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Results for 'Claus-Peter Leonhardt'

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  1.  58
    Preface.Claus-PeterLeonhardt -1994 -World Futures 42 (3):3-4.
  2.  43
    Hilbert's epsilon as an operator of indefinite committed choice.Claus-Peter Wirth -2008 -Journal of Applied Logic 6 (3):287-317.
  3.  3
    Bedeutung und Bedeutsamkeit: Untersuchungen zur phänomenologischen Bedeutungstheorie.Claus-Peter Becke -1994 - Herzberg: Verlag Traugott Bautz.
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  4.  21
    Nachruf auf Ernst J. Grube (1932–2011).Claus-Peter Haase -2014 -Der Islam: Journal of the History and Culture of the Middle East 91 (1):1-5.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Der Islam Jahrgang: 91 Heft: 1 Seiten: 1-5.
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  5.  8
    Heideggers Umweltanalyse in Sein und Zeit.Claus-Peter Becke -2024 -Heidegger Studies 40 (1):301-320.
  6.  40
    A contradiction between matter and form: on the significance of the production of relative surplus value in the dynamic of terminal crisis.ClausPeter Ortlieb &Josh Robinson -unknown
    Building on the insights of Capital I, and dispatching common liberal misunderstandings of those insights,ClausPeter Ortlieb makes the case for what mainstream economists euphemistically call “secular stagnation”: that is, an economic crisis that cannot be resolved by economic means.
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  7.  18
    (1 other version)Debatte: Medienwissenschaft ohne Medien | Medienwissenschaft ohne Medien? vs. Postmedial.Claus Pias &Katrin Peters -2020 -Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 11 (2020).
    Der Beitrag vonClaus Pias geht von zwei Beobachtungen aus: einem Zurücktreten des Medienbegriffs innerhalb medienwissenschaftlicher Forschung und eines Desinteresses sogenannter ›Digitalisierung‹ ihr gegenüber. Er untersucht, inwiefern Medientheorie (von McLuhan und Kittler bis zu den sogenannten Digital Humanities) durch einen starken Medienbegriff an der Herausbildung von Zeitsemantiken und Narrativen von ›Digitalisierung‹ beteiligt war und von ihnen profitiert hat. Als Konsequenz fordert Pias zu medienwissenschaftlicher Grundlagenforschung auf, die mit einer strategischen Revision und Aktualisierung von ›Medien‹ als Begriff und Gegenstand einhergeht. (...) Der Beitrag von Kathrin Peters stimmt mit dieser Lagebeschreibung nur teilweise überein. Die Skepsis gegenüber den Zukunfts- und Dringlichkeitsrhetoriken gegenwärtiger Digitalisierungsoffensiven wird von ihr geteilt, dass allerdings vor allem eine Medienwissenschaft des ›medientechnischen a priori‹ eine Antwort auf den gegenwarts- und an- wendungsfixierten Digitalisierungsdiskurs liefern könnte, erscheint Peters als zu kurz gegriffen. Andere medienwissenschaftliche Ausrichtungen sind dazu ebenso in der Lage: medienwissenschaftliche Analysen zu Kolonialität und Postkolonialität, feministische, gen- der- und queertheoretische Fragestellungen, eine medienwissenschaftlich informiert Wissenschaftsforschung und Affekttheorie – um nur einige zu nennen. Es geht um Konzepte von Medienwissenschaft als Fragestellung, die ihre Gegenstände in den verschiedensten Bereichen hervorbringen, dabei aber zugleich als Mittel und Mittler immer wieder unsichtbar werden. Debate: Media Studies without MediaClaus Pias’ article starts out from two points of observation: a recession of the term media within the field of media studies and a dis- interest of the so-called digitalization in this particular term. Pias examines the impact media theory (ranging from McLuhan and Kittler to the so-called Digital Humanities) had on the development of time semantics and the narratives of ›digitalization‹ due to the use of a strong media term, and how media theory profited from it. mAs a result, Pias calls for establishing basis research in media studies, going hand in hand with a strategic revision and update of media, as a term as well as a subject. In her article, Kathrin Peters only partially agrees with this evaluation. She shares the scepticism concerning future-rhetoric as well as priority-rhetoric, both featuring heavily in current digital offensives; however, in her opinion it is not enough to hope for answers on today’s digitalization-discourse from media studies hailing the media-technical a priori. There are other approaches in media studies which are able to offer these answers: analysis of colonialism and post-colonialism, feministic, gender- and queer-theoretical questions, a media-informed science of knowledge and affect theory, just to name a few of them. It is all about concepts of media science being perceived as problems which bring forth their own subjects in various areas of research, yet as a tool as well as an intermediary, they are frequently overlooked. (shrink)
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  8.  26
    Bewußtlose Objektivität.ClausPeter Ortlieb -1998 -Krisis 21 (22):15-51.
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  9.  35
    Lectures on Jacques Herbrand as a Logician.Claus-Peter Wirth,Jörg Siekmann,Christoph Benzmüller &Serge Autexier -2009 - Seki Publications (Issn 1437-4447).
    We give some lectures on the work on formal logic of Jacques Herbrand, and sketch his life and his influence on automated theorem proving. The intended audience ranges from students interested in logic over historians to logicians. Besides the well-known correction of Herbrand’s False Lemma by Goedel and Dreben, we also present the hardly known unpublished correction of Heijenoort and its consequences on Herbrand’s Modus Ponens Elimination. Besides Herbrand’s Fundamental Theorem and its relation to the Loewenheim-Skolem-Theorem, we carefully investigate Herbrand’s (...) notion of intuitionism in connection with his notion of falsehood in an infinite domain. We sketch Herbrand’s two proofs of the consistency of arithmetic and his notion of a recursive function, and last but not least, present the correct original text of his unification algorithm with a new translation. (shrink)
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  10.  33
    Jacques Herbrand: life, logic, and automated deduction.Claus-Peter Wirth,Jörg Siekmann,Christoph Benzmüller &Serge Autexier -2009 - In Dov Gabbay,The Handbook of the History of Logic. Elsevier. pp. 195-254.
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  11.  35
    Herbrand’s fundamental theorem in the eyes of Jean Van heijenoort.Claus-Peter Wirth -2012 -Logica Universalis 6 (3-4):485-520.
    Using Heijenoort’s unpublished generalized rules of quantification, we discuss the proof of Herbrand’s Fundamental Theorem in the form of Heijenoort’s correction of Herbrand’s “False Lemma” and present a didactic example. Although we are mainly concerned with the inner structure of Herbrand’s Fundamental Theorem and the questions of its quality and its depth, we also discuss the outer questions of its historical context and why Bernays called it “the central theorem of predicate logic” and considered the form of its expression to (...) be “concise and felicitous”. (shrink)
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  12.  42
    Folktales of India.Frank J. Korom,Brenda E. F. Beck,Peter J.Claus,Praphulladatta Goswami &Jawaharlal Handoo -1988 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 108 (1):191.
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  13.  44
    Blockchain and business ethics.Claus Dierksmeier &Peter Seele -2019 -Business Ethics: A European Review 29 (2):348-359.
    Business Ethics: A European Review, EarlyView.
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  14.  13
    Blockchain and Cryptocurrencies, the Relevance for Business Ethics.Peter Seele &Claus Dierksmeier -2021 - In Deborah C. Poff & Alex C. Michalos,Encyclopedia of Business and Professional Ethics. Springer Verlag. pp. 210-214.
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  15. Themen der paulinischen Missionspredigt auf dem Hintergrund der spät-jüdischhellenistischen Missionsliteratur.Claus Bussmann,Herbert Lang &Peter Lang -1971
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  16.  101
    Cryptocurrencies and Business Ethics.Claus Dierksmeier &Peter Seele -2018 -Journal of Business Ethics 152 (1):1-14.
    Cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, SETLcoin, Ether, Solar Coin, or Liberty Reserve exist since 2009. Because of their decentralized control, they are often considered a threat or alternative to the conventional centralized banking system. While the technological implication of some such currencies, especially of Bitcoin, has attracted much attention, so far there is little discussion about the entire field of cryptocurrencies and very little academic literature addressing its ethical significance. In this article, we thus address the impact of “blockchain technology” on (...) the nature of financial transactions from a business ethics perspective. We begin with a survey on relevant literature from neighboring disciplines. Next, we work towards a 3 × 3 framework for current debates on the ethics of cryptocurrencies : we combine the micro, meso, and macro levels of business and society with assessments of the potential ethical impact of cryptocurrencies as morally beneficial, detrimental, and ambiguous. In addition, we highlight possible avenues for future research, such as the changing roles of the miners and regulators, the prosocial use of cryptocurrencies, the antisocial use for shadow banking and transactions in the ‘dark net’ and cryptocurrencies’ effect on inflation and deflation. (shrink)
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  17.  42
    Mapping the Ethicality of Algorithmic Pricing: A Review of Dynamic and Personalized Pricing. [REVIEW]Peter Seele,Claus Dierksmeier,Reto Hofstetter &Mario D. Schultz -2019 -Journal of Business Ethics 170 (4):697-719.
    Firms increasingly deploy algorithmic pricing approaches to determine what to charge for their goods and services. Algorithmic pricing can discriminate prices both dynamically over time and personally depending on individual consumer information. Although legal, the ethicality of such approaches needs to be examined as often they trigger moral concerns and sometimes outrage. In this research paper, we provide an overview and discussion of the ethical challenges germane to algorithmic pricing. As a basis for our discussion, we perform a systematic interpretative (...) review of 315 related articles on dynamic and personalized pricing as well as pricing algorithms in general. We then use this review to define the term algorithmic pricing and map its key elements at the micro-, meso-, and macro levels from a business and marketing ethics perspective. Thus, we can identify morally ambivalent topics that call for deeper exploration by future research. (shrink)
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  18.  73
    More Consistently Altered Connectivity Patterns for Cerebellum and Medial Temporal Lobes than for Amygdala and Striatum in Schizophrenia.Henning Peters,Junming Shao,Martin Scherr,Dirk Schwerthöffer,Claus Zimmer,Hans Förstl,Josef Bäuml,Afra Wohlschläger,Valentin Riedl,Kathrin Koch &Christian Sorg -2016 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10.
  19. Videnskabsteori for de biologiske fag.Hanne Andersen,Claus Emmeche,Michael Norup &Peter Sandøe -2006 - København, Danmark: Samfundslitteratur.
     
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  20.  117
    LTP-like plasticity in the visual system and in the motor system appear related in young and healthy subjects.Stefan Klöppel,Eliza Lauer,JessicaPeter,Lora Minkova,Christoph Nissen,Claus Normann,Janine Reis,Florian Mainberger,Michael Bach &Jacob Lahr -2015 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  21.  37
    Histories and freedom of the present: Foucault and Skinner.Naja Vucina,Claus Drejer &Peter Triantafillou -2011 -History of the Human Sciences 24 (5):0952695111415176.
    This article compares the ways in which Michel Foucault’s and Quentin Skinner’s historical analyses seek to unsettle the limits on present forms of freedom. We do so by comparing their ways of analysing discourse, rationality and agency. The two authors differ significantly in the ways they deal with these three phenomena. The most significant difference lies in their ways of addressing agency and its relationship to power. Notwithstanding these differences, the historical analyses of both authors seek to problematize the ways (...) in which past thoughts and practices limit contemporary forms of freedom. While Foucault seems to go furthest in this endeavour, a comparison may enrich both lines of historical analyses. (shrink)
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  22.  71
    Aberrant Intrinsic Connectivity of Hippocampus and Amygdala Overlap in the Fronto-Insular and Dorsomedial-Prefrontal Cortex in Major Depressive Disorder.Masoud Tahmasian,David C. Knight,Andrei Manoliu,Dirk Schwerthöffer,Martin Scherr,Chun Meng,Junming Shao,Henning Peters,Anselm Doll,Habibolah Khazaie,Alexander Drzezga,Josef Bäuml,Claus Zimmer,Hans Förstl,Afra M. Wohlschläger,Valentin Riedl &Christian Sorg -2013 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  23. Case assignment in the clause on adjuncts.Peter Sells -manuscript
    It is well-known that the domain of case assignment extends beyond the arguments of a predicate to a range of adverbials in some languages, including Korean. In this paper we concentrate on case-marked Duration/Frequency adverbials which are characterized as ‘extensive measures’ by Wechsler and Lee (1996).∗ In some languages, case-marked adverbials are in the accusative and provide a boundedness to an event (cf. Kuryłowicz (1964), Kiparsky (1998), Kratzer (2004)). However, in Korean, the D/F adverbials can show accusative or nominative, with (...) no apparent difference in their temporal or aspectual semantic contribution. (shrink)
     
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  24.  17
    Claus-Peter Pfeffer, Plutopia: Wirtschaft einmal rational.Heiner Michel -2006 -Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie 92 (2):290-293.
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  25.  28
    Adding clauses to poor man's logic (without increasing the complexity).Peter Jonsson -2005 -Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics 15 (3):341-357.
    Partly motivated by description logics, poor man's logics have been proposed as an interesting fragment of modal logics. A poor man's logic is a propositional modal logic where only literals and the connectives ∧, □, and ◊ are allowed. It is known that the complexity of the satisfiability problem may drop dramatically when going from a full modal logic to the corresponding poor man's logic, e.g., in the case of modal logic K one goes from PSPACE-complete to coNP-complete. We prove (...) that it is sometimes possible to extend poor man's logics with restricted disjunctions (i.e., clauses) without increasing the computational complexity. For Horn and Krom clauses, we provide necessary and sufficient conditions for when the resulting logic is polynomial-time. Such extensions correspond to allowing a restricted use of the union operator in description logics. (shrink)
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  26.  22
    Computing finite models by reduction to function-free clause logic.Peter Baumgartner,Alexander Fuchs,Hans de Nivelle &Cesare Tinelli -2009 -Journal of Applied Logic 7 (1):58-74.
  27.  25
    Relative Clause Effects at the Matrix Verb Depend on Type of Intervening Material.Matthew W. Lowder &Peter C. Gordon -2021 -Cognitive Science 45 (9):e13039.
    Although a large literature demonstrates that object‐extracted relative clauses (ORCs) are harder to process than subject‐extracted relative clauses (SRCs), there is less agreement regarding where during processing this difficulty emerges, as well as how best to explain these effects. An eye‐tracking study by Staub, Dillon, and Clifton (2017) demonstrated that readers experience more processing difficulty at the matrix verb for ORCs than for SRCs when the matrix verb immediately follows the relative clause (RC), but the difficulty is eliminated if a (...) prepositional phrase (PP) intervenes. A careful examination of Staub et al.’s materials reveals that the types of PPs used in the experiment were a mixture of locative and temporal PPs. This is important in that locative PPs can modify either a noun phrase or a verb phrase (VP), whereas temporal PPs typically modify VPs, resulting in systematic differences in PP attachment across ORCs versus SRCs. In the current eye‐tracking experiment, we systematically manipulated RC type and PP type in the same sentences used by Staub et al. The manipulation of PP type resulted in a crossover pattern at the matrix verb such that there was a trend for reading times to be longer for ORCs than SRCs when the PP was locative, but reading times were longer for SRCs than ORCs when the PP was temporal. These results provide important information regarding the locus of RC‐processing effects and highlight the importance of carefully considering how intervening material might unintentionally alter the structure or the meaning of a sentence. (shrink)
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  28.  107
    Decretum Concomitans. Bartolomeo Mastri on Divine Cognition and Human Free Will.Claus A. Andersen -2023 - In Claus A. Andersen & Daniel Heider,Cognitive Issues in the Long Scotist Tradition. Basel: Schwabe. pp. 333–363.
    The Disputationes Theologiae from 1655 of Bartolomeo Mastri (1602–1673) is structured after the model of the medieval commentaries onPeter Lombard’s Four Books of Sentences and hence has a large section in the first part on divine knowledge. Within this section, called Disputation on the Divine Intellect (Disputatio de Divino Intellectu), Mastri’s long and nuanced discussion of divine foreknowledge merits particular attention. In the time of Mastri, the theological issue of divine foreknowledge and its relation to human freedom had (...) gained particular prominence, with the Jesuits and the Thomists each opting for their particular doctrine on this subject as well as the related topics of grace and predestination, thereby competing to establish the definitive Roman Catholic reaction to the Protestant and Reformed views on these matters. Mastri, entering the debate at a rather late stage (almost half a century after Paul V’s famous attempt in 1607 to call off the controversy De Auxiliis by prohibiting any further polemics on the subject of grace), sets out to locate a clearly Scotist position in this rather peculiar historical landscape called Early Modern theology. This article discusses Mastri's contribution to the debate and highlights its coherence with other aspects of Mastri's doctrine of divine knowledge. (shrink)
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  29. 32Peter M. Sullivan.Peter Sullivan -manuscript
    Define ‘het’ as a predicate that truly applies to itself if and only if it does not truly apply to itself and which also truly applies to any predicate that does not truly apply to its own name. We know that the attempted definition of ‘hes’ is a failure, and so a fortiori is that of ‘het’. Similarly, there is no Qussell class which contains itself as a member if and only if it does not contain itself as a member, (...) so a fortiori there is no Russell Class which contains itself as a member if and only if it does not contain itself as a member and which also contains all and only non-self-membered classes (such as the class of dogs). The second conjunct in both the definition of ‘het’ and of the Russell class cannot revive a definition doomed to failure. Likewise, the ‘definition’ of n as ‘n > 1 iff n< 1’ fails, and the attempted definition of m as ‘m > 1 iff m< 1 and m is prime’ is hopeless too; its final clause buys it no respectability. (shrink)
     
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  30.  929
    That-clauses and propositional anaphors.Peter van Elswyk -2020 -Philosophical Studies 177 (10):2861-2875.
    This paper argues that "that"-clauses do not reference propositions because they are not intersubstitutible with other expressions that do reference propositions. In particular, "that"-clauses are shown to not be intersubstitutible with propositional anaphors like "so." The substitution failures are further argued to support a semantics on which "that"-clauses are predicates.
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  31.  33
    Jaume Janer OCist († after 1506) and the Tradition of Scoto-Lullist Metaphysics.Claus A. Andersen &Rafael Ramis-Barceló -2023 -Bulletin de Philosophie Medievale 64:167-207.
    The Cistercian Jaume Janer († after 1506) was the most prolific student of Pere Daguí, the first professor in the Lullist Studium on Majorca, and became himself, by royal privilege from the Crown of Aragon, the leader of a similar institution in Valencia. Janer’s and Daguí’s brand of Lullism embraced elements from Scotism. In particular, Janer in three of his works discussed the system of distinctions put forward byPeter Thomae, one of Duns Scotus’s early followers. This preoccupation with (...) Scotist distinction theory remained a doctrinal centerpiece of eclectic Lullism at least until the second half of the seventeenth century. (shrink)
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  32.  289
    Causal Equations without Ceteris Paribus Clauses.Peter Gildenhuys -2010 -Philosophy of Science 77 (4):608-632.
    Some writers have urged that evolutionary theory produces generalizations that hold only ceteris paribus, that is, provided “everything else is equal.” Others have claimed that all laws in the special sciences, or even all laws in science generally, hold only ceteris paribus. However, if we lack a way to determine when everything else really is equal, hedging generalizations with the phrase ceteris paribus renders those generalizations vacuous. I propose a solution to this problem for the case of causal equations from (...) classical population genetics. When coupled with the right proviso, equations in classical population genetics function as strict laws. (shrink)
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  33.  19
    Francisco Suárez, De pace – De bello / Über den Frieden – Über den Krieg, Lateinisch / deutsch, hg. u. eingel. v. Markus Kremer, ins Deutsche übers. v. Markus Kremer u. Joseph de Vries †, m. einem Vorwort v.Peter Schallenberg (= Politische Philosophie und Rechtstheorie des Mittelalters und der Neuzeit, Abteilung I, Bd. 2). [REVIEW]Claus A. Andersen -2014 -Philosophisches Jahrbuch 121 (2):433-435.
  34.  32
    Operationism, smuggled connotations, and the nothing-else clause.Peter Harzem -1984 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7 (4):559.
  35.  8
    Speech Acts and Clause Types: English in a Cross-Linguistic Context.Peter Siemund -2018 - Oxford University Press.
    This book is an introduction to the relationship between the morphosyntactic properties of sentences and their associated illocutionary forces or force potentials. It draws on insights from linguistics, philosophy, and sociology, and may be used as a textbook for undergraduate or graduate courses in semantics, pragmatics, and morphosyntax.
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  36.  39
    Clauses are perceptual units for young infants.Kathy Hirsh-Pasek,Deborah G. Kemler Nelson,Peter W. Jusczyk,Kimberly Wright Cassidy,Benjamin Druss &Lori Kennedy -1987 -Cognition 26 (3):269-286.
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  37.  91
    Normativity and Naturalism, edited byPeter Schaber. [REVIEW]Claus Beisbart -2008 -European Journal of Philosophy 16 (2):325-329.
  38.  79
    No more shall we part: Quantifiers in English comparatives.Peter Alrenga &Christopher Kennedy -2014 -Natural Language Semantics 22 (1):1-53.
    It is well known that the interpretation of quantificational expressions in the comparative clause poses a serious challenge for semantic analyses of the English comparative. In this paper, we develop a new analysis of the comparative clause designed to meet this challenge, in which a silent occurrence of the negative degree quantifier no interacts with other quantificational expressions to derive the observed range of interpretations. Although our analysis incorporates ideas from previous analyses, we show that it is able to account (...) for a broader range of facts than other approaches, with a minimum of construction-specific stipulations. We demonstrate that the analysis can be embedded within a general syntactic and semantic architecture for the comparative, and although our analysis focuses on the English data, we give evidence of its potential for crosslinguistic application. We conclude with a discussion of the implications of our approach for the analysis of “split-scope” phenomena in nominal quantification. (shrink)
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  39. Negative imperatives in korean.Peter Sells -unknown
    Like many languages, Korean has a special form of negation that is used in imperative clauses (see (1)c), to the exclusion of the usual clausal negation in (1)b: (1) a. ka-la b. *ka-ci anh-ala c. ka-ci mal-ala go-Imp go-Comp Neg-Imp go-Comp Neg-Imp ‘Don’t go!’ ‘Don’t go!’ ‘Go!’ Sadock and Zwicky (1985) noted that negation in imperative(-like) clauses shows special morpho-syntax in many languages, a fact documented in more detail by Zanuttini (1997) or Han (2000). In this paper I will consider (...) the semantic properties of Korean clauses that use the negative form mal-, and suggest a more indirect relationship to the morpho-syntax than has been assumed in previous work.∗ In section 2 I present the basic account of clausal semantics in the HPSG framework of Ginzburg and Sag (2000), and then in section 3 I return to a fuller consideration of data like that in (1). (shrink)
     
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  40. Three aspects of negation in korean.Peter Sells -manuscript
    Studies 6, 1–15. Korean has three forms that express negation: short-form negation, long-form negation and inherently lexical verbs. The goal of this paper is to argue that there are three separate notions related to the expression and interpretation of negation in Korean, which must be kept separate. They are the notions of a negative clause, of the surface c-command domain of a negative element, and of the semantic scope of a negative element. The main arguments derive from the interactions of (...) the negative-sensitive adverb yekan with different forms of negation, and of the interaction of examples with both yekan and a negative-sensitive item like awmu-to (‘anyone’). (Stanford University). (shrink)
     
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  41.  73
    Simple and Sophisticated "Naive" Semantics.Peter Alward -2000 -Dialogue 39 (1):101-122.
    RésuméJe critique dans cet article la théorie «naïve»des attributions de croyances, selon laquelle la signification d'un nom propre dans la clause qui figure comme complément d'une telle attribution est son référent. Je soutiens que l'usage que nous faisons de ces attributions dans l'explication du comportement oblige à rejeter la version simple de la sémantique «naïve» au profit de sa cousine plus sophistiquée. Et je soutiens que la théorie «naïve» sophistiquée se compare défavorablement à des versions plausibles de la sémantique non (...) naíve. (shrink)
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  42.  376
    Comments on David Johnston's "Identity, Necessity, and Propositions".Peter Alward -manuscript
    Johnston maintains that the notion of a proposition -- ”a language independent (abstract) particular” -- can be dispensed with in philosophical semantics and replaced with that of a propositional act. A propositional act is a component of a speech act that is responsible for the propositional content of the speech act. Traditionally, it is thought that a propositional act yields the propositional content of a speech act by being an act of expressing a proposition. And it is the expressed proposition (...) that serves as the propositional content of the speech act. Johnston points out, however, that a propositional act is a structured event consisting minimally of a referential act, a predicative act, and a time-designative act. And on Johnston's view, the propositional content is the structured propositional act itself. (Strictly speaking, Johnston analyzes sameness of propositional content in terms of sameness of propositional act type, from which I, perhaps rashly, inferred that the propositional content of a speech act should be taken to be the propositional act itself). Johnston argues that a semantic analysis in terms of propositional acts enables us to reconcile the necessity of both, (1) Hesperus is Phosphorus (2) Phosphorus is Phosphorus with their intuitive difference in meaning, while maintaining the direct reference theory of proper names. Moreover, he argues that invoking propositional acts rather than propositions has the advantage of being able to capture the various senses in which distinct statements might be said to "say the same thing", as well as that of ontological parsimony. I will address each of these claims in turn, but first, I want to point out that the propositionalist can easily reconcile the necessity of (1) and (2) with their intuitive difference in meaning, without forsaking direct reference. All one needs to do is invoke the Fregean idea that there is a meaning shift in “thatâ€-clauses of (opaque) indirect discourse (and other) ascriptions.. (shrink)
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  43.  23
    Growing the Pie or Slicing it Differently - on the Need to Disentangle Two Aspects of Trade Agreements.Peter Dietsch -2017 -Global Justice: Theory Practice Rhetoric 10 (1).
    Recent trade negotiations such as TTIP include investor protection clauses. Against the background of an analysis of the case for trade, the paper asks whether such clauses can be justified from a normative perspective. More specifically, what is the impact of investor protection on the domestic distribution of the gains from trade between labour and capital, and how should we assess this impact from the perspective of justice? In order to answer this question, the paper develops a series of ideal-type (...) scenarios that reflect the consequences of investor protection on employment on the one hand, and on the distributive conflict between labour and capital on the other. While no claim is made which of these scenarios corresponds to TTIP or other trade agreements, they provide a useful normative framework to analyse such agreements. (shrink)
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  44.  72
    Let Us Not Forget: Crypto Means Secret. Cryptocurrencies as Enabler of Unethical and Illegal Business and the Question of Regulation.Peter Seele -2018 -Humanistic Management Journal 3 (1):133-139.
    In the following, I concentrate on the nefarious, harmful and unethical dimensions emerging only slowly as the rather new phenomenon of cryptocurrencies and blockchain at large become visible only gradually. For the positive and pro-social use of cryptocurrencies please refer to the article ofClaus Dierksmeier in this issue of HMJ. As there are many different dimensions still unknown, I concentrate on the ethical issues emerging from the secretive nature of cryptocurrencies, less on the environmental carbon footprint or economic (...) implications of volatility also discussed in the literature. Among the most critical issues are black market transactions of weapons used in terrorist attacks, drugs, or childpornography. Additionally, cryptocurrencies are more and more found in blackmailing people and as payment for ransom-ware and other computer viruses. Money laundering also is on the rise via cryptocurrencies. I argue that the nefarious use of cryptocurrencies threatens the prosocial potential of cryptocurrencies and in general makes criminal activity easier for criminals and less likely to track down by legal authorities. In closing, I discuss current debates about emerging regulation presenting an overview of some jurisdictions and the option of regulated central bank issues cryptocurrencies. (shrink)
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  45.  21
    Claus Zittel, Gisela Engel, Romano Nanni and Nicole C. Karafyllis eds., Philosophies of Technology: Francis Bacon and His Contemporaries. Intersections: Yearbook for Early Modern Studies series vol. 11. Leiden: Brill, 2008. 2 vols. Pp. xxix+577. ISBN 978-9-0041-70506. €149.00. [REVIEW]Peter Dear -2009 -British Journal for the History of Science 42 (4):616.
  46.  50
    Adnominal conditionals.Peter Lasersohn -1996 - In T. Galloway & J. Spence,Papers from Semantics and Linguistic Theory VI. CLC Publications.
    Argues that certain conditional clauses are irreducibly adnominal, so that 'if' cannot be treated purely as a sentential connective. A unified analysis of adnominal if-clauses and ordinary if-clauses is possible, however, if we assume a semantic theory in which sentences denote sets of events rather than truth values.
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  47. Amendment.Peter Suber -unknown
    If the fundamental law, or constitution, of a nation cannot be changed by legal means, then it cannot adapt to changing circumstances; as the disparity with circumstances widens, the risk of revolution increases. But if it can be changed too easily, then the fundamental principles and institutions it establishes are at risk of being swept away by a majority momentarily enraptured with a new idea. An amendment clause permits fundamental change, courting the latter risk, but it makes that change difficult, (...) courting the former. It aspires to capture the inconsistent virtues of stability and flexibility, protecting what the enacting generation thinks wise, but permitting future generations to think otherwise. (shrink)
     
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  48.  119
    An epistemic analysis of explanations and causal beliefs.Peter Gärdenfors -1990 -Topoi 9 (2):109-124.
    The analyses of explanation and causal beliefs are heavily dependent on using probability functions as models of epistemic states. There are, however, several aspects of beliefs that are not captured by such a representation and which affect the outcome of the analyses. One dimension that has been neglected in this article is the temporal aspect of the beliefs. The description of a single event naturally involves the time it occurred. Some analyses of causation postulate that the cause must not occur (...) later than the effect. If we want this kind of causality it is easy to add the appropriate clause to ( CAUS ). An alternative is not to rule out backwards causation or causal loops a priori , but expect that ( CAUS ), via the properties of the contraction P C - , will result in the desired temporal relation between C and E . One way of ensuring this is to postulate that when the probability function P is contracted to P C - , the probabilities of all events that occurred before C remain the same in P C - as in P . This means that all beliefs about the history of events up to C are left unaltered in the construction of the hypothetical state of belief P C - . In conclusion, I hope to have shown that, in spite of these limitations, ( EXP ) and ( CAUS ) provide viable analyses of explanation and causality between single events for the case when epistemic states can be described by probability functions. I have also shown that the two analyses can be used to explicate the close connections between the two notions. These analyses reduce the problems of explanation and causality, hopefully in a non-circular way, to the problem of identifying contractions of states of belief. (shrink)
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  49.  15
    Philoponus,in De Anima III: Quest for an Author.Peter Lautner -1992 -Classical Quarterly 42 (2):510-522.
    It has been strongly disputed that Philoponus is the author of the commentary on the third book ofDe Animaprinted in vol. xv ofCAGunder his name, and Stephanus of Alexandria has been taken to be its real author. The evidence for the authorship of Stephanus is as follows: (I)Codex Parisinus gr. 1914, written in the twelfth century, has an adscript by a later hand saying βιβλ⋯ον τρ⋯τον ⋯π⋯ ϕωνης στεϕ⋯νου (‘third book from the voice of Stephanus’), and the same appears in (...) the fifteenth-centuryCodex Estensisiii F 8. (II) In 543.9 there is a clause saying ὡς ⋯ν τῷ περ⋯ ⋯ρμηνε⋯ας ⋯μ⋯θομεν (‘as we learnt in theDe Interpretatione’), which was taken by M. Hayduck to be direct reference to Stephanus' commentary on theDe Interpretatione, edited also by Hayduck in vol. xiii/3 ofCAG. (III) The third book, says Hayduck, is short (brevis) and jejune (jejunus), in contrast to the verbosity of the preceding two books. (IV) The commentary on the third book ofDe Animais divided into lectures (πρ⋯ξεις), but the first two books are not. (V) Some locutions are used constantly in the third book and in Stephanus' inDe Interpretationeas well. (VI) In theCodex Vaticanus gr. 241 fol. 6 (fourteenth century) we are told that Stephanus also wrote a commentary on theDe Anima. (shrink)
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  50.  18
    Judicial Review of US Border Policy's Spillover Effects: Negative Externalities, Executive Discretion, and Immigration Law.Peter Margulies -2023 -Public Affairs Quarterly 37 (3):250-268.
    Negative externalities pervade immigration law. For example, immigration rules can cause negative economic externalities by barring foreign nationals whose participation would make labor markets more efficient. On the other hand, sweeping executive-branch measures to assist immigrants may unduly expand executive power and yield adverse effects on governance. This essay divides immigration's negative externalities into three categories: economic, relational, and rhetorical. It then argues for specific legal and policy measures, including tailored executive discretion over deportation; more robust court review of immigration (...) restrictions that affect foreign nationals outside the United States; and classifying deportation of lawful permanent residents of the United States as punishment requiring advance notice that specific acts can prompt removal, like the notice the Constitution's Ex Post Facto Clause requires for criminal laws. (shrink)
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