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Results for 'John T. Vu'

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  1.  38
    Commentary: Switching between internally and externally focused attention in obsessive-compulsive disorder: Abnormal visual cortex activation and connectivity.John T. Vu,Gian R. Agtarap &Michael Wong -2017 -Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  2.  25
    John Henry Newman: el viaje al Mediterráneo de 1833 by Victor García Ruiz.John T. Ford -2020 -Newman Studies Journal 17 (2):121-125.
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  3.  49
    Pilgrim Journey:John Henry Newman 1801-1845.John T. Ford -2004 -Newman Studies Journal 1 (2):109-110.
  4.  120
    The Law Governed Universe.John T. Roberts -2008 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The law-governed world-picture -- A remarkable idea about the way the universe is cosmos and compulsion -- The laws as the cosmic order : the best-system approach -- The three ways : no-laws, non-governing-laws, governing-laws -- Work that laws do in science -- An important difference between the laws of nature and the cosmic order -- The picture in four theses -- The strategy of this book -- The meta-theoretic conception of laws -- The measurability approach to laws -- What (...) comes where -- In defense of some received views -- Some assumptions that will be in play -- The laws are propositions -- The laws are true -- The logically contingent consequences of the laws are laws themselves -- At least some laws are metaphysically contingent -- The meta-theoretic conception of laws -- Laws of nature, laws of science, laws of theories -- The first-order conception versus the meta-theoretic conception -- What is a law of nature? -- Some examples of meta-theoretic accounts -- The virtues of the meta-theoretic conception -- Weighing the virtues and shortcomings of the meta-theoretic conception -- An epistemological argument for the meta-theoretic conception of laws -- The discoverability thesis, the governing thesis, and the first-order conception -- The main argument -- The objection from bad company -- The objection from inference to the best explanation -- The objection from bayesianism -- The objection from contextualist epistemology -- The objection from the threat of inductive skepticism -- Laws, governing, and counterfactuals -- Where we are now -- What would things have to be like in order for the laws of nature to govern the universe? -- Lawhood, inevitability, counterfactuals -- What is it for a proposition to be inevitably true? -- What is it for a whole class of propositions to be inevitably true? -- What is it for lawhood to confer inevitability? -- NP and supporting counterfactuals -- The worry about context-variability -- A solution and a look ahead -- When would the laws have been different? -- Where we are now -- The God cases -- Other counterexamples to NP -- A moral-theoretic counterexample to NP -- Scientific contexts and non-scientific contexts -- Scientific God cases? -- Lewisian non-backtracking counterexamples -- Where things stand now -- How could science show that the laws govern? -- Why the law-governed world-picture must include the science-says-so thesis -- What is extra-scientific? -- How can the science-says-so thesis be true? -- NP as a consequence of the presuppositions in any scientific context -- Np as true in all possible scientific contexts -- But how could it be so? -- Attack of the actual-factualists -- Measurement and counterfactuals -- Where we are now -- Measurements, reliability, counterfactuals -- A general principle that captures the relation between measurement and counterfactuals -- What we can learn about lawhood from what we have learned about the counterfactual commitments of science -- A first-order account of laws or a meta-theoretic account of laws? -- What methods are presupposed to be legitimate measurement procedures? -- Why we must adopt a meta-theoretic account of laws -- What lawhood is -- Where we are now -- The measurability account of laws -- Brief review of the case for the mal -- A note about hedged laws -- How plausible is the mal? -- What if we don't care about the law-governed world-picture? -- Newton's God and Laplace's demon -- Beyond humean and non-humean -- Two views of laws -- Humean supervenience and the meta-theoretic conception -- Alleged counterexamples to humean supervenience -- Governing and non-trivial necessity -- How the mal lets us have it all -- Humeanism? non-humeanism? -- What is the significance of the idea of the law-governed universe? -- Where in the world are the laws of nature? -- Appendix: The mal in action : a few examples -- Of scientific theories and their laws -- Newton's theory as a paradigm example -- Classical special-force laws -- Geometrical optics and one of its laws -- Local deterministic field theories. (shrink)
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  5.  20
    Dieu Intérieur: La théologie spirituelle deJohn Henry Newman by Keith Beaumont.John T. Ford -2017 -Newman Studies Journal 14 (1):69-70.
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  6.  24
    Rousseau's God: theology, religion, and the natural goodness of man.John T. Scott -2023 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    Rousseau's God offers a comprehensive interpretation of Rousseau's theological and religious writings, both in themselves and in relation to his philosophy of the natural goodness of man.John T. Scott argues that there is a complicated relationship between Rousseau's philosophy, on the one hand, and his theological and religious thought. This relationship revolves around two oppositions: first, between the attributes and psychological needs of natural man and social or moral man; second, between the criteria of truth and utility for (...) evaluating theological and religious doctrines. In short, because the justification of nature through the natural goodness of man does not suffice for developed humans, Rousseau offers theological and religious doctrines which are less true than useful, psychologically, morally, or politically. (shrink)
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  7.  46
    Stable generic structures.John T. Baldwin &Niandong Shi -1996 -Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 79 (1):1-35.
    Hrushovski originated the study of “flat” stable structures in constructing a new strongly minimal set and a stable 0-categorical pseudoplane. We exhibit a set of axioms which for collections of finite structure with dimension function δ give rise to stable generic models. In addition to the Hrushovski examples, this formalization includes Baldwin's almost strongly minimal non-Desarguesian projective plane and several others. We develop the new case where finite sets may have infinite closures with respect to the dimension function δ. In (...) particular, the generic structure need not be ω-saturated and so the argument for stability is significantly more complicated. We further show that these structures are “flat” and do not interpret a group. (shrink)
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  8.  38
    John Henry Newman: A Short Introduction to His Writings.John T. Ford -2015 -Newman Studies Journal 12 (2):33-45.
    This essay, which was originally presented at the first Coloquio Internacional at the Guadalajara Campus of the Universidad Panamericana, Mexico, October 8-10, is a short introduction to Newman’s writings in six areas—autobiography, philosophy, theology, literature, education and spirituality—along with some suggestions for additional reading, particularly for those beginning Newman studies.
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  9.  15
    (3 other versions)John Henry Newman.John T. Ford -2004 -Newman Studies Journal 1 (1):62-76.
    Newman was a prolific writer, but one who usually wrote on “call”; sometimes these calls were unexpected, but at other times they were a pastoral responsibility. Such was the case with his sermons, which exhibit four characteristics: biblically based, theologically grounded, circumstantially relevant, and spiritually insightful. As such, his sermons still appeal to readers today.
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  10.  63
    John W. Rosenthal. A new proof of a theorem of Shelah. The journal of symbolic logic, vol. 37 , pp. 133–134.John T. Baldwin -1973 -Journal of Symbolic Logic 38 (4):649.
  11.  30
    A Hanf number for saturation and omission: the superstable case.John T. Baldwin &Saharon Shelah -2014 -Mathematical Logic Quarterly 60 (6):437-443.
  12.  59
    Three autobiographical manuscripts by Ernst Mach.John T. Blackmore -1978 -Annals of Science 35 (4):401-418.
    This paper is a collection of original source material for the use of all scholars interested in understanding Ernst Mach's life as an aid to comprehending his unique and controversial impact on the development of modern physics and both the history and philosophy of science. The documents are complete; and to encourage points of view other than my own, I have listed a number of very recent articles in my footnotes which reflect a wide spectrum of opinion on Ernst Mach (...) and the singular nature of his ideas. (shrink)
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  13.  5
    Value, language & life: an essay in theory of value.John T. Goldthwait -1985 - Buffalo, N.Y.: Prometheus Books.
    Answering the simplest questions satisfactorily often poses the greatest challenge and difficulty to philosophers. Since these questions concern principles underlying our everyday conduct, the inability to provide convincing answers can be exceedingly frustrating. When, during a career of teaching,John T. Goldthwait was asked by his students "Why is that good?" - in regard to art and to conduct - he realized he had no answer that would satisfy his students and himself. And so, his effort to answer his (...) students became a journey through the concept of value judgments, resulting in his book, Value, Language, and Life. What is value? What makes things good? Value, Language, and Life presents a new answer to these age-old questions through Goldthwait's adaptation of linguistic analysis and phenomenological methodology. By examining our everyday experience and use of language, he arrives at a knowledge of value that can be applied in solving problems and reconciling disputes about value. This unique approach enables us to place ethics, aesthetics, and other fields in which value is prominent on a single foundation. (shrink)
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  14.  10
    After Emerson.John T. Lysaker -2017 - Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.
    Where do we find ourselves? -- Not with syllables but men -- Essaying America -- Living multiplicity: a matter of course -- Emerson, race, and the conduct of life -- Reforming ethical life -- Emerson and the case of philosophy -- Abbreviations for Emerson's works.
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  15. Heaven, Hell & History a Survey of Man's Faith in History From Antiquity to the PresentJohn T. Marcus. --.John T. Marcus -1967 - Macmillan.
     
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  16.  35
    Gailliot Award for Newman Studies.John T. Ford -2016 -Newman Studies Journal 13 (2):90-91.
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  17.  10
    “In a Higher World it is Otherwise, but Here Below to Live is to Change, and to Be Perfect is to Have Changed Often.”.John T. Ford -2004 -Newman Studies Journal 1 (2):3-4.
  18.  30
    “Lead, Kindly Light, Amid The Encircling Gloom”.John T. Ford -2008 -Newman Studies Journal 5 (1):3-4.
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  19.  18
    May Newman’s Example Continue to Inspire New Generations of Students to Draw Abundantly from the Richness of the Christian Tradition in Order to Respond to the Deepest Yearnings of The Human Spirit...John T. Ford -2007 -Newman Studies Journal 4 (1):3-4.
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  20. Recent Studies on Newman.John T. Ford -forthcoming -The Thomist.
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  21. Two Recent Studies on Newman.John T. Ford -1977 -The Thomist 41 (3):424.
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  22.  27
    Photo-graphing Spirit part 1.John T. Giordano -1999 -Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 3 (1):139-148.
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  23.  41
    Dual-process theory and signal-detection theory of recognition memory.John T. Wixted -2007 -Psychological Review 114 (1):152-176.
  24.  24
    Vividness, spatial manipulation, and spontaneous elaboration: A critical evaluation of the use of factor analysis by Lorenz and Neisser.John T. E. Richardson -1988 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 26 (5):437-440.
  25.  18
    Machiavelli’s Catilinarian Oration.John T. Scott -2023 -Polis 40 (1):110-127.
    In the Discourses on Livy, Machiavelli claims that writers who are afraid to condemn Caesar instead criticize Catiline. I argue that Machiavelli follows this advice by inverting it. He openly condemns Caesar and the empire he founded while signaling that he has in mind another inimical example: the Church. He signals his intention by echoing Cicero’s fourth Catilinarian oration, imitating Cicero’s image of the ruin of Rome if Catiline’s conspiracy were to succeed through his own vision of the Italy wrought (...) by wicked Roman emperors who succeeded Caesar. The reader of Machiavelli who recognizes this echo is in a position to see Machiavelli’s own Catilinarian oration against another successor of Caesar. In making my argument, I draw on Rex Stem’s treatment of the functions of exemplementarity as employed by authors of texts and as received by their readers. (shrink)
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  26.  21
    SIX. A Stone’s Throw from Paris.John T. Scott &Robert Zaretsky -2009 - In Robert Zaretsky & John T. Scott,The Philosophers' Quarrel: Rousseau, Hume, and the Limits of Human Understanding. Yale University Press. pp. 90-103.
  27.  26
    Education and Development in Latin America.John T. K. Adams &Laurence Gale -1970 -British Journal of Educational Studies 18 (1):101.
    First published in 1969, this volume presents a survey of the contemporary national education system in Latin American countries. Laurence Gale describes the uneven provision of schools for different sections of the community and the problems which arise with the racial, cultural and geographical difficulties. He examines the main features in education throughout Latin America, areas of co-operation and agreement and differences of policy and provision.
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  28. A selection of papers presented at the" Stability in Model Theory III" conference.John T. Baldwin &Annalisa Marcja -1993 -Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 62 (2).
  29.  17
    Scepticism, Truth and Religious Belief in the Thought ofJohn Henry Newman: A Contribution to Contemporary Debate by DanielJohn Pratt Morris-Chapman.John T. Ford -2019 -Newman Studies Journal 16 (1):121-123.
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  30.  22
    Categoricity.John T. Baldwin -2009 - American Mathematical Society.
    CHAPTER 1 Combinatorial Geometries and Infinitary Logics In this chapter we introduce two of the key concepts that are used throughout the text. ...
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  31.  28
    Preface.John T. Baldwin -1993 -Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 62 (2):81.
  32.  29
    The metamathematics of random graphs.John T. Baldwin -2006 -Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 143 (1-3):20-28.
    We explain and summarize the use of logic to provide a uniform perspective for studying limit laws on finite probability spaces. This work connects developments in stability theory, finite model theory, abstract model theory, and probability. We conclude by linking this context with work on the Urysohn space.
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  33.  36
    The Tragedy of the Athenian Ideal in Thucydides and Plato.John T. Hogan -2020 - Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, imprint of Rowman and Littlefield.
    This book shows how Plato's "Statesman" and Thucydides' presentation of the moral collapse in Athenian political discourse reveal many points of agreement between Plato and Thucydides. Discussions of other dialogues including "Meno," "Laches," "Charmides," "Symposium," "Phaedo," "Sophist," and "Laws" confirm this agreement. Please see thucydides(dot)org for some editorial errata and corrections. The book was released in paperback in December 2021.
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  34.  29
    A continuous dual-process model of remember/know judgments.John T. Wixted &Laura Mickes -2010 -Psychological Review 117 (4):1025-1054.
  35.  129
    Model Companions of $T_{\rm Aut}$ for Stable T.John T. Baldwin &Saharon Shelah -2001 -Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 42 (3):129-142.
    We introduce the notion T does not omit obstructions. If a stable theory does not admit obstructions then it does not have the finite cover property . For any theory T, form a new theory $T_{\rm Aut}$ by adding a new unary function symbol and axioms asserting it is an automorphism. The main result of the paper asserts the following: If T is a stable theory, T does not admit obstructions if and only if $T_{\rm Aut}$ has a model companion. (...) The proof involves some interesting new consequences of the nfcp. (shrink)
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  36.  21
    Law, seduction, and the sentimental heroine: The case of Amelia Norman.John T. Parry &Andrea L. Hibbard -manuscript
    This article examines the notorious mid-nineteenth-century American trial of Amelia Norman, who was acquitted - very much against the weight of the evidence - of attempting to kill the man who seduced her. In particular, we explore the role in the trial and its aftermath of the affective energies and cultural expectations set in motion by best-selling American sentimental novels like Hannah Foster's "The Coquette" and Susanna Rowson's "Charlotte Temple." In Norman's case, once newspapers, defense lawyers, and reformers such as (...) Lydia Maria Child recast the defendant as a sentimental heroine, the trial became about seduction, not attempted murder. The sentimental emplotment of Norman's life marshaled a powerful set of emotional responses and moral judgments on her behalf. For example, Norman claimed insanity. And since sentimental heroines are supposed to go mad when they are seduced and abandoned, the jury was prepared to interpret her symptoms according to her lawyers' very strategy for establishing her innocence. Ultimately, however, Norman embodied the plight of the sentimental heroine at the same time that she contested her fictional counterpart's fate. In this way, her trial spectacularized the disparity which the sentimental novel conjures up and displaces but never resolves. Going further, the common law theory of coverture, which severely limited the legal personhood of married women, has received a great deal of scholarly attention. Cases like Norman's remind us that unmarried women were also subject to draconian constraints on their legal personhood. The tort of seduction is a key example. Legal historians trace the development of the seduction tort from its common-law origins, when men's property interest in women's bodies formed the basis of the cause of action, to 1851, when Field Code authors (including Norman's lawyer, David Graham) persuaded several states to grant seduced women standing to bring their own cause of action. Consequently, courts were forced to reckon with the seduced woman as a moral agent capable of consenting to sex. As trials like Norman's demonstrate, sentimental novels helped lay the groundwork for this shift in the law by elucidating a subjectivity for the seduced woman. Yet the doctrinal implications of Norman's precedent-setting trial had a second, more ambiguous strain. Other women facing similar charges used the same legal strategy to gain acquittals in a substantial number of cases. Indeed, Norman's sentimental strategy proved so powerful that men on trial for killing their wives' seducers appropriated it to bring their own stories before juries and to reinforce male sexual norms through the so-called honor defense. In the end, then, Norman's trial fostered legal reform, but it also suggested - as Lydia Maria Child's fictionalization of the case in "Rosenglory" recognized - that only sustained and multifaceted efforts to change cultural as well as legal norms could improve the sexual status of women. In addition to its legal, literary, and historical insights that it provides, we also intend this article to contribute to debates on the nature of scholarship in law and literature. Scholars such as Wai Chee Dimock have argued for a focus on the historical and historically shifting relations between law and literature - a view we endorse. Where we differ from Dimock is in our diversion of attention away from abstract ideas of law laid out by treatise writers and philosophers in favor of law experienced and manipulated by individuals. So, too, we are interested less in representations of concepts such as justice in legal and literary texts than we are in the ways in which literature (broadly conceived) can create provisional and fragile opportunities for concrete instantiations of justice and even generate legal change (for good or ill). We would argue that to the extent legal change motivates rather than simply mirrors cultural change, it needs literature to be effective. This project, then, responds to Gregg Crane's call for attention to the complex and slippery historical interactions of law and literature that shape and are shaped by an ever changing cultural idiom of justice. The extended story of Amelia Norman, in short, not only constitutes a case study in the inescapable interaction between the overlapping and interdependent discourses of law and literature, but also reveals the literary and legal consequences of that interaction. (shrink)
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  37.  41
    Torture, Security, and Liberal Theory.John T. Parry -2012 -Criminal Justice Ethics 31 (1):53-71.
    Jeremy Waldron, Torture, Terror, and Trade-offs: Philosophy for the White House, viii + 357 pp. In Torture, Terror, and Trade-offs, Jeremy Waldron assesses s...
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  38.  21
    A Reader’s Companion to the Prince, Leviathan, and the Second Treatise.John T. Bookman -2019 - Cham: Springer Verlag.
    Machiavelli, Hobbes, and Locke each sought a new foundation for political order. This book serves as a reader's companion to Machiavelli’s The Prince, Hobbes’s Leviathan, and Locke’s Second Treatise written for graduate students and scholars seeking a fuller understanding of these classic texts. How do these philosophers respond to perennial questions such as why anyone is ever obligated to obey a government and whether there are any limits to such an obligation. In this book, Bookman begins by sorting out the (...) hermeneutical controversy between textualists and contextualists, offers a chapter-by-chapter commentary on the texts punctuated by questions for the reader’s reflection, and finally suggests a firmer foundation for a theory of political obligation than Hobbes’s and Locke’s consent theories. Also included are bibliographical essays keyed to select bibliographies, providing readers with a wide-ranging, critical review of the secondary literature. Intended to be read alongside the primary work, the work is a full intellectual, critical, and bibliographical history, as well as a fresh examination of three classic texts in political theory and philosophy. (shrink)
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  39.  36
    First-order theories of abstract dependence relations.John T. Baldwin -1984 -Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 26 (3):215-243.
  40.  20
    Celestial Girls in the Brocade-hung Pavilions of Heaven.John T. Giordano -2000 -Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 4 (2 & 3):231-253.
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  41. Kilimanjaro International Airport.John T. Giordano -1997 -Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 1 (2):183-193.
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  42.  21
    Photo-graphing Spirit part 2.John T. Giordano -1999 -Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 3 (1):149-158.
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  43.  20
    Henkin constructions of models with size continuum.John T. Baldwin &Michael C. Laskowski -2019 -Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 25 (1):1-33.
    We describe techniques for constructing models of size continuum inωsteps by simultaneously building a perfect set of enmeshed countable Henkin sets. Such models have perfect, asymptotically similar subsets. We survey applications involving Borel models, atomic models, two-cardinal transfers and models respecting various closure relations.
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  44.  104
    The stability spectrum for classes of atomic models.John T. Baldwin &Saharon Shelah -2012 -Journal of Mathematical Logic 12 (1):1250001-.
    We prove two results on the stability spectrum for Lω1,ω. Here [Formula: see text] denotes an appropriate notion of Stone space of m-types over M. Theorem for unstable case: Suppose that for some positive integer m and for every α μ, K is not i-stable in μ. These results provide a new kind of sufficient condition for the unstable case and shed some light on the spectrum of strictly stable theories in this context. The methods avoid the use of compactness (...) in the theory under study. In this paper, we expound the construction of tree indiscernibles for sentences of Lω1,ω. Further we provide some context for a number of variants on the Ehrenfeucht–Mostowski construction. (shrink)
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  45. Determinism.John T. Roberts -2005 - In Sahotra Sarkar & Jessica Pfeifer,The Philosophy of Science: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge. pp. 1.
  46. The assessment of pathogenic beliefs.John T. Curtis &George Silberschatz -2005 - In George Silberschatz,Transformative Relationships: The Control-Mastery Theory of Psychotherapy. Routledge. pp. 69--91.
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  47.  6
    Narrative processes in organizational discourse.John T. Luhman -2005 -Emergence: Complexity and Organization 7.
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  48.  62
    Axiomatizing Changing Conceptions of the Geometric Continuum II: Archimedes-Descartes-Hilbert-Tarski†.John T. Baldwin -2019 -Philosophia Mathematica 27 (1):33-60.
    In Part I of this paper we argued that the first-order systems HP5 and EG are modest complete descriptive axiomatization of most of Euclidean geometry. In this paper we discuss two further modest complete descriptive axiomatizations: Tarksi’s for Cartesian geometry and new systems for adding $$\pi$$. In contrast we find Hilbert’s full second-order system immodest for geometrical purposes but appropriate as a foundation for mathematical analysis.
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  49.  27
    Hanf numbers for extendibility and related phenomena.John T. Baldwin &Saharon Shelah -2022 -Archive for Mathematical Logic 61 (3):437-464.
    This paper contains portions of Baldwin’s talk at the Set Theory and Model Theory Conference and a detailed proof that in a suitable extension of ZFC, there is a complete sentence of \ that has maximal models in cardinals cofinal in the first measurable cardinal and, of course, never again.
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  50.  35
    Iterated elementary embeddings and the model theory of infinitary logic.John T. Baldwin &Paul B. Larson -2016 -Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 167 (3):309-334.
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