Search results for 'Betty J. Birner' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Betty J. Birner (2004). Metaphor and the Reshaping of Our Cognitive Fabric. Zygon 39 (1):39-48.score: 290.0
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  2. J. Birner (forthcoming). Popper and Hayek on Reason and Tradition. Philosophy of the Social Sciences.score: 120.0
    Karl Popper and Friedrich von Hayek became close friends soon after they first met in the early 1930s. Ever since, they discussed their ideas intensively on many occasions. But even though an analysis of the origins and contents of their ideas and correspondence reveals a number of important and fundamental differences, they rarely criticize each other in their published work. The article analyzes in particular the different ideas they have on the role of reason in society and on rationalism and (...)
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  3. Donka F. Farkas, To Appear in a Festschrift for Larry Horn Edited by Gregory Ward and Betty Birner.score: 36.0
    This paper explores the determiner corner of the ‘any’ land in Romanian, taking Lee and Horn 1994 and Horn 2000a as tour guides. The immediate interest of the task lies in the fact that the work done in English by the over-employed determiner any is carried out in Romanian by a host of more specialized (and, one fears, lower paid) morphemes, which I review in the rest of this section. My aim is to introduce the details of the Romanian facts (...)
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  4. Mary Gerhart & Allan Melvin Russell (2004). Changing Worldviews: Responding to Betty Birner and Robert Masson. Zygon 39 (1):63-75.score: 36.0
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  5. Lynsey Wolter (2010). Teaching & Learning Guide For: Demonstratives in Philosophy and Linguistics. Philosophy Compass 5 (1):108-111.score: 29.0
    Demonstrative noun phrases (e.g. this; that guy over there ) are intimately connected to the context of use in that their reference is determined by demonstrations and/or the speaker's intentions. The semantics of demonstratives therefore has important implications not only for theories of reference, but for questions about how information from the context interacts with formal semantics. First treated by Kaplan as directly referential , demonstratives have recently been analyzed as quantifiers by King, and the choice between these two approaches (...)
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