Comments on Jim Franklin's “the representation of context: Ideas from artificial intelligence”
| Abstract | To be honest, I have almost nothing critical to say about Jim’s presentation (and this is quite unusual for a cranky analytic philosopher like me!). What Jim has said is all very sensible, and his examples are very well chosen, etc. So, instead of making critical remarks, I will try to expand a little on one of the themes Jim briefly touched upon in his talk: the contextuality of probability. | |||||||||
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Jethro Masís (2009). Fenomenología Hermenéutica E Inteligencia Artificial: Otra Urbanización de la Provincia Heideggeriana. Actas de Las Primeras Jornadas de Internacionales de Hermenéutica:6 pp.
Jonathan Joseph (2007). Critical Realism and Postwar British Politics: Review of Postwar British Politics in Perspective by David Marsh, Jim Buller, Colin Hay, Jim Johnson, Peter Kerr, Stuart McAnulla and Matthew Watson. [REVIEW] Journal of Critical Realism 3 (1).
Jim Good Jim Garrison (2010). Dewey, Hegel, and Causation. Journal of Speculative Philosophy 24 (2):101-120.
Paul McNamara (1993). Comments on Can Intelligence Be Artificial? Philosophical Studies 71 (2):217-222.
Stan Franklin (1997). Action Patterns, Conceptualization, and Artificial Intelligence. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (1):23-24.
James Franklin (2003). The Representation of Context: Ideas From Artificial Intelligence. Law, Probability and Risk 2:191-199.
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