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Results for 'E. Weibel'

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  1. Language and national-identity in switzerland+ multilingual coexistence.E.Weibel -1993 -History of European Ideas 16 (1-3):229-232.
     
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  2.  100
    An austrian mélange • Eckehart köler, Peterweibel, Michael stöltzner, Bernd Buldt, Carsten Klein, and Werner depauli-schimanovich-göttig, eds. Kurt gödel. Wahrheit & beweisbarkeit. Band 1: Dokumente und historische analysen [Kurt gödel. Truth and provability. Vol. 1: Documents and historical analyses]. Vienna: Öbv et hpt, 2002. Isbn 3-209-03824-1. Pp. 279. • Bernd Buldt, Eckehart köhler, Michael stöltzner, Peterweibel, Carsten Klein, and Werner depauli-schimanovich-göttig, eds. Kurt gödel. Wahrheit & beweisbarkeit. Band 2: Kompendium zum werk [vol. 2: Compendium of work]. Vienna: Öbv et hpt, 2002. Isbn 3-209-03835-X. Pp. 447. [REVIEW]Hannes Leitgeb -2007 -Philosophia Mathematica 15 (2):245-257.
    While the Gödel centenary year 2006 triggered a lot of conference and workshop activity on Gödel, the years leading to it stand out by exhibiting several excellent publications on Gödel's life and work, most notably the completion of the Kurt Gödel Collected Works series . The two volumes of Kurt Gödel. Wahrheit & Beweisbarkeit, written in German and edited by E. Köhler et al., constitute something like the ‘German-Austrian contribution’ to this renewal of interest in Gödel's legacy, even though not (...) all of the articles in the volumes actually have German or Austrian authors.2 Indeed, as P.Weibel explains in the preface of the first volume, one of the intentions of the editors was to present Gödel as part of the cultural history of Austria. At the same time, the volumes highlight the contrast between Gödel's national reception—or lack thereof—and the way in which he was perceived and appreciated internationally, and although this discrepancy is now fortunately a thing of the past, its history is worth documenting. In this respect the two volumes will be of lasting value and importance, and the editors must be given credit not just for recording Gödel's delayed acceptance by Austrian politicians and university headquarters, but also for promoting Gödel's case. This being said, there is something extravagant and slightly queer about the two Kurt Gödel. Wahrheit & Beweisbarkeit volumes. Parts of them seem to be written for a generally educated audience, while other parts will be understandable only to logicians and philosophers who specialize in the topics covered. The volumes consist partly of biographical essays, interviews about Gödel, photos of him and his family, and letters by or to him, but they also include several non-historical articles which use …. (shrink)
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  3.  64
    I pellegrinaggi ai Luoghi Santi e il culto dei martiri in Gregorio di Nissa.E. Pietrella -1981 -Augustinianum 21 (1):135-151.
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  4.  84
    Nineteenth-Century Perceptions of John Austin: Utilitarianism and the Reviews of The Province of Jurisprudence Determined: Wilfrid E. Rumble.Wilfrid E. Rumble -1991 -Utilitas 3 (2):199-216.
    In 1954 H. L. A. Hart wrote that Austin's work has ‘never, since his death … been ignored’. If it never has been completely ignored, interest in it has periodically waxed and waned. The interest definitely waxed in the 1980s. More books were published about Austin in this period than in any other decade since his death in 1859. Although this literature contains discussions of some of the nineteenth-century responses to his work, they are not the focus of it. Certain (...) of the responses remain completely in the dark, while there is more light to shed on at least some of the others. In short, our knowledge of nineteenth-century interpretations of Austin's legal philosophy is very incomplete. (shrink)
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  5.  669
    Hill on perceptual relativity and perceptual error.E. J. Green -2024 -Mind and Language 39 (1):80-88.
    Christopher Hill's Perceptual experience is a must‐read for philosophers of mind and cognitive science. Here I consider Hill's representationalist account of spatial perception. I distinguish two theses defended in the book. The first is that perceptual experience does not represent the enduring, intrinsic properties of objects, such as intrinsic shape or size. The second is that perceptual experience does represent certain viewpoint‐dependent properties of objects—namely, Thouless properties. I argue that Hill's arguments do not establish the first thesis, and then I (...) raise questions about the Thouless‐property view and its role in Hill's defense of representationalism. (shrink)
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  6.  743
    Can We Perceive the Past?E. J. Green -forthcoming - In Lynn Nadel & Sara Aronowitz,Space, Time, and Memory. Oxford University Press.
    A prominent view holds that perception and memory are distinguished at least partly by their temporal orientation: Perception functions to represent the present, while memory functions to represent the past. Call this view perceptual presentism. This chapter critically examines perceptual presentism in light of contemporary perception science. I adduce evidence for three forms of perceptual sensitivity to the past: (i) shaping perception by past stimulus exposure, (ii) recruitment of mnemonic representations in perceptual processing, and (iii) perceptual representation of present objects (...) as possessing past properties. I argue that forms (i) and (ii) are consistent with perceptual presentism, while form (iii) poses a genuine threat to the view. While the empirical case for form (iii) remains inconclusive, I suggest that the most serious challenges to perceptual presentism derive from representations that integrate mnemonic and present-tensed elements in the performance of canonical perceptual functions, such as perceiving object continuity over time. (shrink)
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  7.  95
    Planning and Its Function in Our Lives.Michael E. Bratman -2024 -Journal of Applied Philosophy 41 (1):1-15.
    Our capacity for planning agency is a core capacity that underlies interrelated forms of mind-shaped practical organization: cross-temporal organization of individual agency, shared agency, social rules, and rule-guided organized institutions. A function of our capacity for planning agency is the support of these forms of practical organization. I highlight Peter Godfrey-Smith's contrast between the ‘Wright function’ of something as ‘the effect it has which explains why it is there’ and ‘Cummins functions’ that ‘are capacities or effects of components of systems, (...) which are salient in the explanation of capacities of the larger system’. Drawing on Paul Grice's strategy of ‘creature construction’, I articulate a sequence of nested constructions: from temporally extended planning agency to shared agency to shared policies to social rules to rule-guided organized institutions. We see our capacity for planning agency as part of an explanation of how we achieve such practical organization, and as having nested Cummins functions of supporting those forms of organization. This sheds light on related ideas in H.L.A. Hart's theory of law, a challenge from J. David Velleman, the centrality of such forms of organization to the philosophy of action, and the moral and political significance of our capacity for planning agency. (shrink)
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  8.  40
    Informed Consent for Clinician-AI Collaboration and Patient Data Sharing: Substantive, Illusory, or Both.Charles E. Binkley &Bryan C. Pilkington -2023 -American Journal of Bioethics 23 (10):83-85.
    In the piece, “What Should ChatGPT Mean for Bioethics?” Professor Cohen proposes that the introduction of AI generally, and generative AI specifically, requires that patients be informed of, and co...
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  9. Mārksiṣṭu tatvavētta, caritra pariśōdhakulu Ēụkūru Balarāmamūrti vyāsāvaḷi.Ēṭukūru Balarāmamūrti -2002 - Haidarābādu: Pratulaku, Viśālāndhra Pabliṣiṅg Haus. Edited by Ēṭukūru Paṅkajamma.
    Selected articles of Ēṭukūru Balarāmamūrti on Marxist philosophy; includes contributed on his life and work.
     
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  10.  6
    Professionalʹnai︠a︡ ėtika: moralʹnai︠a︡ propedevtika delovogo povedenii︠a︡: uchebnoe posobie.E. S. Protanskai︠a︡ -2003 - Sankt-Peterburg: Aleteĭi︠a︡.
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  11.  45
    Saúde Comunitária: conhecimentos e experiências na América Latina.Anamélia Lins E. Silva Franco -2012 -Revista Aletheia 37:235-237.
  12. Azione, intenzione e doppio effetto: Metafisica e azione: Nuovi approcci al tomismo.G. E. M. Anscombe,Mario Ricciardi &Claudio Antonio Testi -2001 -Divus Thomas 104 (2):43-61.
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  13.  52
    (4 other versions)Editors’ Statement on the Responsible Use of Generative AI Technologies in Scholarly Journal Publishing.Gregory E. Kaebnick,David Christopher Magnus,Audiey Kao,Mohammad Hosseini,David Resnik,Veljko Dubljević,Christy Rentmeester,Bert Gordijn &Mark J. Cherry -2023 -Hastings Center Report 53 (5):3-6.
    Generative artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to transform many aspects of scholarly publishing. Authors, peer reviewers, and editors might use AI in a variety of ways, and those uses might augment their existing work or might instead be intended to replace it. We are editors of bioethics and humanities journals who have been contemplating the implications of this ongoing transformation. We believe that generative AI may pose a threat to the goals that animate our work but could also be (...) valuable for achieving those goals. In the interests of fostering a wider conversation about how generative AI may be used, we have developed a preliminary set of recommendations for its use in scholarly publishing. We hope that the recommendations and rationales set out here will help the scholarly community navigate toward a deeper understanding of the strengths, limits, and challenges of AI for responsible scholarly work. (shrink)
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  14.  37
    (1 other version)Editors' statement on the responsible use of generative artificial intelligence technologies in scholarly journal publishing.Gregory E. Kaebnick,David Christopher Magnus,Audiey Kao,Mohammad Hosseini,David Resnik,Veljko Dubljević,Christy Rentmeester &Bert Gordijn -2023 -Bioethics 37 (9):825-828.
  15.  35
    Transparency, consent and trust in the use of customers' data by an online genetic testing company: an Exploratory survey among 23andMe users.Aviad E. Raz,Emilia Niemiec,Heidi C. Howard,Sigrid Sterckx,Julian Cockbain &Barbara Prainsack -2020 -New Genetics and Society 39 (4):459-482.
    23andMe not only sells genetic testing but also uses customer data in its R&D activities and commercial partnerships. This raises questions about transparency and informed consent. Based on a online survey conducted in 2017–18, we examine attitudes of 368 customers of 23andMe toward the company's use of their data. Our findings point at divides in the context of customers' awareness of the two-sided business model of DTC genetics and their attitudes toward consent. While most of our respondents (68%) were aware (...) that 23andMe could store their data and use it for certain purposes without their consent, over 40% were not aware that using and sharing customer data was part of the business model. Views were also divided regarding what type of consent was most appropriate. We explore the implications of these divides for participatory research and for the importance of transparency and trust in commercially-driven scientific knowledge production. (shrink)
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  16. Metodologicheskie problemy estestvennonauchnogo ėksperimenta.P. E. Sivokonʹ -1968 - Moskva: Izd. Mosk. un-ta.
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  17. Alekseĭ Losev v ėpokhu russkoĭ revoli︠u︡t︠s︡ii: 1917-1919.E. A. Takho-Godi -2014 - Moskva: Modest Kolerov.
     
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  18.  9
    A Psychology for People of God.E. Rae Harcum -2012 - Hamilton Books.
    E. Rae Harcum argues that Christians do not have to give up their religious faith to keep the contributions of science. He confronts the relation between the human body and its non-material parts—the mind and spirit—and provides a way of looking at these metaphysical issues.
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  19.  674
    Kantian Naturalism.E. Sonny Elizondo -forthcoming -Australasian Journal of Philosophy.
    I offer a qualified defence of Kant’s natural teleological argument, that is, his inference from the (un)naturalness of an act to its (im)morality. Though I reject many of Kant’s conclusions, I think the form of argument he uses to support these conclusions is not as wrong-headed as it might at first appear. I consider and answer two objections: first, that the argument is inconsistent with Kant’s moral rationalism; and second, that the argument is inconsistent with post-Kantian developments in science. I (...) argue that both objections rest on a common mistake, namely, the assumption that the account of (human) nature on which Kant’s argument relies is theoretical. On the contrary, the relevant account is practical: informed by science, but not determined by it. Once we appreciate the practical character of Kant’s naturalism, we can see not only that Kant can be a naturalist and a rationalist, but contemporary Kantians can be as well. (shrink)
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  20. Li Shih-tsʻên chʻing pien wan yen shu.Wan-chʻêng Hsü -1964
     
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  21. (1 other version)La pensée allemande de Luther à Nietzsche.Jean Édouard Spenlé -1934 - Paris,: A. Colin.
     
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  22. Hay pʻilisopʻayakan mitkʻě tasninnerord dari arahajin kesin.Ēdoward Shamiri Harowtʻyownyan -1965
     
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  23. Mir rat︠s︡ionalʹnosti v mire cheloveka: logiko-metodologicheskiĭ i sot︠s︡ialʹno-ėpistemologicheskiĭ analiz: monografii︠a︡.E. I︠U︡ Leontʹeva -2001 - Volgograd: Politekhnik.
     
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  24.  17
    Semiotics and Pragmatism: Theoretical Interfaces by Ivo Assad Ibri (review).Robert E. Innis -2023 -Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 59 (2):257-261.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Semiotics and Pragmatism: Theoretical Interfaces by Ivo Assad IbriRobert E. InnisIvo Assad Ibri Semiotics and Pragmatism: Theoretical Interfaces Springer, 2022, xxvii + 341 pp., incl. indexIn the chapter on 'The Heuristic Power of Agapism in Peirce's Philosophy' in his recent book, Semiotics and Pragmatism: Theoretical Interfaces, Ivo Ibri points out that access to Peirce's work requires something on the part of the reader that is "not readily available (...) in everyone's spirit: a sense of poetry, an aesthetic sensitivity that will, ultimately, become the sharpest and strongest tool to penetrate the deepest meaning of his philosophy" (116). Such a sensitivity is manifested in Ibri's own responsiveness to Peirce's accounts of the permeating qualities of things in a dynamic universe of emerging novel orders and patterns. Ibri's book presents the record, indeed the culmination, of a well-known and wide-ranging long-term engagement with the work of Peirce. It makes available in English translation the contents of the two-volume [End Page 257] collection of his papers in Portuguese published in 2020 and 2021, although a number of them were originally published in English. The title of the book indicates the dynamic triadic nature of Ibri's central Peircean themes: semiotics and pragmatism and their theoretical as well as historical 'interfaces.'Paradoxically, taken alone, the book's main title, 'Semiotics and Pragmatism,' gives no indication that it is principally about Peirce. The reason, I think, is that there is an interwoven duality of, or tension between, the tasks that Ibri has taken upon himself to accomplish in the intellectual journey manifested in the book's contents: (a) Thinking about Peirce, on the one hand, and (b) Thinking with and through Peirce, on the other. This duality of tasks accounts both for the expository and argumentative richness of Peircean themes and the accompanying sense of intellectual engagement and exploration as they are taken up in the various parts of the book: art as an articulated realm of 'nameless things,' the presence of a poetic ground and its links to Schelling in Peirce's philosophy, the nature of abduction and of agapism as heuristic principles, the scope of Peirce's theory of signs and interpretants, the theory of beliefs and the intellectual dangers and poverty of dogmatism, the nature of habits and rational conduct, the centrality of the categories for Peircean pragmatism and objective idealism, the relations between pragmatism, pragmaticism, and neopragmatism, and other technical and subsidiary topics of current social and political importance. The discussion of these themes involves wide-ranging and generous linkages to other parallel discussions that support or expand Ibri's own positions and existential commitments.Ibri frames in a variety of ways the inextricably intertwined strands of semiotics and pragmatism (or pragmaticism) in Peirce's work and argues forcefully in other chapters for Peirce's metaphysical vision of an emergent creative universe marked by the "infinite faces of chance" (122), a vision rooted in Schelling's objective idealism and in scientific discoveries of the 19th century. The organization of the book is thematic and does not develop in linear fashion as a treatise. It can be seen as sequence of engagements or as a series of analytical spirals in which the topics and issues of the book, focused on Peirce's heuristic fertility, are taken up in a kind of dialectical dance of 'retrievals and continuations,' leading inevitably, as Ibri points out, to a high number of repetitions and recapitulations. This is partially due to each chapter in the book, while free standing, functioning as a heuristic device for exploring and arguing for the nature and power of Peirce's interlocking main positions and their shared conceptual underpinnings.In a stimulating chapter on 'The Poetics of Nameless things,' Ibri writes that the Peircean claim of a "correspondence between external and internal worlds" is the "deepest root of pragmatism" (60). This root gives rise to a system of spiraling tendrils marking the growth of the [End Page 258] Peircean philosophical project. We can think of the chapters of Ibri's book as themselves spiraling, and at times entangled, analytical tendrils that support the growth of our... (shrink)
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  25.  12
    Receptions of Kant’s Philosophy in Russian Empiriocriticism.Aleksandr E. Rybas &Рыбас Александр Евгеньевич -2023 -RUDN Journal of Philosophy 27 (3):582-597.
    The article analyzes the influence of Kantian philosophy on the problems and development of Russian empiriocriticism. It is shown that the critical pathos of Kant’s philosophy, as well as his call for intellectual honesty in philosophy, was appreciated first of all. Relying on Kant, Russian empiriocritics proved the inconsistency of metaphysics in both its religious and materialistic forms. In addition, the teachings of the founders of empiriocriticism, E. Mach and R. Avenarius, were also criticized because some dogmatic assumptions were found (...) in them. Attempts to eliminate these assumptions resulted in a dynamic concept of experience, based on which the concepts of empiriomonism (A. Bogdanov), empiriosymbolism (P. Yushkevich), scientific philosophy (V. Lesevich), positive philosophy of life (S. Suvorov), positive aesthetics (A. Lunacharsky), ethics of mutual joy (A. Bogdanov) and many others were developed. Special attention was paid to the analysis of the “thing-in-itself” since this very concept of Kantian philosophy was used by G. Plekhanov to justify “orthodox” Marxism. Russian empiriocritics opposed Plekhanov’s identification of the “thing in itself” and the material object, arguing that the concept of matter is a metaphysical assumption and, for this reason, cannot contribute to refuting dualism and Kantian “agnosticism.” From the monistic point of view, the “thing-in-itself” should be understood on the basis of experience as a necessary form of its organization. According to Bogdanov, there is nothing a priori in the “thing-in-itself”; this idea appeared as a result of substituting the known for the unknown and expressed a process rather than essence. Kant’s aesthetics and moral philosophy were also actively discussed in Russian empiriocriticism. The interpretation of beauty as “expediency without purpose” was extended to the fundamental principle of the “aesthetic worldview,” which gave credibility to the doctrine of the ideal, the practice of social construction, etc. As a result of the polemic with the ethics of compassion, of which Kant was considered the most authoritative defender, an alternative ethic of mutual joy was created. Thus, the influence of Kantian philosophy on Russian empiriocritics was complex and contributed to the development of new ideas. (shrink)
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  26. An Analysis of Three Studies of Pictorial Representation: M. C. Beardsley, E. H. Gombrich, and L. Wittgenstein.George E. Yoos -1971 - Dissertation, University of Missouri - Columbia
     
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  27.  45
    Chassez La Femme.E. J. Kenney -1992 -Classical Quarterly 42 (2):551-552.
    Femina in line 28 has nagged me subconsciously for years. I have now belatedly realized that it sabotages the poet's prudent disclaimer: it is not women in general who are in question, but only those not ruled out of bounds by stola and uittae. The repetition of the word in the following verse, where it means, as the opposition to uiri indicates, ‘the female sex’, only serves to underline its inappropriateness here. Cristante's defence of the anaphora, that it ‘ribadisce la (...) necessità dell'insegnamento, introducendone la giustificazione’, sets up an unwanted connection: lines 25–8 are strictly parenthetic to the main argument, as indeed is signalled by the truly functional anaphora of femina in line 29, whose effect is blurred in the text as transmitted. The form of the couplet, typical of Ovid, dictates that what is wanted is a variation on nil nisi lasciui, e.g. nec or, better, non proba. The source of the intrusive femina is not far to seek, though how precisely it ousted the original reading I do not pretend to guess. (shrink)
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  28.  38
    Antigone (review).E. Christian Kopff -2001 -American Journal of Philology 122 (2):274-278.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Sophocles: AntigoneE. Christian KopffMark Griffith, ed. Sophocles: Antigone. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. xii + 366. Cloth, $64.95; paper, $24.95.Mark Griffith's edition of Sophocles' Antigone is a welcome addition to the Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics. The best volumes in the series, inaugurated by T. B. L. Webster's Philoctetes (1970), enrich the traditional commentary format with the editor's distinctive scholarly concerns: general editor P. E. Easterling's Trachiniae (1982) (...) displays a sensitive literary taste; R. D. Dawe's Oedipus Rex (1982) provides a lively example of a first-rate mind reading a great text, as does Alan Sommerstein's Eumenides (1989); Sommerstein doubts that his play was originally called "Eumenides," while Griffith's Prometheus (1983) gives reasons to question the Aeschylean authorship of Prometheus Vinctus. Griffith's Antigone is less controversial, but it lives up to the series' high standards.The introduction has almost thirty pages of background information on Sophocles and Athens, the myth, dramatic structure, technique, and style, the production of Greek drama, and the transmission of the text. The forty pages on "The Meaning of the Play" contain short essays with bibliography on aesthetics, lessons, characters, ethics, contradictions (human/divine, polis/oikos, male/female), politics, and fantasies. The section on character is especially clear and forceful, but I found the pages on fantasies less focused and their discussion of Freudian criticism, with the rambling footnote on page 60, distracting. Colleagues will learn much from these pages, but students might well skip them and start reading the play.The text is temperately conservative, with good taste displayed when conjectures and variant readings are chosen. The commentary is careful, scholarly, and yet accessible to students. Difficult passages are translated with close attention to particles. The many notes devoted to explicating the nuances of the word reminded me of the story that Denniston was supposedly overheard telling a student, " can sometimes mean 'and.'"Each chorus is accompanied by a metrical description based on a colometry which is often that of R. D. Dawe's Teubner (1985). Griffith's short essays explaining the metrical patterns are usually successful. An exception is his note on [End Page 274] 1115-16/1126-27, which he prints as one long colon, which "could be classified as a kind of 'dragged enoplian'... or as 'acephalous dactylo-epitrite.'... In either case the affiliation to aeolics remains clear" (316). This is the kind of explanation which convinces people that metrics is mumbo-jumbo. Griffith refers to A. M. Dale, Lyric Metres of Greek Drama (Cambridge 1968, 191 n. 3), but Dale's note does not explain why she prefers this colometry over others. The colometry of Lloyd-Jones and Wilson's Oxford Classical Text (1990) is better than Dale's and Griffith's because it is easier to understand (telesillean with resolved first element/ iambic penthemimer) and fits the meter of the rest of the ode. This is also true of the colometry of manuscript L, Laurentianus 32.9 (telesillean/iambic dimeter/telesillean), which I prefer.Griffith usually ignores L's colometry, although for the third stasimon (781-800), the Eros Ode, he agrees with it, including word break at the end of 789/799, and gives a good discussion of the metrical and verbal traits that make the poem a satisfying unity. In other choruses the colometry of manuscript L is superior to that concocted by modern scholars, for example, the second stasimon (582-625), the Ate Ode. At 604-5/615-16, the beginning of the second strophe and antistrophe, Griffith prints glyconic () followed by hipponactean (). L presents these lines as hipponactean and hagesichorean (), an acephalous hipponactean. With modern editors' colometry, the hipponactean is a pendent clausula to the preceding glyconic. Two points noted by Griffith favor the manuscripts. The modern colometry entails word break in both strophe and antistrophe, so that, as Griffith notes (223) "'dovetailing' makes the distinction between 'glyconic' and 'hipponactean' arbitrary." The modern colometry is clearer on paper than in performance. The ancient colometry begins a pattern of increasingly acephalous verses, as noted by Bruno Snell, in Griechische Metrik (Göttingen 1984, 62).More important, as Griffith notes sagaciously: "The basic motif... (shrink)
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  29. Reason, knowledge, experience. Reconstructing (not only) traditional concepts in feminist epistemology.E. Farkasova &M. Szapuova -2001 -Filozofia 56 (7):463-473.
    The paper deals with the relationship between feminist epistemology and some other streams of current epistemological thinking, particularly those of pragmatist and postmodern epistemology. The authors focus mainly on the reconstruction of several basic epistemological concepts, e. g. reason, knowledge and experience. Attention is paid also to parallels between these epistemological projects.
     
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  30. L'Art, la science et la métaphysique: études offertes à André Mercier à l'occasion de son quatre-vingtième anniversaire et recueillies au nom de l'Académie internationale de philosophie de l'art.Luz Garcâia Alonso,E. Moutsopoulos,Gerhard Seel &Andrâe Mercier (eds.) -1993 - New York: P. Lang.
     
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  31. Il comparto sedimentario e la sua disponibilitatrofica per il macrozoobenthos in valle Fattibello e valle Spavola.G. Rossi,E. A. Fano &R. Rossi -1999 -Laguna 5:42-51.
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  32. Filosofía e identidad cultural en América Latina.Jorge J. E. Gracia -1988 - Caracas, Venezuela: Monte Avila Editores. Edited by Ivan Jaksic.
  33. The Casimir effect and the interpretation of the vacuum.E. S.,H. Zinkernagel &Y. T. -1999 -Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 30 (1):111-139.
    The Casimir force between two neutral metallic plates is often considered conclusive evidence for the reality of electromagnetic zero-point fluctuations in 'empty space' (i.e. in absence of any boundaries). However, it is not well known that the Casimir force can be derived from many different points of view. The purpose of this note is to supply a conceptually oriented introduction to a representative set of these different interpretations. The different accounts suggest that the Casimir effect reveals nothing conclusive about the (...) nature of the vacuum. (shrink)
     
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  34.  32
    Proportionality principles in American law: controlling excessive government actions.E. Thomas Sullivan -2009 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by Richard S. Frase.
    Across a wide range of legal contexts, E. Thomas Sullivan and Richard S. Frase identify three basic ways that government measures and private remedies have been ...
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  35.  2
    Il volo di Psiche: insegnamenti tradizionali sull'anima e il suo destino.Sigfrido E. F. Höbel -2021 - Napoli: Stamperia del Valentino.
    Tutte le dottrine tradizionali, da quelle più arcaiche e "primitive" a quelle più evolute e articolate, hanno sempre affermato che l'uomo non è un essere solamente corporeo, sia pur dotato di ingegno e di intelligenza, ma è un essere dalla natura composita, formato da una parte materiale e da una o più componenti invisibili e "sottili" e che in lui risiede un principio immortale di origine divina o comunque soprannaturale. Secondo il modo di vedere tradizionale, l'uomo, per conoscere e realizzare (...) se stesso, deve pertanto prendere coscienza, in primo luogo ed essenzialmente, di questa sua natura di essere composito e immortale, e questa è una di quelle idee universali (per noi forse la più importante) che troviamo diffuse presso tutte le popolazioni del pianeta, anche se con sfumature diverse nelle varie tradizioni..."--Cover flap. (shrink)
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  36.  40
    The cognitive disunity of mankind: G. E. R. Lloyd: Disciplines in the making: Cross-cultural perspectives on elites, learning, and innovation, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2009, viii + 215 pp, £25.00, US $50 HB.Toby E. Huff -2011 -Metascience 20 (1):191-193.
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  37.  17
    Educational Assessment, Evaluation and Research: The Selected Works of Mary E. James.Mary E. James -2016 - Routledge.
    In the _World Library of Educationalists_, international experts themselves compile career-long collections of what they judge to be their finest pieces – extracts from books, key articles, salient research findings, major theoretical and practical contributions – so the world can read them in a single manageable volume, allowing readers to follow the themes of their work and see how it contributes to the development of the field. Mary James has researched and written on a range of educational subjects which encompass (...) curriculum, pedagogy and assessment in schools, and implications for teachers´ professional development, school leadership and policy frameworks. She has written many books and journals on assessment, particularly assessment for learning and is an expert on teacher learning, curriculum, leadership for learning and educational policy. Starting with a specially written introduction in which Mary gives an overview of her career and contextualises her selection, the chapters are divided into three parts: Educational Assessment and Learning Educational Evaluation and Curriculum Development Educational Research and the Improvement of Practice Through this book, readers can follow the different strands that Mary James has researched and written about over the last three decades, and clearly see her important contribution to the field of education. (shrink)
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  38.  20
    A. Lippold, Theodosius der Große und seine Zeit [Urban-Bücher, 107.].W. E. Kaegi -1969 -Byzantinische Zeitschrift 62 (2).
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  39. I. Bernard Cohen and George E. Smith (eds): The Cambridge Companion to Newton.P. J. E. Kail -2003 -British Journal for the History of Philosophy 11 (3):540-541.
  40.  27
    Dirke And the Sun's Course in Sophocles'Antigone.E. Coughanowr -1973 -Classical Quarterly 23 (01):22-.
    There has been apparently a universal agreement among commentators on Antigone that either Sophocles was wrong in having the early sun rise over Dirke, west of Thebes, or that he chose Dirke rather than Ismenos, which flows to the east, as the most representative waterbed. But, curiously enough, they fail to realize that Sophocles nowhere in the above passage mentions the sun, but rather the sunlight, , eyelid, may not necessarily mean but eyelashes, i.e. the outward-bound sunbeams.
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  41.  30
    Moral Judgement: An Introduction through Anglo-American, German and French Philosophy.Étienne Brown -2000 - Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    This book is the first to introduce readers to contemporary philosophical works on moral judge- ment stemming from France, Germany and the Anglo-American world — many of which remain untranslated. By integrating Kantian and Aristotelian reflections on this subject, the author combines historiography and critical reflection to offer a rich picture of what it means to make good moral decisions. -/- As both Kantians and Aristotelians argue, moral judgements are ultimately grounded in the normativity of practical identities. Thus, it is (...) by identifying the obligations tied to the multiple dimensions of our identities (e.g., friend, teacher, romantic partner, citizen) that we can ultimately understand how we ought to act. Yet, Aristotle and Kant also remind us that doing so requires the acquisition of moral virtues which allow us to better discern practical reasons in concrete situations. (shrink)
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  42.  16
    Bioética e direitos humanos.Reinaldo Pereira E. Silva &Fernanda Brandão Lapa (eds.) -2002 - Florianópolis, SC: OAB/SC Editora.
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  43.  54
    Sobre alguns aspectos da relação entre fé e saber no século XVII.Franklin Leopoldo E. Silva -1983 -Discurso 15:133-146.
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  44.  13
    Khu̇mu̇u̇niĭ ertȯnt︠s︡ ba togtvortoĭ khȯgzhil: Shinzhlėkh ukhaany gavʹi︠a︡at zu̇tgėltėn, doktor, professor T︠S︡.Balkhaazhavyn 90 nasny oĭd zoriulsan ėrdėm shinzhilgėėniĭ baga khurlyn ėmkhėtgėl.T︠S︡ėrėnpiliĭn Balkhaazhav &B. Pu̇rėvsu̇rėn (eds.) -2018 - Ulaanbaatar Khot: Soëmbo Printing.
    Memoirs and papers presented at a conference held on the occasion of the 90th birthday of the Mongolian philosopher Ts. Balkhaajav.
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  45.  54
    Lucani sententia de deis et fato, by J. E. Millard. (Utrecht, Beyers.).W. E. Heitland -1892 -The Classical Review 6 (1-2):68-.
  46.  11
    Leninskai︠a︡ dialektika i metafizika pozitivizma: razmyshlenii︠a︡ nad knigoĭ V.I. Lenina "Materializm i ėmpiriokritit︠s︡izm" dialektika idealʹnogo.Ė. V. Ilʹenkov -2015 - Moskva: Dmitriĭ Sechin.
  47.  6
    Fizika absoli︠u︡tnogo prostranstva i absoli︠u︡tnogo vremeni: spet︠s︡ialʹnai︠a︡ teorii︠a︡ otnositelʹnosti, osnovannai︠a︡ na absoli︠u︡tnom prostranstve i absoli︠u︡tnom vremeni, a takshe utochnennai︠a︡ spet︠s︡ialʹnai︠a︡ teorii︠a︡ otnositelʹnosti A. Ėĭnshteĭna, osnovannai︠a︡ na pokazanii︠a︡kh izmeritelʹnykh priborov, i ikh fizicheskoe i filosofskoe soderzhanie; ėlektromagnitnye i gravitat︠s︡ionnye vzaimodeĭstvii︠a︡.G. E. Ivanchenko -1995 - Moskva: Izd-vo "ASLAN".
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  48. La physique quantique,(Michel MEYER).E. Klein -forthcoming -Revue Internationale de Philosophie.
     
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  49. Na puti k filosofii: putevye razmyshlenii︠a︡.E. V. Kosilova -2022 - Sankt-Peterburg: Aleteĭi︠a︡.
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  50.  17
    Exact ground states for the four-electron problem in a Hubbard ladder.E. Kovács &Z. Gulácsi -2006 -Philosophical Magazine 86 (13-14):1997-2009.
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