the popular thesis that unrealistic models confer understanding by imparting counterfactual knowledge. (shrink)
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  11.  11
    Modulation of Response Times During Processing of Emotional Body Language.Alessandro Botta,Giovanna Lagravinese,Marco Bove,Alessio Avenanti &Laura Avanzino -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12:616995.
    The investigation of how humans perceive and respond to emotional signals conveyed by the human body has been for a long time secondary compared with the investigation of facial expressions and emotional scenes recognition. The aims of this behavioral study were to assess the ability to process emotional body postures and to test whether motor response is mainly driven by the emotional content of the picture or if it is influenced by motor resonance. Emotional body postures and scenes (IAPS) divided (...) into three clusters (fear, happiness, and neutral) were shown to 25 healthy subjects (13 males, mean age ± SD: 22.3 ± 1.8 years) in a three-alternative forced choice task. Subjects were asked to recognize the emotional content of the pictures by pressing one of three keys as fast as possible in order to estimate response times (RTs). The rating of valence and arousal was also performed. We found shorter RTs for fearful body postures as compared with happy and neutral postures. In contrast, no differences across emotional categories were found for the IAPS stimuli. Analysis on valence and arousal and the subsequent item analysis showed an excellent reliability of the two sets of images used in the experiment. Our results show that fearful body postures are rapidly recognized and processed, probably thanks to the automatic activation of a series of central nervous system structures orchestrating the defensive threat reactions, strengthening and supporting previous neurophysiological and behavioral findings in body language processing. (shrink)
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  12.  17
    Theology and Science in Copernicus’ Universe.Alessandro Giostra -2021 -Scientia et Fides 9 (1):131-147.
    The publication of Copernicus’ On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres marked the beginning of the Scientific Revolution. Christian doctrine played a key role for the emergence of the scientific turning point, that brought about the transition from a qualitative to a quantitative approach to natural phenomena. Although the Polish scientist was not a philosopher in the ordinary sense of the term, he shared with many other protagonists of modern science the idea of the universe as mathematical harmony created by (...) God. In this sense, modern scientific thought completed the development that took place since the Scholastic Age. In the historical period between the XII and the XVII century, indeed, Christianity proved a fundamental factor for a considerable growth in natural knowledge. (shrink)
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  13.  26
    Constructional associations trump lexical associations in processing valency coercion.Alessandro Lenci,Florent Perek &Lucia Busso -2021 -Cognitive Linguistics 32 (2):287-318.
    The paper investigates the interaction of lexical and constructional meaning in valency coercion processing, and the effect of (in)compatibility between verb and construction for its successful resolution (Perek, Florent & Martin Hilpert. 2014. Constructional tolerance: Cross-linguistic differences in the acceptability of non-conventional uses of constructions. Constructions and Frames 6(2). 266–304; Yoon, Soyeon. 2019. Coercion and language change: A usage-based approach. Linguistic Research 36(1). 111–139). We present an online experiment on valency coercion (the first one on Italian), by means of a (...) semantic priming protocol inspired by Johnson, Matt A. & Adele E. Goldberg. 2013. Evidence for automatic accessing of constructional meaning: Jabberwocky sentences prime associated verbs. Language & Cognitive Processes 28(10). 1439–1452. We test priming effects with a lexical decision task which presents different target verbs preceded by coercion instances of four Italian argument structure constructions, which serve as primes. Three types of verbs serve as target: lexical associate (LA), construction associate (CA), and unrelated (U) verbs. LAs are semantically similar to the main verb of the prime sentence, whereas CAs are prototypical verbs associated to the prime construction. U verbs serve as a mean of comparison for the two categories of interest. Results confirm that processing of valency coercion requires an integration of both lexical and constructional semantics. Moreover, compatibility is also found to influence coercion resolution. Specifically, constructional priming is primary and independent from compatibility. A secondary priming effect for LA verbs is also found, which suggests a contribution of lexical semantics in coercion resolution – especially for low-compatibility coercion coinages. (shrink)
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  14.  22
    Urban AI depends: the need for (wider) urban strategies.Alessandro Aurigi -2023 -AI and Society 38 (3):1245-1247.
  15.  30
    Improvisation and ontology of art.Alessandro Bertinetto -2020 -Rivista di Estetica 73:10-29.
    I aim at explaining the sense in which the notion of improvisation is important for the ontology of art. In the first part, I criticize the widespread assumption of the repeatability of a musical work without transformation of its identity and defend Conversational Improvisational Emergentism (CIE) as the specific contribution of improvisation to musical ontology: in an improvisation, values and meanings of what has been played constrain what follows and are themselves retroactively (trans)formed by what follows; likewise, the performing interpretations (...) of musical works and traditions reinvent their meanings and evaluation criteria, responding to past interpretations and opening up (as well as binding) possibilities for future interpretations. In the second part, I extend the scope of my investigation to art more generally. By critiquing the principle of «no evaluation without identification» and referring to Peter Lamarque’s and Joseph Margolis’ views about art ontology, I propose a transformative theory of artworks, which is based on the thesis of the improvisational “nature” of artistic practices (a thesis that I conceive of as a particular form of CIE). Its core point is that evaluative and performative interpretations of artworks (re)shape creatively, and retroactively, the meanings and the flexible identities of artworks. Accordingly, the artworks’ meanings and identities emerge (and are (trans)formed) through the cultural improvisational interactions in which artworks participate. (shrink)
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  16.  16
    L'emergentismo nell'arte.Alessandro Bertinetto -2019 -Philosophy Kitchen 11 (7):177-191.
    Following suggestions by Joseph Margolis and Richard K. Sawyer, in this paper I apply the notion of emergence to the philosophy of art. I will argue that the interpretation of works of art cannot be reduced either to the perceptive experience of the manifest qualities of the art object, nor to the identification of the author’s intentions, nor to the understanding of the practices of the historic context of production. I suggest, instead, that the identity of a work of art (...) emerges, on the one hand, from the artist’s interactions with forms, materials and artistic genres and, on the other, from the relationships between the artwork and the changing contexts of its reception. Moreover, I maintain that artistic categories are formed through artistic practices and that, therefore, they cannot be assumed as undisputable criteria for the identification and evaluation of artworks. I will thus argue that the emerging normativity of improvisational interaction in the performing art provides a suitable model to account for the “dynamic” ontological identity of artistic phenomena. (shrink)
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  17.  13
    Muscle Synergies in Patients With Multiple Sclerosis Reveal Demand-Specific Alterations in the Modular Organization of Locomotion.Lars Janshen,Alessandro Santuz &Adamantios Arampatzis -2021 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
    For patients with multiple sclerosis, deficits in gait significantly reduce the quality of life. Using the concept of muscle synergies, this study investigated the modular organization of motor control during level and inclined walking in MS patients compared with healthy participants to identify the potential demand-specific adjustments in motor control in MSP. We hypothesized a widening of the time-dependent activation patterns in MSP to increase the overlap of temporally-adjacent muscle synergies, especially during inclined walking, as a strategy to increase the (...) robustness of motor control, thus compensating pathology-related deficits. We analyzed temporal gait parameters and muscle synergies from myoelectric signals of 13 ipsilateral leg muscles using non-negative matrix factorization. Compared with HP, MSP demonstrated a widening in the time-dependent coefficients, as well as altered relative muscle contribution, in certain synergies during level and inclined walking. Moreover, inclined walking revealed a demand-specific adjustment in the modular organization in MSP, resulting in an extra synergy compared with HP. This further increased the overlap of temporally-adjacent muscle synergies to provide sufficient robustness in motor control to accomplish the more demanding motor task while coping with pathology-related motor deficits during walking. (shrink)
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  18. Per un programma di filosofia del diritto.Alessandro Levi -1905 - Torino [etc.]: Fratelli Bocca.
     
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  19.  1
    Saggi di teoria del diritto.Alessandro Levi -1924 - Bologna,: N. Zanichelli.
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  20.  18
    Hacking Hacked! The Life Cycles of Digital Innovation.Alessandro Delfanti &Johan Söderberg -2015 -Science, Technology, and Human Values 40 (5):793-798.
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  21.  20
    Assistive Technologies in Dementia Care: An Updated Analysis of the Literature.Alessandro Pappadà,Rabih Chattat,Ilaria Chirico,Marco Valente &Giovanni Ottoboni -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Objectives: Technology can assist and support both people with dementia and caregivers. Recently, technology has begun to embed remote components. Timely with respect to the pandemic, the present work reviews the most recent literature on technology in dementia contexts together with the newest studies about technological support published until October 2020. The final aim is to provide a synthesis of the timeliest evidence upon which clinical and non-clinical decision-makers can rely to make choices about technology in the case of further (...) pandemic waves.Methods: A review of reviews was performed alongside a review of the studies run during the first pandemic wave. PsycInfo, CINAHL, and PubMed-online were the databases inspected for relevant papers published from January 2010.Results: The search identified 420 articles, 30 of which were reviews and nine of which were new studies meeting the inclusion criteria. Studies were first sorted according to the target population, then summarized thematically in a narrative synthesis. The studies targeting technologies for PWD were categorized as follows: monitoring and security purposes, sustaining daily life, and therapeutic interventions. Each category showed potential benefits. Differently, the interventions for caregivers were classified as informative, psycho-education programs, psychosocial-supportive, therapeutic, and cognitive/physical training. Benefits to mental health, skills learning, and social aspects emerged.Conclusions: The evidence shows that technology is well-accepted and can support PWD and caregivers to bypass physical and environmental problems both during regular times and during future pandemic waves. Nevertheless, the lack of a common methodological background is revealed by this analysis. Further and more standardized research is necessary to improve the implementation of technologies in everyday life while respecting the necessary personalization. (shrink)
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  22.  24
    Charles S. Peirce on Dialogic Form.Alessandro Topa -2020 -Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 56 (4):475-520.
  23. Immanenza e trascendenza nella filosofia bruniana: Spaventa, Gentile, Renda.Sandro Mancini &Alessandro Musco -2009 - In Alberto Samonà,Giordano Bruno nella cultura mediterranea e siciliana dal '600 al nostro tempo: atti della Giornata nazionale di studi, Villa Zito, Palermo, 1 marzo 2008. Palermo: Officina di studi medievali.
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  24.  49
    The Dialectics of the Talmud and the Kabbalah.George Vajda,Alessandro Ferace &Nelda Cantarella -1967 -Diogenes 15 (59):63-79.
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  25.  502
    Transferable and Fixable Proofs.William D'Alessandro -forthcoming -Episteme:1-12.
    A proof P of a theorem T is transferable when a typical expert can become convinced of T solely on the basis of their prior knowledge and the information contained in P. Easwaran has argued that transferability is a constraint on acceptable proof. Meanwhile, a proof P is fixable when it’s possible for other experts to correct any mistakes P contains without having to develop significant new mathematics. Habgood-Coote and Tanswell have observed that some acceptable proofs are both fixable and (...) in need of fixing, in the sense that they contain nontrivial mistakes. The claim that acceptable proofs must be transferable seems quite plausible. The claim that some acceptable proofs need fixing seems plausible too. Unfortunately, these attractive suggestions stand in tension with one another. I argue that the transferability requirement is the problem. Acceptable proofs need only satisfy a weaker requirement I call “corrigibility”. I explain why, despite appearances, the corrigibility standard is preferable to stricter alternatives. (shrink)
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  26.  30
    Agricultural policies and the capitalist State.Alessandro Bonanno -1987 -Agriculture and Human Values 4 (2-3):40-46.
    The paper examines the social contradictions generated by patterns of reproduction of accumulation of capital, social legitimation and by present agricultural policies fostered by the State. Through a scrutiny of the role of the State in capitalism it is argued that agricultural overproduction, the widening of the gap between small and large farms, the fiscal crisis of the State associated with agricultural programs and waste of resources are the outcomes of an attempt on the part of the State to promote (...) simultaneously accumulation and legitimation. The possibility of enhancing accumulation and maintaining legitimation clashes with the diverse socio-economic demands associated with the present agricultural production system and the general viability of the social structure as a whole. (shrink)
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  27.  14
    Neuromechanics of Dynamic Balance Tasks in the Presence of Perturbations.Victor Munoz-Martel,Alessandro Santuz,Sebastian Bohm &Adamantios Arampatzis -2021 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
    Understanding the neuromechanical responses to perturbations in humans may help to explain the reported improvements in stability performance and muscle strength after perturbation-based training. In this study, we investigated the effects of perturbations, induced by unstable surfaces, on the mechanical loading and the modular organization of motor control in the lower limb muscles during lunging forward and backward. Fifteen healthy adults performed 50 forward and 50 backward lunges on stable and unstable ground. Ground reaction forces, joint kinematics, and the electromyogram (...) of 13 lower limb muscles were recorded. We calculated the resultant joint moments and extracted muscle synergies from the stepping limb. We found sparse alterations in the resultant joint moments and EMG activity, indicating a little if any effect of perturbations on muscle mechanical loading. The time-dependent structure of the muscle synergy responsible for the stabilization of the body was modified in the perturbed lunges by a shift in the center of activity and a widening. Moreover, in the perturbed backward lunge, the synergy related to the body weight acceptance was not present. The found modulation of the modular organization of motor control in the unstable condition and related minor alteration in joint kinetics indicates increased control robustness that allowed the participants to maintain functionality in postural challenging settings. Triggering specific modulations in motor control to regulate robustness in the presence of perturbations may be associated with the reported benefits of perturbation-based training. (shrink)
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  28.  29
    The meanings of the sigh. Vocal expression along the route of our desires.Isabella Poggi,Alessandro Ansani &Christian Cecconi -2019 -Lebenswelt. Aesthetics and Philosophy of Experience 13.
    The work defines the sigh as a type of breath expressing or communicating specific physical or mental internal states. To investigate the meanings of the sigh, the paper presents analyses of written and oral corpora, finding out that it may express different emotions like boredom or frustration, but also positive meanings like self-encouragement; then it focuses on the use of sighs in political debates. Finally a perception study shows participants’ agreement on the meanings of sighs in terms of valence and (...) arousal. These results lay the bases for future studies to set a clearer distinction between sighs and other vocalisations as well as other effects on its meaning caused by the combination with other body signals like rolling eyes or shaking head. (shrink)
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  29.  8
    Comparare: una riflessione tra le discipline.Giorgio Resta,Alessandro Somma &Vincenzo Zeno-Zencovich (eds.) -2020 - Milano: Mimesis.
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  30.  176
    On maximal intermediate predicate constructive logics.Alessandro Avellone,Camillo Fiorentini,Paolo Mantovani &Pierangelo Miglioli -1996 -Studia Logica 57 (2-3):373 - 408.
    We extend to the predicate frame a previous characterization of the maximal intermediate propositional constructive logics. This provides a technique to get maximal intermediate predicate constructive logics starting from suitable sets of classically valid predicate formulae we call maximal nonstandard predicate constructive logics. As an example of this technique, we exhibit two maximal intermediate predicate constructive logics, yet leaving open the problem of stating whether the two logics are distinct. Further properties of these logics will be also investigated.
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  31.  21
    Why do we believe that an atom is colourless? Reflections about the teaching of the particle model.Alessandro Albanese &Matilde Vicentini -1997 -Science & Education 6 (3):251-261.
  32.  179
    Arte como desrealización.Alessandro Bertinetto -2006 -Daimon: Revista Internacional de Filosofía 39:175-185.
    The paper recognizes the failure of contemporary non-aesthetic theories of art and aims at recovering the phenomenological notion of derealization – which re-emerges in A. Dantoʼs idea of the ʻbracketting effectʼ of art –, in order to explain art and art-experience. The main point is that art makes us free from the ʻreal worldʼ through an act of derealization that leads to the establishment of possible or fictional worlds different from the one we live in. Artworks are primarly imaginary, unreal (...) objects, due to the fact that they interest us only for its appearance and as appearance. Therefore, art cannot be understood without the frame of a particular kind of experience that we can understand in terms of Kantʼs notion of disinterestedness. This notion is still productive to understand why art has a certain power to free us from the needs of reality, although through art we do have profound views of certain aspects of reality and our life. Some objections against Kantʼs theory of aesthetic disinterestedness are discussed and refused, in order to understand the transcendental significance of the aesthetic theory of art. (shrink)
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  33.  22
    Forms and Models of Contagion according to Albert the Great. Pestilence, Leprosy, the Basilisk, the Menstruating Woman, and Fascination.Alessandro Palazzo -2023 -Quaestio 23:235-265.
    It has been argued that the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries were a crucial period in the medieval development of the idea of contagion. Theologians and physicians cooperated in devising a conceptual model based on medical literature (Hippocratico-Galenic and Avicennian) and formulated primarily to explain the origin, transmission, and development of contagious diseases, but that was flexible enough to be applied to a number of other different phenomena (the communication of sin and vices, love sickness, fascination, etc.). This article explores the (...) ways in which Albert the Great contributed to the formation of this broad and highly articulated notion of contagion. First, he provided a systematic analysis of the mechanisms of pathogenesis and transmission of contagious diseases (in particular, pestilences and leprosy). Moreover, his interests encompassed several different forms of contagion, including the powers of stones (e.g., the attractive virtue of the magnet) and animals, the influences of the woman’s body and mind (mulier menstruata and vetula), fascination. Albert also provided different models for the explanation of the “contagious influence” (mechanical explanation based on physical contact, the Avicennian theory of psychosomatic transformations, the Avicennian doctrine of the power of the soul over external bodies, spiritual transmission of sins). As a result of his investigation into the mechanisms of disease transmission, air contamination, noxious influences, and fascination, Albert came to problematize the usual idea of natural causality based on the principle of contact between substances, and to test the potentials and limits of action at-a-distance. In particular, the present paper will examine Albert’s views on some of the phenomena explained through the concept of contagion: pestilences, leprosy, the basilisk, the menstruating woman, and fascination. (shrink)
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  34. Hannah Arendt : La persona, l'effettività e la terzietà.Alessandro Argiroffi -2014 - In Alessandro Argiroffi & Abelardo Rivera Llano,Persona, imputabilità, ermeneutica. Torino: G. Giappichelli Editore.
     
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  35.  7
    Persona, imputabilità, ermeneutica.Alessandro Argiroffi &Abelardo Rivera Llano (eds.) -2014 - Torino: G. Giappichelli Editore.
    L’ambientazione dell’itinerario che qui si propone rinvia ad un’ermeneutica del diritto che concentra l’attenzione non su un settore – costituito da metodologie e principi ai quali attingere per la soluzione di conflitti nella prassi –, ma su una riflessione rigorosa. Tale ordine di pensiero muove dalla filosofia aristotelica del De Interpretatione, sino ai problemi della globalizzazione, trattati interrogandosi se l’ermeneutica occupi o meno un posto prioritario nel complesso universum giuridico. Si prende atto che l’arte dell’interpretazione appare sostituibile con un insieme (...) di teorie argomentative che, con il loro management, rischiano di banalizzare i concetti della responsabilità personale nella vita quotidiana dell’amministrazione della giustizia. (shrink)
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  36.  37
    A Correspondence between Temporal Description Logics.Alessandro Artale &Carsten Lutz -2004 -Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics 14 (1-2):209-233.
    In this paper, we investigate the relationship between two decidable interval-based temporal description logics that have been proposed in the literature, T L-ALCF and ALCF. Although many aspects of these two logics are quite similar, the two logics suggest two rather different paradigms for representing temporal conceptual knowledge. In this paper, we exhibit a reduction from T L-ALCF concepts to ALCF concepts that serves two purposes: first, it nicely illustrates the relationship between the two knowledge representation paradigms; and second, it (...) provides a tight PSPACE upper bound for T L-ALCF concept satisfiabiliy, whose complexity was previously unknown. (shrink)
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  37.  19
    Il Pragmatismo: Una Questione Aperta.Alessandro Pagnini &H. Putnam -1993 -Philosophical Quarterly 43 (173):548.
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  38.  28
    Match Point di Woody Allen.Andrea Panzavolta &Alessandro Tiberio -2006 -Iride: Filosofia e Discussione Pubblica 19 (2):385-396.
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  39.  46
    Leibniz on Animal Generation.Alessandro Becchi &Osvaldo Ottaviani -2020 -The Leibniz Review 30:63-106.
    We edited and translated a so far unpublished manuscript ("Sur la generation des insectes et d'autres petits animaux") drafted by Leibniz in 1714. The text is written on the same paper of the first draft of the "Monadology" and, as we show, there is a connection between these two texts of the late Leibniz, as far as in the "Monadology" , the rejection of the traditional theory of the spontaneous generation of small animals (like insects) is considered by Leibniz as (...) a posteriori confirmation of his preformist theory. In addition to that, this piece shows that Leibniz was deeply influenced by the experimental results in biology and natural sciences, and, especially, by the works of Italian scientits of the Galilean tradition, like Francesco Redi and Antonio Vallisneri. (shrink)
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  40. Fra Nañoli e Consenza: appunti per una geografia della "Historia naturalis" da Antonio Telesio a Marco Aurelio Severino.Alessandro Ottaviani -2012 -Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana 8 (1):32-43.
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  41.  4
    Il desiderio nel Medioevo.Alessandro Palazzo (ed.) -2014 - Roma: Edizioni di storia e letteratura.
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  42.  29
    La sapientia nel De summo bono di Ulrico di Strasburgo.Alessandro Palazzo -2005 -Quaestio 5 (1):495-512.
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  43.  14
    Prophecy and prophets in the Middle Ages.Alessandro Palazzo &Anna Rodolfi (eds.) -2020 - Firenze: SISMEL - Edizioni del Galluzzo.
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  44.  36
    The Organism-Centered Approach to Cultural Evolution.Filip Buekens,Alessandro Salice,Luciano Floridi,Bert Baumgaertner &Filippo Domaneschi -2016 -Topoi 35 (1):283-290.
    In this paper, we distinguish two different approaches to cultural evolution. One approach is meme-centered, the other organism-centered. We argue that in situations in which the meme- and organism-centered approaches are competing alternatives, the organism-centered approach is in many ways superior. Furthermore, the organism-centered approach can go a long way toward understanding the evolution of institutions. Although the organism-centered approach is preferable for a broad class of situations, we do leave room for super-organismic or sub-organismic explanations of some cultural phenomena.
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  45.  19
    Spending too little in hard times.Alessandro Del Ponte &Peter DeScioli -2019 -Cognition 183 (C):139-151.
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  46.  19
    The cyclicity of a cubic system.Viktor Levandovskyy,Alessandro Logar &Valery G. Romanovski -2009 - In Krzysztof Stefanski,Open Systems and Information Dynamics. World scientific publishing company. pp. 16--04.
  47.  15
    Gli scomparsi.PaoloAlessandro Mattiello -2010 -Rivista di Estetica 45:167-189.
    How is it possible, for those who were not “under that sky of blood”, to speak about the Shoah without outraging again, even involuntarily, millions of victims?What are we speaking of, when we mention the Shoah? Starting from these two questions, the paper approaches Treblinka, the biggest factory of “pure” death set up by the Aktion Reinhard, with the purpose of understanding, through the words of Yitzhak Arad, a survivor who became a historian, and those of other witnesses, dead or (...) alive, interviewed by Claude Lanzmann, the reality of the concentration camps. (shrink)
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  48. Il negozio giuridico.Alessandro Passerin D'Entrèves -1934 - Torino,: Tip. R. Gayet.
     
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  49.  34
    The "What" problem: the emergence of new goals in a robot.MarcoAlessandro Villamira -unknown
    - Biological and cognitive systems have the capa- bility of developing new goals during phylogenesis of species or during ontogenesis of single individuals. On the other hand, current artificial cognitive systems focus on how achieving a given fixed set of hard-wired goals. They search an optimal solution of a problem, given a set of goals and a set of optimiza- tion criteria. They look for “how” to achieve a given goal. Natural agents develop new goals in order to cope with (...) par- tially unknown and ever changing environment. They must find “what” they want to achieve and not only “how”. The development of new goals on the basis of the interaction with the environment is here defined the “what” problem. The de- velopment of a collection of goals permits to redefine the con- cept of Umwelt in what could be considered the teleological Umwelt of an agent. The objective of this paper is twofold: i) to outline the “what” problem and ii) to describe a robotic archi- tecture capable of addressing it. (shrink)
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  50.  83
    Distributed neural blackboards could be more attractive.André Grüning &Alessandro Treves -2006 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (1):79-80.
    The target article demonstrates how neurocognitive modellers should not be intimidated by challenges such as Jackendoff's and should explore neurally plausible implementations of linguistic constructs. The next step is to take seriously insights offlered by neuroscience, including the robustness allowed by analogue computation with distributed representations and the power of attractor dynamics in turning analogue into nearly discrete operations.
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