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Results for 'Gian Matteo Apuzzo'

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  1.  531
    Report on Shafe Policies, Strategies and Funding.Willeke van Staalduinen,Carina Dantas,Maddalena Illario,Cosmina Paul,Agnieszka Cieśla,Alexander Seifert,Alexandre Chikalanow,Amine Haj Taieb,Ana Perandres,Andjela Jaksić Stojanović,Andrea Ferenczi,Andrej Grgurić,Andrzej Klimczuk,Anne Moen,Areti Efthymiou,Arianna Poli,Aurelija Blazeviciene,Avni Rexhepi,Begonya Garcia-Zapirain,Berrin Benli,Bettina Huesbp,Damon Berry,Daniel Pavlovski,Deborah Lambotte,Diana Guardado,Dumitru Todoroi,Ekateryna Shcherbakova,Evgeny Voropaev,Fabio Naselli,Flaviana Rotaru,Francisco Melero,GianMatteoApuzzo,Gorana Mijatović,Hannah Marston,Helen Kelly,Hrvoje Belani,Igor Ljubi,Ildikó Modlane Gorgenyi,Jasmina Baraković Husić,Jennifer Lumetzberger,Joao Apóstolo,John Deepu,John Dinsmore,Joost van Hoof,Kadi Lubi,Katja Valkama,Kazumasa Yamada,Kirstin Martin,Kristin Fulgerud,Lebar S. &Lhotska Lea -2021 - Coimbra: SHINE2Europe.
    The objective of Working Group 4 of the COST Action NET4Age-Friendly is to examine existing policies, advocacy, and funding opportunities and to build up relations with policy makers and funding organisations. Also, to synthesize and improve existing knowledge and models to develop from effective business and evaluation models, as well as to guarantee quality and education, proper dissemination and ensure the future of the Action. The Working Group further aims to enable capacity building to improve interdisciplinary participation, to promote knowledge (...) exchange and to foster a cross-European interdisciplinary research capacity, to improve cooperation and co-creation with cross-sectors stakeholders and to introduce and educate students SHAFE implementation and sustainability. To enable the achievement of the objectives of Working Group 4, the Leader of the Working Group, the Chair and Vice-Chair, in close cooperation with the Science Communication Coordinator, developed a template to map the current state of SHAFE policies, funding opportunities and networking in the COST member countries of the Action. On invitation, the Working Group lead received contributions from 37 countries, in a total of 85 Action members. The contributions provide an overview of the diversity of SHAFE policies and opportunities in Europe and beyond. These were not edited or revised and are a result of the main areas of expertise and knowledge of the contributors; thus, gaps in areas or content are possible and these shall be further explored in the following works and reports of this WG. But this preliminary mapping is of huge importance to proceed with the WG activities. In the following chapters, an introduction on the need of SHAFE policies is presented, followed by a summary of the main approaches to be pursued for the next period of work. The deliverable finishes with the opportunities of capacity building, networking and funding that will be relevant to undertake within the frame of Working Group 4 and the total COST Action. The total of country contributions is presented in the annex of this deliverable. (shrink)
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  2.  367
    How to do philosophy informationally.Gian Maria Greco,Gianluca Paronitti,Matteo Turilli &Luciano Floridi -2005 -Lecture Notes in Computer Science 3782:623–634.
    In this paper we introduce three methods to approach philosophical problems informationally: Minimalism, the Method of Abstraction and Constructionism. Minimalism considers the specifications of the starting problems and systems that are tractable for a philosophical analysis. The Method of Abstraction describes the process of making explicit the level of abstraction at which a system is observed and investigated. Constructionism provides a series of principles that the investigation of the problem must fulfil once it has been fully characterised by the previous (...) two methods. For each method, we also provide an application: the problem of visual perception, functionalism, and the Turing Test, respectively. (shrink)
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  3. Matteo Perrini.Gian Enrico Manzoni -2007 -Studium 103 (1):113-116.
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  4.  62
    Development and initial validation of the Cardiovascular Disease Acceptance and Action Questionnaire in an Italian sample of cardiac patients.Chiara A. M. Spatola,Emanuele A. M. Cappella,Christina L. Goodwin,Matteo Baruffi,Gabriella Malfatto,Mario Facchini,Gianluca Castelnuovo,Gian Mauro Manzoni &Enrico Molinari -2014 -Frontiers in Psychology 5.
  5.  15
    Viaggio nel viaggio: metamorfosi della conoscenza.LoredanoMatteo Lorenzetti -1992 - Milano: Guerini studio.
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  6.  87
    Intuitions About the Reference of Proper Names: a Meta-Analysis.Noah van Dongen,Matteo Colombo,Felipe Romero &Jan Sprenger -2020 -Review of Philosophy and Psychology 12 (4):745-774.
    The finding that intuitions about the reference of proper names vary cross-culturally was one of the early milestones in experimental philosophy. Many follow-up studies investigated the scope and magnitude of such cross-cultural effects, but our paper provides the first systematic meta-analysis of studies replicating. In the light of our results, we assess the existence and significance of cross-cultural effects for intuitions about the reference of proper names.
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  7.  9
    Filosofía americana y educación.Pablo Javier Aguzín &Javier DiMatteo (eds.) -2020 - [Rosario, Provincia de Santa Fe, República Argentina?]: Editorial Fundación Ross.
  8. Pensieri sulla Cometa e Dizionario storico e critico.Pierre Bayle &Gian Piero Brega -1972 -Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 162:321-321.
     
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  9. Educaçao na América Latina.Matteo di Vicenzo -1993 -Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 49 (1):277-300.
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  10.  36
    Formal analysis of responsibility attribution in a multimodal framework.Daniela Glavaničová &Matteo Pascucci -2019 - In Daniela Glavaničová & Matteo Pascucci,PRIMA 2019: Principles and Practice of Multi-Agent Systems. Springer. pp. 36-51.
    The present article is devoted to a logical treatment of some fundamental concepts involved in responsibility attribution. We specify a theoretical framework based on a language of temporal deontic logic with agent-relative operators for deliberate causal contribution. The framework is endowed with a procedure to solve normative conflicts which arise from the assessment of different normative sources. We provide a characterization result for a basic system within this framework and illustrate how the concepts formalized can be put at work in (...) the analysis of examples of legal reasoning. (shrink)
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  11.  38
    When do the expectations of others matter? Experimental evidence on distributional justice and guilt aversion.Riccardo Ghidoni &Matteo Ploner -2020 -Theory and Decision 91 (2):189-234.
    Distributional justice—measured by the proportionality between effort exerted and rewards obtained—and guilt aversion—triggered by not fulfilling others’ expectations—are widely acknowledged fundamental sources of pro-social behavior. We design three experiments to study the relevance of these sources of behavior when considered in interaction. In particular, we investigate whether subjects fulfill others’ expectations also when this could produce inequitable allocations that conflict with distributional justice considerations. Our results confirm that both justice considerations and guilt aversion are important drivers of pro-social behavior, with (...) the former having an overall stronger impact than the latter. Expectations of others are less relevant in environments more likely to nurture equitable outcomes. (shrink)
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  12. Global legal indicators and comparative law: the factory of indexes.Daniele D'Alvia &Matteo Nicolini -2025 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    In recent times, comparative law has moved towards a new type of visualisation of the law, which is mainly based on indexes and indicators. Through these, legal scholars and practition-ers measure legal systems against specific benchmarks; they no longer search for commonalities among legal systems but are interested in assessing how the law performs in economic terms. This book critically analyses this 'quantitative turn' in comparative law. The work focuses on the role played by social indicators, in general, and legal (...) indicators, in particular, in contemporary societies. It presents the evaluation of indicators as a pattern of gov-ernance, as well as a driver promoting a change in the law from 'outside'. The authors explore a range of issues including: how and why the quantitative turn in comparative law has taken place; how legal indicators are created and for which purposes; whether indicators really act as a new form of legitimisation and law-making and, if so, if it is possible to resist or challenge their power; whether it is fair and equitable to measure the performance of diversified national legal frameworks through such managerial tools of governance; and, ultimately, how legal indi-cators change the way we conceive of the law. The book addresses these issues by focusing on legal indicators whose global ambitions are often related to societal concerns. To this extent, it examines how both non-economic and economic global indicators might have some bearing on the law. The volume will be of interest to advanced students, researchers and academics in Comparative Law, Global Law, Transnational Law, Constitutional Law, and Law and Economics"-- Provided by publisher. (shrink)
     
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  13.  13
    Le ragioni dell'esistenza: esistenzialismo e ragione in Luigi Stefanini.Matteo De Boni -2017 - Milano: Mimesis.
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  14.  6
    (In-)attualità di Adorno: estetica e dialettica.Giuseppe Molinari &Matteo Settura (eds.) -2022 - Milano: Mimesis.
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  15.  7
    A filosofia no Recife: ontem e hoje.Alfredo Moraes &Vincenzo DiMatteo (eds.) -2006 - Olinda, PE: Editora Livro Rápido.
  16.  22
    Introduction temporal reasoning and tensed truths.Vincent Grandjean &Matteo Pascucci -2024 -Synthese 204 (1):1-5.
    This topical collection is dedicated to the formal representation of arguments involving temporal reasoning and tensed truths; in particular, arguments with a clear significance to everyday life. In a broad perspective, temporal reasoning can be rigorously encoded via intensional logic, treating tenses as modalities, or via extensional logic, quantifying over domains of temporal objects (e.g., instants, intervals, etc.). Nowadays there are several formal devices (languages, systems, semantics, etc.) able to deal with time in many regards. Each of these devices is (...) characterized by peculiar features, such as a certain choice of primitive notions and, arguably, a certain kind of ontological commitment (see, e.g., the surveys of approaches offered by Prior 1967, van Benthem 1983, Gabbay, Hodkinson & Reynolds 1994 and Øhrstrøm & Hasle 1995). The truth-conditions of (the propositions expressed by) statements involving tenses can be explained either in terms of the “past-present-future” opposition (McTaggart’s A-theory) or in terms of the “earlier-later” opposition (McTaggart’s B-theory). Moreover, taking into account the difference between chronologically definite propositions and chronologically indefinite propositions (Rescher 1966), it is possible to distinguish between atemporal and temporal (or tensed) notions of truth. This topical collection will primarily focus on the latter. (shrink)
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  17.  21
    Interview with Charlene Haddock Seigfried.Michela Bella,Matteo Santarelli &Charlene Haddock Seigfried -2015 -European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 7 (2).
    Michela Bella &Matteo Santarelli – What did you know about Pragmatism when you started? Where did you start as a student? Charlene Haddock Seigfried – I came to pragmatism by way of existentialism. During the late sixties, I took my first graduate class at the University of Southern California – an introduction to empiricism – which I didn’t like at all, and I also attended a lecture on existentialism, which intrigued me. But I was always interested in social (...) and political issues and I was m... (shrink)
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  18.  11
    Pensare la pace: il legame imprendibile.F. Bonicalzi &Matteo Amori (eds.) -2011 - Milano: Jaca book.
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  19. PRIMA 2019: Principles and Practice of Multi-Agent Systems.Daniela Glavaničová &Matteo Pascucci (eds.) -forthcoming - Springer.
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  20. Einstein in Innsbruck: über die wegweisenden Dialoge zur modernen Quantenmechanik von 1924.SalvatoreMatteo Giacomuzzi -2024 - Innsbruck: Michael Wagner Verlag.
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  21.  37
    Axiomatizing norms across time and the 'Paradox of the Court'.Daniela Glavaničová &Matteo Pascucci -2021 - In Fenrong Liu, Alessandra Marra, Paul Portner & Frederik Van de Putte,Deontic Logic and Normative Systems: 15th International Conference, DEON 2020/2021. College Publications. pp. 201-218.
    In normative reasoning one typically refers to intervals of time across which norms are intended to hold, as well as to alternative possibilities representing hypothetical developments of a given scenario. Thus, deontic modalities are naturally intertwined with temporal and metaphysical ones. Furthermore, contemporary debates in philosophy suggest that a proper understanding of fundamental ethical principles, such as the Ought-Implies-Can thesis, requires a simultaneous analysis of these three families of concepts. In the present article we propose a general formal framework which (...) allows for fine-grained multimodal reasoning in the normative domain. We provide an axiomatization for a novel system of propositional logic encoding the way in which possibilities and norms arising from different sources change over intervals of time. The usefulness of our framework is illustrated by analysing an ancient and particularly challenging `cold case', the Paradox of the Court. (shrink)
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  22.  15
    Seminario di Storia dei Concetti: “Il governo della società. Stato, potere ed economia nel XIX secolo”.Matias X. Gonzalez &Matteo Rossi -2020 -Scienza and Politica. Per Una Storia Delle Dottrine 32 (63):251-257.
    Dipartimento di Culture, Politica e Società Università di Torino, 9 ottobre 2020.
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  23.  32
    L’appropriation du capital fixe : une métaphore?Antonio Negri &Matteo Polleri -2018 -Multitudes 70 (1):92.
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  24.  25
    Averroes and philosophy in islamic Spain.Matteo di Giovanni -2011 - In John Marenbon,The Oxford Handbook to Medieval Philosophy. Oxford Up.
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  25. II/3. Minora : scritti latini storici e d'occasione.A. Cura diGian Galeazzo Visconti -1982 - In Giambattista Vico & Giuseppe Ferrari,Opere di Giambattista Vico. Napoli: Consiglio nazionale delle ricerche, Centro di studi vichiani.
     
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  26.  50
    Paul Brouzeng;, Suzanne Débarbat . Sur les traces des Cassini: Astronomes et observatoires du sud de la France. 370 pp., illus., figs., tables, index. Paris: Editions du Comité des Travaux Historiques et Scientifiques, 2001. €31. [REVIEW]J. Heilbron -2002 -Isis 93 (2):286-287.
    An outdated geography supplies the bond among the thirty‐one articles in Sur les traces des Cassini. In the seventeenth century, when the ItaliansGian Domenico Cassini and his nephew Giacomo Filippo Maraldi were born in Perinaldo, north of Genoa, their birthplace belonged to the County of Nice. Hence the rationale of building a set of papers on astronomy in the south of France around Cassini I and his family, which for four generations ran the Royal Observatory in Paris.Over half (...) the articles concern the Cassinis, mostly Cassini I and his great‐great‐grandson and namesake Cassini IV. There was also a Cassini V, Henri de Cassini, who countered the family genius and stamina by preferring botany and dying early, of the same outbreak of cholera that took the life of Sadi Carnot, without having created Cassini VI. He had already entered the Academy of Sciences with a push from his father. “I dare to beg of you [Cassini IV wrote to his fellow academician A. M. Ampère] to consider whether this unique situation in the history of letters, [a family's] devotion to the sciences for five successive generations and 170 years, ought not add some weight to the scientific credentials of my son.” It is hard to refuse the children of important alumni.The portion of Traces dealing more directly with astronomy in the south of France gets off to a distant start. Pytheas of Marseilles, who lived about 350 b.c., sailed to the Orkneys and the Baltic and earned himself the reputation of a liar back home for his stories of midnight suns and frozen lakes. He measured the latitude of Marseilles, the obliquity of the ecliptic, and the size of the earth. Ptolemy praised him. Strabo did not: “Pytheas lied about everything and covered it up with his knowledge of astronomy and numbers.”No traces worth following up were laid down for just under two thousand years. Then, in 1580, Nicolas Fabri de Peiresc first saw the light of day. He lived in Italy for four years as a very young man, deepening his knowledge of astronomy and human nature and meeting the main future actors in the Galileo affair: Galileo himself, Bellarmine, andMatteo Barberini . At his center in Aix‐la‐Provence, Peiresc made many useful astronomical observations, some in collaboration with Pierre Gassendi. He died in harness, worrying about the change of the obliquity since the days of Pytheas.There follow articles on Provençal astronomers who determined longitude and latitude at sea, on neglected observers in Languedoc who assisted the cause of the Enlightenment, and on modern observatories in the south of France. The political circumstances after the defeat of 1870–1871 favored decentralization of astronomy away from the Paris Observatory. In Italy, too, recent political events—the unification of 1870—made a restructuring of astronomical institutions desirable and possible. But whereas France had too few observatories, Italy had too many. Georges Rayet and Pietro Tacchini, both astrophysicists, compared the circumstances in their countries and made mutually reinforcing proposals to their colleagues and governments. Their respective proposals, most of which were enacted, called for reassigning some Italian observatories to meteorological work, building new observatories in Besançon, Bordeaux, and Lyon, and refurbishing older ones at Marseilles and Toulouse. Once again, as in the days of Cassini I, Italy made a decisive contribution to the practice of astronomy in France.Sur les traces des Cassini mixes slight and weighty work, admits antiquarian and broader approaches, offers new documentation, displays pertinent illustrations, and does it all at a high level of scholarship. Since, because of its title, the book's primary audience probably will be people interested in the Cassinis, its fullest articles about them may usefully be mentioned here: Anna Cassini on Cassini's brief return to Italy, 1694–1696; Claude Teillet on the provincial life and poetry of Cassini IV; Christiane Demeulenaere‐Douyère on the Cassinis and the Académie des Sciences; Fabrizio Bonoli and Alessandro Braccesi on Cassini I's astronomical work in Bologna, with full bibliography; and Monique Pelletier on the Cassini map of France, on which she has written a book . Pytheas and Peiresc are the subjects of collaborative articles by Simone Arzano and Yvon Georgelin. (shrink)
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  27.  605
    Nongenetic selection and nongenetic inheritance.Matteo Mameli -2004 -British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 55 (1):35-71.
    According to the received view of evolution, only genes are inherited. From this view it follows that only genetically-caused phenotypic variation is selectable and, thereby, that all selection is at bottom genetic selection. This paper argues that the received view is wrong. In many species, there are intergenerationally-stable phenotypic differences due to environmental differences. Natural selection can act on these nongenetically-caused phenotypic differences in the same way it acts on genetically-caused phenotypic differences. Some selection is at bottom nongenetic selection. The (...) argument against the received view involves a reformulation of the concepts of inheritance and heritability. Inherited factors are all those developmental factors responsible for parent–offspring similarity; some inherited factors are genetic and some are not. Heritable variation is intergenerationally-stable phenotypic variation; some such variation is genetically-caused and some is not. The received view and its critics The possibility of nongenetic selection (the lucky butterfly) The reality of nongenetic selection 3.1 Imprinting mechanisms 3.2 Other learning mechanisms 3.3 Other nongenetic mechanisms Genetic and nongenetic inheritance mechanisms Genetic and nongenetic inherited factors Genetic and nongenetic heritability Conclusions + Current address: DrMatteo Mameli, Research Fellow, King's College, Cambridge, CB2 1ST, United Kingdom,matteo.mameli{at}kings.cam.ac.uk' + u + '@' + d + ''//-->. (shrink)
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  28.  26
    Cognitive gadgets and cognitive priors.Gian Domenico Iannetti &Giorgio Vallortigara -2019 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42.
    Some of the foundations of Heyes’ radical reasoning seem to be based on a fractional selection of available evidence. Using an ethological perspective, we argue against Heyes’ rapid dismissal of innate cognitive instincts. Heyes’ use of fMRI studies of literacy to claim that culture assembles pieces of mental technology seems an example of incorrect reverse inferences and overlap theories pervasive in cognitive neuroscience.
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  29.  23
    Sunrise.Gian Carla Agbisit -2021 -Kritike 15 (2):i-i.
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  30.  7
    La struttura della percezione.Gian Luigi Brena -1969 - Milano,: Vita e pensiero.
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  31. Scritti in Onore di Eugenio Garin.Gian Carlo Garfagnini (ed.) -1987 - Scuola Normale Superiore.
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  32. Eisagōgē eis tēn nomikēn epistēmēn.Gianēs Kōnstantinou Kordatos -1977
     
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  33.  14
    Socrate, Platone, Aristotele: una filosofia della polis, da Politeia a Politika.Gian Franco Lami -2005 - Soveria Mannelli: Rubbettino.
  34. Valori figurativi nell'educazione poetica del Poliziano.Gian Carlo Oli -1959 -Rinascimento 10:197-220.
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  35.  31
    Tra morale, etica e politica. La questione della solidarietà in Ronald Dworkin.Gian Luca Sanna -2018 -Società Degli Individui 60:9-23.
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  36.  7
    Essere, libertà, moralità: studi su Antonio Rosmini.Gian Pietro Soliani -2018 - Napoli: Orthotes.
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  37.  50
    Soundness arguments for consistency and their epistemic value: A critical note.Matteo Zicchetti -2024 -Philosophical Quarterly.
    Soundness Arguments for the consistency of a (mathematical) theory S aim to show that S is consistent by first showing or employing the fact that S is sound, i.e., that all theorems of S are true. Although soundness arguments are virtually unanimously accepted as valid and sound for most of our accepted theories, philosophers disagree about their epistemic value, i.e., about whether such arguments can be employed to improve our epistemic situation concerning questions of consistency. This article provides a (partial) (...) negative answer to this question and argues that soundness arguments cannot be employed to justify their conclusion. Additionally, soundness arguments are unconvincing; they cannot be employed to overcome reasonable open-mindedness about their conclusion. (shrink)
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  38.  177
    Relational EPR.Matteo Smerlak &Carlo Rovelli -2007 -Foundations of Physics 37 (3):427-445.
    We study the EPR-type correlations from the perspective of the relational interpretation of quantum mechanics. We argue that these correlations do not entail any form of “non-locality”, when viewed in the context of this interpretation. The abandonment of strict Einstein realism implied by the relational stance permits to reconcile quantum mechanics, completeness, (operationally defined) separability, and locality.
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  39.  7
    Metaphysics and the Sciences.Matteo Morganti -2024 - Cambridge University Press.
    This Element presents and critically examines the relationship between metaphysics and the sciences. Section 1 provides a brief introduction. Section 2 looks at the methodological issues that arise when metaphysics and science get into contact, which is a much-debated aspect of the larger dispute concerning philosophical 'naturalism' and 'anti-naturalism'. A taxonomy of possible views is offered. Section 3 looks more specifically at milder forms of naturalism about metaphysics, which attempt in various ways to make it 'continuous' with science while preserving (...) some degree of autonomy for it. Section 4 adds some reflections on what might be regarded as the most pressing open problem when it comes to doing scientifically oriented metaphysics (but also when practising metaphysics or science in isolation): the problem concerning theory choice and the value of non-empirical factors in determining which explanation of certain phenomena should be preferred. (shrink)
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  40. A new look at relational holism in quantum mechanics.Matteo Morganti -2009 -Philosophy of Science 76 (5):1027--1038.
    Teller argued that violations of Bell’s inequalities are to be explained by interpreting quantum entangled systems according to ‘relational holism’, that is, by postulating that they exhibit irreducible (‘inherent’) relations. Teller also suggested a possible application of this idea to quantum statistics. However, the basic proposal was not explained in detail nor has the additional idea about statistics been articulated in further work. In this article, I reconsider relational holism, amending it and spelling it out as appears necessary for a (...) proper assessment, and application, of the position. †To contact the author, please write to: FB Philosophie‐Zukunftskolleg, University of Konstanz, Universitätstraße 10, 78464, Konstanz, Germany; e‐mail:matteo.morganti@uni ‐konstanz.de. (shrink)
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  41.  36
    From Suicide Due to an Economic-Financial Crisis to the Management of Entrepreneurial Health: Elements of a Biographical Change Management Service and Clinical Implications.Gian Piero Turchi,Antonio Iudici &Elena Faccio -2019 -Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  42. The ethics of information transparency.Matteo Turilli &Luciano Floridi -2009 -Ethics and Information Technology 11 (2):105-112.
    The paper investigates the ethics of information transparency (henceforth transparency). It argues that transparency is not an ethical principle in itself but a pro-ethical condition for enabling or impairing other ethical practices or principles. A new definition of transparency is offered in order to take into account the dynamics of information production and the differences between data and information. It is then argued that the proposed definition provides a better understanding of what sort of information should be disclosed and what (...) sort of information should be used in order to implement and make effective the ethical practices and principles to which an organisation is committed. The concepts of “heterogeneous organisation” and “autonomous computational artefact” are further defined in order to clarify the ethical implications of the technology used in implementing information transparency. It is argued that explicit ethical designs, which describe how ethical principles are embedded into the practice of software design, would represent valuable information that could be disclosed by organisations in order to support their ethical standing. (shrink)
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  43. Inherent Properties and Statistics with Individual Particles in Quantum Mechanics.Matteo Morganti -2009 -Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 40 (3):223-231.
    This paper puts forward the hypothesis that the distinctive features of quantum statistics are exclusively determined by the nature of the properties it describes. In particular, all statistically relevant properties of identical quantum particles in many-particle systems are conjectured to be irreducible, ‘inherent’ properties only belonging to the whole system. This allows one to explain quantum statistics without endorsing the ‘Received View’ that particles are non-individuals, or postulating that quantum systems obey peculiar probability distributions, or assuming that there are primitive (...) restrictions on the range of states accessible to such systems. With this, the need for an unambiguously metaphysical explanation of certain physical facts is acknowledged and satisfied. (shrink)
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  44. Phenomenologie discrete. Ecrits sur les mathematiques, la science et le langage.Gian Carlo Rota &Fr Patras -2008 -Archives de Philosophie 71 (1):135.
     
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  45.  26
    Coleridge and German idealism.Gian Napoleone Giordano Orsini -1969 - Carbondale,: Southern Illinois University Press.
    Professor Orsini’s book enters the controversy that has marked the changing response to Coleridge’s work during the past forty years, stimulated recently by the accessibility of Coleridge manuscripts and by the publication of hitherto unpublished works. Professor Orsini himself contributes to our new knowl­edge by publishing here for the first time texts from the note­books. His book is of importance and interest because it examines problems which are rooted in world-wide intellectual developments of recent times. Counterposing his argument against the (...) theory that Col­eridge had anticipated Kant and Schelling, Professor Orsini marshalls impressive evidence that shows that Coleridge was familiar with the works of the German idealists and that they greatly influenced his thinking, to the extent that he was for a time an expounder of transcendental idealism, and should be credited with bringing it to England. Professor Orsini’s new findings will lead inevitably to reassessment of Coleridge’s status as a philosopher, though he insists that his report is an interim one, that a final estimate must wait until all Coleridge’s writings have been published and assessed. (shrink)
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  46.  11
    Indiscrete Thoughts.Gian-Carlo Rota -1997 - Birkhauser.
    Offers a glimpse into the world of science and technology between 1950 and 1990 as seen through the eyes of a mathematician, and debunks various myths of scientific philosophy. Portrays some of the great scientific personalities of the period, including Stanislav Ulam, who patented the hydrogen bomb, and Jack Schwartz, one of the founders of computer science. Also discusses phenomenology of mathematics, and philosophy and computer science. Includes book reviews. For students and academics. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, (...) OR. (shrink)
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  47.  73
    Non-well-founded sets via revision rules.Gian Aldo Antonelli -1994 -Journal of Philosophical Logic 23 (6):633 - 679.
  48.  106
    Meat made us moral: a hypothesis on the nature and evolution of moral judgment.Matteo Mameli -2013 -Biology and Philosophy 28 (6):903-931.
    In the first part of the article, an account of moral judgment in terms of emotional dispositions is given. This account provides an expressivist explanation of three important features of moral demands: inescapability, authority independence and meriting. In the second part of the article, some ideas initially put forward by Christopher Boehm are developed and modified in order to provide a hypothesis about the evolution of the ability to token moral judgments. This hypothesis makes evolutionary sense of inescapability, authority independence (...) and meriting. It does so by referring to the selection pressures generated in the Late Pleistocene by large-game hunting. If the hypothesis is correct, we can say that, in a sense, meat made us moral. (shrink)
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  49.  26
    Responsabilità di fronte al male.Gian Luigi Brena -2005 -Idee 59:9-25.
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  50.  38
    Cervello come coscienza? La 'risoluzione' neurobiologica della soggettività?Gian Franco Frigo -2009 -Idee 70:115-126.
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