Results for 'Howard Jackson'

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  1.  17
    Supercompactness within the Projective Hierarchy.Howard Becker & Steve Jackson - 2001 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 66 (2):658-672.
    We show that all the projective ordinals $\delta^1_n$ are supercompact through their supremum $\aleph_{\varepsilon 0}$, and a ways beyond.
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  2.  17
    On the Foundations of Geometry and Formal Theories of Arithmetic.Howard Jackson - 1981 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 46 (1):175-179.
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  3.  5
    Frege’s Theory of Judgment.Howard Jackson - 1979 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 50 (1):254-258.
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  4.  6
    A Computation of δ 5 1.Howard S. Becker & Steve Jackson - 2002 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 8 (4):546.
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  5.  21
    A New Proof of the Strong Partition Relation on ω 1Admissible Suslin Cardinals in LA Computation of δ 5 1.Howard S. Becker & Steve Jackson - 2002 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 8 (4):546.
  6.  60
    Seeing and acquiring beliefs.Malcolm Acock & Howard Jackson - 1979 - Mind 88 (351):370-383.
  7.  68
    Frege on Sense-Functions.Howard Jackson - 1963 - Analysis 23 (4):84 - 87.
  8. Frege on sense-functions.Howard Jackson - 1963 - Analysis 23 (4):84.
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  9.  54
    Critical studies/book reviews.Howard Jackson - 2001 - Philosophia Mathematica 9 (2):252-256.
  10.  2
    Euripides, 'Hippolytos' 29-33.Howard Jackson - 1996 - Hermes 124 (2):150-159.
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  11.  37
    Frege's ontology.Howard Jackson - 1960 - Philosophical Review 69 (3):394-395.
  12.  22
    Non-Existent Concepts.Howard Jackson & Richard E. Robinson - 1985 - Dialogue 24 (3):473-.
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  13. Note on an argument of Church.Howard Jackson - 1964 - Theoria 30 (3):197.
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  14. REVIEWS-Three publications.S. Jackson & Howard S. Becker - 2002 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 8 (4):546-547.
  15.  20
    The Two Front War on Reproductive Rights—When the Right to Abortion is Banned, Can the Right to Refuse Obstetrical Interventions Be Far behind?Howard Minkoff, Raaga Unmesha Vullikanti & Mary Faith Marshall - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (2):11-20.
    The loss of the federally protected constitutional right to an abortion is a threat to the already tenuous autonomy of pregnant people, and may augur future challenges to their right to refuse unwanted obstetric interventions. Even before Roe’s demise, pregnancy led to constraints on autonomy evidenced by clinician-led legal incursions against patients who refused obstetric interventions. In Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the Supreme Court found that the right to liberty espoused in the Constitution does not extend to (...)
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  16.  20
    David Bell. Frege's theory of judgement. Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York 1979, xii + 165 pp. [REVIEW]Howard Jackson - 1985 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 50 (1):254-258.
  17.  26
    Eike-Henner W. Kluge. Introduction. On the foundations of geometry and formal theories of arithmetic, by Gottlob Frege, translated and with an introduction by Eike-Henner W. Kluge, Yale University Press, New Haven and London1971, pp. xi–xlii. - Gottlob Frege. Letter from G. Frege to Heinrich Liebmann. On the foundations of geometry and formal theories of arithmetic, by Gottlob Frege, translated and with an introduction by Eike-Henner W. Kluge, Yale University Press, New Haven and London1971, pp. 3–5. - Gottlob Frege and David Hilbert. Correspondence leading to “On the foundations of geometry,” On the foundations of geometry and formal theories of arithmetic, by Gottlob Frege, translated and with an introduction by Eike-Henner W. Kluge, Yale University Press, New Haven and London1971, pp. 6–21. - Gottlob Frege. On the foundations of geometry. English translation of 4916.1. On the foundations of geometry and formal theories of arithmetic, by Gottlob Frege, translated and with an introduc. [REVIEW]Howard Jackson - 1981 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 46 (1):175-179.
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  18.  10
    Review: David Bell, Frege's Theory of Judgement. [REVIEW]Howard Jackson - 1985 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 50 (1):254-258.
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  19.  52
    Steve Jackson. A new proof of the strong partition relation on ω1. Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 320 , pp. 737–745. - Steve Jackson. Admissible Suslin cardinals in L. The journal of symbolic logic, vol. 56 , pp. 260–275. - Steve Jackson. A computation of. Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society, no. 670. American Mathematical Society, Providence 1999, viii + 94 pp. [REVIEW]Howard S. Becker - 2002 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 8 (4):546-548.
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  20. Three publications by S. Jackson[REVIEW]Howard Becker - 2002 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 8 (4):546-546.
     
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  21.  24
    Index Verborum C. Suetoni Tranquilli stiligue eius proprietatum nonnullarum. Confecerunt Albertus Andreas Howard, Carolus Newell Jackson. Cantabrigiae Massachusettensium e typographeo Academiae Harvardianae. … MDCCCCXXII. [REVIEW]J. S. Phillimore - 1924 - The Classical Review 38 (1-2):42-42.
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  22. Epiphenomenal qualia.Frank Jackson - 1982 - Philosophical Quarterly 32 (April):127-136.
  23.  45
    On resistance: a philosophy of defiance.Howard Caygill - 2013 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
  24. Pragmatic Arguments for Theism.Elizabeth Jackson - 2023 - In John Greco, Tyler Dalton McNabb & Jonathan Fuqua (eds.), The Cambridge Handbook of Religious Epistemology. Cambridge University Press. pp. 70–82.
    Traditional theistic arguments conclude that God exists. Pragmatic theistic arguments, by contrast, conclude that you ought to believe in God. The two most famous pragmatic theistic arguments are put forth by Blaise Pascal (1662) and William James (1896). Pragmatic arguments for theism can be summarized as follows: believing in God has significant benefits, and these benefits aren’t available for the unbeliever. Thus, you should believe in, or ‘wager on’, God. This article distinguishes between various kinds of theistic wagers, including finite (...)
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  25.  41
    Paths Toward a Clearing: Radical Empiricism and Ethnographic Inquiry.Michael Jackson - 1989
    edition (unseen), $12.95. traditions, bringing into being new modes of understanding. Paper Anthropology, and particularly ethnography, is torn between two quests, one to capture the diversity of social life and the other to discover universal principles structuring that diversity. Jackson examines these quests within the context of ethnographic fieldwork, focusing on the relationship between ethnographers and the people they study. He is concerned with defining the anthropological project as something more than the projection of the anthropologist's traditions and concerns (...)
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  26. Induction and Natural Kinds Revisited.Howard Sankey - 2021 - In Stathis Psillos, Benjamin Hill & Henrik Lagerlund (eds.), Causal Powers in Science: Blending Historical and Conceptual Perspectives. Oxford University Press. pp. 284-299.
    In ‘Induction and Natural Kinds’, I proposed a solution to the problem of induction according to which our use of inductive inference is reliable because it is grounded in the natural kind structure of the world. When we infer that unobserved members of a kind will have the same properties as observed members of the kind, we are right because all members of the kind possess the same essential properties. The claim that the existence of natural kinds is what grounds (...)
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  27. Faith.Daniel Howard-Snyder - 2015 - In Robert Audi (ed.), Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, 3rd Edition. Cambridge University Press.
    A brief article on faith as a psychological attitude.
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  28. Fittingness: A User’s Guide.Chris Howard & R. A. Rowland - 2023 - In Chris Howard & R. A. Rowland (eds.), Fittingness. OUP.
    The chapter introduces and characterizes the notion of fittingness. It charts the history of the relation and its relevance to contemporary debates in normative and metanormative philosophy and proceeds to survey issues to do with fittingness covered in the volume’s chapters, including the nature and epistemology of fittingness, the relations between fittingness and reasons, the normativity of fittingness, fittingness and value theory, and the role of fittingness in theorizing about responsibility. The chapter concludes with a brief discussion of issues to (...)
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  29. On relativity theory and openness of the future.Howard Stein - 1991 - Philosophy of Science 58 (2):147-167.
    It has been repeatedly argued, most recently by Nicholas Maxwell, that the special theory of relativity is incompatible with the view that the future is in some degree undetermined; and Maxwell contends that this is a reason to reject that theory. In the present paper, an analysis is offered of the notion of indeterminateness (or "becoming") that is uniquely appropriate to the special theory of relativity, in the light of a set of natural conditions upon such a notion; and reasons (...)
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  30. Fittingness.Christopher Howard & Richard Rowland (eds.) - 2022 - Oxford University Press.
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  31.  8
    Matter and Sense: A Critique of Contemporary Materialism.Howard Robinson - 1982 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Published in 1982 by CUP (pb. 2009) it discusses the forms of materialism then current, including Davidson, early Rorty, but concentrating on Smart and Armstrong, and arguing that central state materialism fails to give a better 'occurrent' account of conscious states than does behaviourism/functionalism, as Armstrong claims. The book starts with a version of the 'knowledge argument' and ends with a chapter claiming that our conception of matter/the physical is more problematic than our conception of mind.
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  32. Justification by Imagination.Magdalena Balcerak Jackson - 2018 - In Fiona Macpherson & Fabian Dorsch (eds.), Perceptual Imagination and Perceptual Memory. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 209-226.
  33. Permissivism, Underdetermination, and Evidence.Elizabeth Jackson & Margaret Greta Turnbull - 2024 - In Maria Lasonen-Aarnio & Clayton Littlejohn (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy of Evidence. New York, NY: Routledge. pp. 358–370.
    Permissivism is the thesis that, for some body of evidence and a proposition p, there is more than one rational doxastic attitude any agent with that evidence can take toward p. Proponents of uniqueness deny permissivism, maintaining that every body of evidence always determines a single rational doxastic attitude. In this paper, we explore the debate between permissivism and uniqueness about evidence, outlining some of the major arguments on each side. We then consider how permissivism can be understood as an (...)
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  34. The Failure of Disjunctivism to Deal with "Philosophers' Hallucinations".Howard Robinson - 2013 - In Fiona Macpherson & Dimitris Platchias (eds.), Hallucination: Philosophy and Psychology. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. pp. 313-330.
    This chapter starts by restating the causal-hallucinatory argument against naive realism. This argument depends on the possibility of “philosophers' hallucinations.” It draws attention to the role of what the chapter refers to as the nonarbitrariness of philosophers' hallucinations in supporting this argument. The chapter then discusses three attempts to refute the argument. Two of them, those associated with John McDowell and with Michael Martin, are explicitly forms of disjunctivism. The third, exemplified by Mark Johnston, has, the chapter claims, disjunctivist features. (...)
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  35. The Fellowship of the Ninth Hour: Christian Reflections on the Nature and Value of Faith.Daniel Howard-Snyder & Daniel J. McKaughan - 2021 - In James Arcadi & James T. Turner (eds.), The T&T Clark Handbook of Analytic Theology. New York: T&T Clark/Bloomsbury. pp. 69-82.
    It is common for young Christians to go off to college assured in their beliefs but, in the course of their first year or two, they meet what appears to them to be powerful defenses of scientific naturalism and crushing critiques of the basic Christian story (BCS), and many are thrown into doubt. They think to themselves something like this: "To be honest, I am troubled about the BCS. While the problem of evil, the apparent cultural basis for the diversity (...)
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  36. In Defense of Clutter.Brendan Balcerak Jackson, DiDomenico David & Kenji Lota - 2022 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 9.
    Gilbert Harman’s famous principle of Clutter Avoidance commands that “one should not clutter one’s mind with trivialities". Many epistemologists have been inclined to accept Harman’s principle, or something like it. This is significant because the principle appears to have robust implications for our overall picture of epistemic normativity. Jane Friedman (2018) has recently argued that one potential implication is that there are no genuine purely evidential norms on belief revision. In this paper, we present some new objections to a suitably (...)
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  37. Surrogate Perspectives on a Patient Preference Predictor: Good Idea, But I Should Decide How It Is Used.Dana Howard - 2022 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 13 (2):125-135.
    Background: Current practice frequently fails to provide care consistent with the preferences of decisionally-incapacitated patients. It also imposes significant emotional burden on their surrogates. Algorithmic-based patient preference predictors (PPPs) have been proposed as a possible way to address these two concerns. While previous research found that patients strongly support the use of PPPs, the views of surrogates are unknown. The present study thus assessed the views of experienced surrogates regarding the possible use of PPPs as a means to help make (...)
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  38.  5
    Dismantling the Master's House with the Master's Tools.Thanayi M. Jackson - 2022-01-11 - In Edwardo Pérez & Timothy E. Brown (eds.), Black Panther and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 211–220.
    Propelled by his own vengeance, N'Jadaka transforms into Erik Killmonger, CIA operative: a master of the weapons wielded by a colonial global empire, who wields these weapons himself in a quest to destroy the system that has oppressed people of color since ships set sail for the Caribbean over 500 years ago. Lorde, a Black lesbian feminist, was critiquing white feminism, suggesting that it failed to dismantle white supremacy (and she was doing this in the 1970s). Yet, her famous words (...)
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  39. What's Wrong with Ostrich Nominalism?Howard Peacock - 2009 - Philosophical Papers 38 (2):183-217.
    Whereas traditional nominalists accept the realist's challenge to solve a 'Problem of Universals', the Ostrich Nominalist responds that there is no such Problem to answer. I suggest that Ostrich Nominalist arguments expose a genuine flaw in the realist project. However, I argue, Ostrich Nominalism is ultimately defeated by a problem about the analysis of qualitative sameness and difference. Qualitative sameness and difference are adequately understood only as sameness or difference in some respect. The need to say what these respects of (...)
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  40. The essential Howard Gardner on education.Howard Gardner - 2024 - New York, NY: Teachers College Press.
    A survey of Howard Gardner's contributions to our understanding of learning, and how to create environments that support growth in all learners across the lifespan.
     
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  41.  12
    Objectivity: How is it Possible?Howard Robinson - 2019 - In Christoph Limbeck-Lilienau & Friedrich Stadler (eds.), The Philosophy of Perception: Proceedings of the 40th International Ludwig Wittgenstein Symposium. Berlin: De Gruyter. pp. 23-38.
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  42. The Objectivity of Science.Howard Sankey - 2023 - Journal of Philosophical Investigations at University of Tabriz 17 (45):1-10.
    The idea that science is objective, or able to achieve objectivity, is in large part responsible for the role that science plays within society. But what is objectivity? The idea of objectivity is ambiguous. This paper distinguishes between three basic forms of objectivity. The first form of objectivity is ontological objectivity: the world as it is in itself does not depend upon what we think about it; it is independent of human thought, language, conceptual activity or experience. The second form (...)
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  43.  21
    Kant and the end of war: a critique of just war theory.Howard Williams - 2012 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    An exploration of Immanuel Kant's account of war and the controversies that have arisen from its interpretation. This book brings the ideas of Kant's critical philosophy to bear on one of the leading political and legal questions of our age: under what circumstances, if any, is recourse to war legally and morally justifiable?
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  44.  90
    Fundamental Physics, Partial Models and Time’s Arrow.Howard Callaway - 2016 - In L. Magnani (ed.), Proceedings of MBR2015. Springer. pp. 601-618.
    This paper explores the scientific viability of the concept of causality—by questioning a central element of the distinction between “fundamental” and non-fundamental physics. It will be argued that the prevalent emphasis on fundamental physics involves formalistic and idealized partial models of physical regularities abstracting from and idealizing the causal evolution of physical systems. The accepted roles of partial models and of the special sciences in the growth of knowledge help demonstrate proper limitations of the concept of fundamental physics. We expect (...)
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  45.  68
    Liberating sex, knowing desire: scientia sexualis and epistemic turning points in the history of sexuality.Howard H. Chiang - 2010 - History of the Human Sciences 23 (5):42-69.
    This study considers the role of epistemic turning points in the historiography of sexuality. Disentangling the historical complexity of scientia sexualis, I argue that the late 19th century and the mid-20th century constitute two critical epistemic junctures in the genealogy of sexual liberation, as the notion of free love slowly gave way to the idea of sexual freedom in modern western society. I also explore the value of the Foucauldian approach for the study of the history of sexuality in non-western (...)
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  46.  71
    Immersive Experience and Virtual Reality.Magdalena Balcerak Jackson & Brendan Balcerak Jackson - 2024 - Philosophy and Technology 37 (1):1-24.
    Much of the excitement about virtual reality and its potential for things like entertainment, art, education, and activism is its ability to generate experiences that are powerfully immersive. However, discussions of VR tend to invoke the notion of immersive experience without subjecting it to closer scrutiny; and discussions often take it for granted that immersive experience is a single unified phenomenon. Against this, we argue that there are four distinct types or aspects of immersive experience that should be distinguished: representational (...)
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  47.  96
    All that can be at issue in the theory-theory/simulation debate.Frank Jackson - 1999 - Philosophical Papers 28 (2):77-96.
  48. The Cognitive Science of Credence.Elizabeth Jackson - forthcoming - In Neil Van Leeuwen & Tania Lombrozo (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the Cognitive Science of Belief. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
    Credences are similar to levels of confidence, represented as a value on the [0,1] interval. This chapter sheds light on questions about credence, including its relationship to full belief, with an eye toward the empirical relevance of credence. First, I’ll provide a brief epistemological history of credence and lay out some of the main theories of the nature of credence. Then, I’ll provide an overview of the main views on how credences relate to full beliefs. Finally, I’ll turn to the (...)
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  49.  7
    Property‐Owning Democracy.Ben Jackson - 2012-02-17 - In Martin O'Neill & Thad Williamson (eds.), Property‐Owning Democracy. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 33–52.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Property‐Owning Democracy Before Socialism: The Rise of Commercial Republicanism Property‐Owning Democracy at the Socialist High Tide (i): Progressive Conservative Origins Property‐Owning Democracy at the Socialist High Tide (ii): Liberals and Labour Revisionists Property‐Owning Democracy at the Socialist High Tide (iii): James Meade Property‐Owning Democracy After Socialism? Rawlsian and Neoliberal Lineages References.
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  50.  11
    The Conduct of Inquiry in International Relations: Philosophy of Science and its Implications for the Study of World Politics.Patrick Thaddeus Jackson - 2010 - Routledge.
    __The Conduct of Inquiry in International Relations_ first edition was winner of the ISA-Northeast’s Yale H. Ferguson Award, and the ISA Theory Section’s Best Book of the Year award._ _The Conduct of Inquiry in International Relations_ provides an introduction to the philosophy of science issues and their implications for the study of global politics. The author draws attention to the problems caused by the misleading notion of a single unified scientific method, and proposes a framework that clarifies the variety of (...)
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