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Uniqueness and historical laws

Philosophy of Science 47 (2):260-276 (1980)

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  1. Psychological predicates.Hilary Putnam - 1967 - In William H. Capitan & Daniel Davy Merrill (eds.), Art, mind, and religion. [Pittsburgh]: University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 37--48.
     
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  • Works of art as physically embodied and culturally emergent entities.Joseph Margolis - 1974 - British Journal of Aesthetics 14 (3):187-196.
  • Reductionism and ontological aspects of consciousness.Joseph Margolis - 1974 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 4 (April):3-16.
  • The Problem of Uniqueness in History.Carey B. Joynt & Nicholas Rescher - 1961 - History and Theory 1 (2):150-162.
    Every individual event, qua individual, is unique. THought renders events non-unique through classification and generalization. Historical explanation demands understanding causal connections, in turn requiring the use of generalizations. History is a consumer of established laws which introduce a locus of non-uniqueness into history. Also, history is a producer of limited generalizations, covering temporally confined structual patterns which constitute the locus of uniqueness in history. It is the temporal limitation of these patterns, and not the chronological description of facts, which gives (...)
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  • The function of general laws in history.Carl Gustav Hempel - 1942 - Journal of Philosophy 39 (2):35-48.
    The classic logical positivist account of historical explanation, putting forward what is variously called the "regularity interpretation" (#Gardiner, The Nature of Historical Explanation), the "covering law model" (#Dray, Laws and Explanation in History), or the "deductive model" (Michael #Scriven, "Truisms as Grounds for Historical Explanations"). See also #Danto, Narration and Knowledge, for further criticisms of the model. Hempel formalizes historical explanation as involving (a) statements of determining (initial and boundary) conditions for the event to be explained, and (b) statements of (...)
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  • Rational Action.Carl G. Hempel - 1961 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 35:5 - 23.
  • VI—Works of Art and Other Cultural Objects.Andrew Harrison - 1968 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 68 (1):105-128.
    Andrew Harrison; VI—Works of Art and Other Cultural Objects, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 68, Issue 1, 1 June 1968, Pages 105–128, https://do.
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  • Explanations in history and the genetic sciences.W. B. Gallie - 1955 - Mind 64 (254):160-180.
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  • Explanation and interpretation in history.Charles Frankel - 1957 - Philosophy of Science 24 (2):137-155.
    Historians, philosophers, and men of affairs frequently raise questions about the “meaning” of history, or of selected segments of history, and frequently disagree about the relative merits of competing interpretations of specific historical periods or of the historical process as a whole. Such discussions are anything but idle. They affect what historians and others say about the past, and, in doing so, they influence the construction of social policies in the present. Indeed, they affect the very quality of a culture. (...)
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  • Theoretical simplicity and defeasibility.Evan Fales - 1978 - Philosophy of Science 45 (2):273-288.
    Theoretical simplicity is difficult to characterize, and evidently can depend upon a number of distinct factors. One such desirable characteristic is that the laws of a theory have relatively few "counterinstances" whose accommodation requires the invocation of a ceteris paribus condition and ancillary explanation. It is argued that, when one theory is reduced to another, such that the laws of the second govern the behavior of the parts of the entities in the domain of the first, there is a characteristic (...)
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  • The ontology of social roles.Evan Fales - 1977 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 7 (2):139-161.
  • What the tortoise said to Achilles.Lewis Carroll - 1895 - Mind 4 (14):278-280.
  • The King's Two Bodies: A Study in Medieval Political Theology.E. H. KANTORWICZ - 1957
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  • Causes and Conditions.J. L. Mackie - 1965 - American Philosophical Quarterly 2 (4):245 - 264.