Works by Alan Gross ( view other items matching `Alan Gross`, view all matches )
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Alan G. Gross [13]Alan Gross [2]

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  1. Alan G. Gross (2010). Chaim Perelman. Southern Illinois University Press.
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  2. Alan G. Gross (2010). Rhetoric, Narrative, and the Lifeworld: The Construction of Collective Identity. Philosophy and Rhetoric 43 (2):pp. 118-138.
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  3. Alan G. Gross & Marcelo Dascal (2001). The Conceptual Unity of Aristotle's Rhetoric. Philosophy and Rhetoric 34 (4):275-291.
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  4. Alan G. Gross (2000). Rhetoric as a Technique and a Mode of Truth: Reflections on Chaïm Perelman. Philosophy and Rhetoric 33 (4):319-335.
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  5. Alan G. Gross (2000). The Science Wars and the Ethics of Book Reviewing. Philosophy of the Social Sciences 30 (3):445-450.
  6. Marcelo Dascal & Alan G. Gross (1999). The Marriage of Pragmatics and Rhetoric. Philosophy and Rhetoric 32 (2):107-130.
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  7. Alan G. Gross & Arthur Walzer (1997). The Challenger Disaster And The Revival Of Rhetoric In Organizational Life. Argumentation 11 (1):85-93.
    Explanations of the cause of the Challenger disaster by the Presidential Commission and by communication scholars are flawed. These explanations are characterized by a common tendency to emphasize the technical and procedural aspects of organizational life at the expense of the cognitive and ethical. Rightly construed, the Challenger disaster illustrates both the need for a revived art of rhetoric and the importance of putting in place the political and social conditions that make this art efficacious in furthering cognitive understanding and (...)
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  8. Alan Gross (1994). Is a Rhetoric of Science Policy Possible? Social Epistemology 8 (3):273 – 280.
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  9. Alan G. Gross (1994). Is a Science of Language Possible? The Derrida-Searle Debate. Social Epistemology 8 (4):345 – 359.
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  10. Alan G. Gross (1994). On Not Taking Sides. Social Epistemology 8 (4):373 – 381.
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  11. Alan Gross (1992). The Battle Over Sociobiology. Social Epistemology 6 (2):165 – 174.
  12. Alan G. Gross (1990). Reinventing Certainty: The Significance of Ian Hacking's Realism. PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1990:421 - 431.
    This paper examines Ian Hacking's arguments in favor of entity realism. It shows that his examples from science do not support his realism. Furthermore, his proposed criterion of experimental use is neither sufficient nor necessary for conferring a privileged status on his preferred unobservables. Nonetheless his insight is genuine; it may be most profitably seen as part of a more general effort to create a space for a new form of scientific and philosophical certainty, one that does not require foundations.
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  13. Alan G. Gross (1990). Shaping Written Knowledge: The Genre and Activity of the Experimental Article in Science. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 21 (2):341-349.
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  14. Alan G. Gross (1988). Adaptation in Evolutionary Epistemology: Clarifying Hull's Model. Biology and Philosophy 3 (2):185-186.
  15. Alan G. Gross (1988). Philosophy Versus Science: The Species Debate and the Practice of Taxonomy. PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1988:223 - 230.
    A reading of a sample of taxonomical papers leads to the conclusion that new species identification is both taxonomically plausible and philosophically incoherent. As a result, taxonomy becomes a science that apparently violates a necessary condition of its rationality. It is this apparent violation that is the focus of the philosophical debate, a debate whose goal for taxonomy is theoretical coherence at a global level. In this paper, I assess the appropriateness of this goal.
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