Search results for 'Boris Levin' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Abraham Meidan & Boris Levin (2002). Choosing From Competing Theories in Computerised Learning. Minds and Machines 12 (1):119-129.score: 120.0
    In this paper we refer to a machine learning method that reveals all the if–then rules in the data, and on the basis of these rules issues predictions for new cases. When issuing predictions this method faces the problem of choosing from competing theories. We dealt with this problem by calculating the probability that the rule is accidental. The lower this probability, the more the rule can be `trusted' when issuing predictions. The method was tested empirically and found to be (...)
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  2. Janet Levin (2009). Experimental Philosophy. Analysis 69 (4):761-769.score: 60.0
    Levin argues that the results of the most methodologically sound and philosophically relevant studies discussed in this volume [Experimental Philosophy] could have been obtained from the armchair, and thus that experimental philosophy may not present a serious challenge to the traditional methods of analytic philosophy.
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  3. Janet Levin (2002). Is Conceptual Analysis Needed for the Reduction of Qualitative States? Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 64 (3):571-591.score: 60.0
    In this paper I discuss the claim (advanced in various ways by Joseph Levine, Frank Jackson and David Chalmers) that the successful reduction of qualitative to physical states requires some sort of intelligible connection between our qualitative and physical concepts, which in turn requires a conceptual analysis of our qualitative concepts in causal-functional terms. While I defend this claim against some of its recent critics, I ultimately dispute it, and propose a different way to get the requisite intelligible connection between (...)
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  4. Susan B. Levin (2001). The Ancient Quarrel Between Philosophy and Poetry Revisited: Plato and the Greek Literary Tradition. Oxford University Press.score: 60.0
    In this study, Levin explores Plato's engagement with the Greek literary tradition in his treatment of key linguistic issues. This investigation, conjoined with a new interpretation of the Republic's familiar critique of poets, supports the view that Plato's work represents a valuable precedent for contemporary reflections on ways in which philosophy might benefit from appeals to literature.
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  5. Janet Levin (1986). Could Love Be Like a Heatwave? Physicalism and the Subjective Character of Experience. Philosophical Studies 49 (March):245-61.score: 30.0
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  6. Janet Levin (2004). The Evidential Status of Philosophical Intuition. Philosophical Studies 121 (3):193-224.score: 30.0
    Philosophers have traditionally held that claims about necessities and possibilities are to be evaluated by consulting our philosophical intuitions; that is, those peculiarly compelling deliverances about possibilities that arise from a serious and reflective attempt to conceive of counterexamples to these claims. But many contemporary philosophers, particularly naturalists, argue that intuitions of this sort are unreliable, citing examples of once-intuitive, but now abandoned, philosophical theses, as well as recent psychological studies that seem to establish the general fallibility of intuition.In the (...)
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  7. T. Bresnick & R. Levin (2006). Phenomenal Qualities of Ayahuasca Ingestion and its Relation to Fringe Consciousness and Personality. Journal of Consciousness Studies 13 (9):5-24.score: 30.0
    Ayahuasca, a hallucinogen with profound consciousness- altering properties, has been increasingly utilized in recent studies (e.g., Strassman, 2001; Shanon, 2002a,b). However, other than Shanon's recent work, there has been little attempt to examine the effects of ayahuasca on perceptual, affective and cognitive experience, its relation to fringe consciousness or to pertinent personality variables. Twenty-one volunteers attending a seminar on ayahuasca were administered personality measures and a semi-structured interview about phenomenal qualities of their experience. Ayahuasca ingestion was associated with profound alterations (...)
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  8. Michael E. Levin (1975). Kripke's Argument Against the Identity Thesis. Journal of Philosophy 72 (March):149-67.score: 30.0
  9. Christian Coons & Noah Levin (2011). The Dead Donor Rule, Voluntary Active Euthanasia, and Capital Punishment. Bioethics 25 (5):236-243.score: 30.0
    We argue that the dead donor rule, which states that multiple vital organs should only be taken from dead patients, is justified neither in principle nor in practice. We use a thought experiment and a guiding assumption in the literature about the justification of moral principles to undermine the theoretical justification for the rule. We then offer two real world analogues to this thought experiment, voluntary active euthanasia and capital punishment, and argue that the moral permissibility of terminating any patient (...)
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  10. Janet Levin (2008). Molyneux's Question and the Individuation of Perceptual Concepts. Philosophical Studies 139 (1):1 - 28.score: 30.0
    Molyneux's Question, that is, “Suppose a man born blind, and now adult, and taught by his touch to distinguish between a cube and a sphere... and the blind man made to see: Quaere, whether by his sight, before he touched them, he could now distinguish, and tell, which is the globe, which the cube”, was discussed by many theorists in the 17th and 18th centuries, and has recently been addressed by contemporary philosophers interested in the nature, and identity conditions, of (...)
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  11. Janet Levin (2007). Can Modal Intuitions Be Evidence for Essentialist Claims? Inquiry 50 (3):253 – 269.score: 30.0
    In Naming and Necessity, Kripke argues that intuitions about what is possible play a limited, but important, role in challenging philosophical theses, counting as evidence against them only if they cannot be reconstrued as intuitions about something else, compatible with the thesis in question. But he doesn't provide clear guidelines for determining when such intuitions have been successfully reconstrued, leading some to question their status as evidence for modal claims. In this paper I focus on some worries, articulated by Michael (...)
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  12. David Michael Levin (1998). Tracework: Myself and Others in the Moral Phenomenology of Merleau-Ponty and Levinas. International Journal of Philosophical Studies 6 (3):345 – 392.score: 30.0
    In this study, I examine the significance of the trace and its legibility in the phenomenologies of Merleau-Ponty and Levinas, showing that this trope plays a more significant role in Merleau-Ponty's thinking than has been recognized heretofore and that it constitutes a crucial point of contact between Merleau-Ponty and Levinas. But this point of contact is also, in both their philosophies, a site where their thinking is compelled to confront its limits and the enigmas involved in the description of the (...)
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  13. Michael E. Levin (1981). Is Racial Discrimination Special? Journal of Value Inquiry 15 (3):225-234.score: 30.0
  14. Janet Levin (2008). Taking Type-B Materialism Seriously. Mind and Language 23 (4):402-425.score: 30.0
    Abstract: Type-B materialism is the thesis that though phenomenal states are necessarily identical with physical states, phenomenal concepts have no a priori connections to physical or functional concepts. Though type-B materialists have invoked this conceptual independence to counter a number of well-known arguments against physicalism (e.g. the conceivability of zombies, the ignorance of Mary, the existence of an 'explanatory gap'), anti-physicalists have raised objections to this strategy. My aim here is to defend type-B materialism against these objections, by arguing that (...)
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  15. Melissa R. Beck, Daniel T. Levin & Bonnie L. Angelone (2007). Change Blindness Blindness: Beliefs About the Roles of Intention and Scene Complexity in Change Detection. Consciousness and Cognition 16 (1):31-51.score: 30.0
  16. Janet Levin (2011). Reconstruing Modal Intuitions. Croatian Journal of Philosophy 11 (1):97-112.score: 30.0
    In Naming and Necessity, Kripke argues that clearly conceived (or imagined) scenarios that seem to be counterexamples to a posteriori identity theses can indeed count as evidence against them—but only if, after reflection on our understanding of their constituent terms and the relevant empirical facts, we find that they cannot be acceptably reconstrued as intuitions about something else. This makes trouble for phenomenalphysical identity statements such as ‘pain is C-fiber stimulation’, since most agree that such statements cannot be so reconstrued—and (...)
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  17. Janet Levin (1991). Analytic Functionalism and the Reduction of Phenomenal States. Philosophical Studies 61 (March):211-38.score: 30.0
  18. Michael Levin (2006). Gettier Cases Without False Lemmas? Erkenntnis 64 (3):381 - 392.score: 30.0
    Examples cited by Feldman, Lehrer and others of true beliefs that are justified, but not by false lemmas, turn out under scrutiny to involve false lemmas after all. In each case there is an EG inference whose conclusion is unwarranted unless its base instance is false. A shift to non-deductive justification does not avert the difficulty. The relation of this result to non-inferential Gettier cases is suggested.
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  19. Janet Levin (2008). Assertion, Practical Reason, and Pragmatic Theories of Knowledge. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 76 (2):359–384.score: 30.0
    Defenders of pragmatic theories of knowledge (such as contextualism and sensitive invariantism) argue that these theories, unlike those that invoke a single standard for knowledge, comport with the intuitively compelling thesis that knowledge is the norm of assertion and practical reason. In this paper, I dispute this thesis, and argue that, therefore, the prospects for both “high standard” approach, and contend that if one abandons the thesis that knowledge is the norm of assertion and practical reason, the most serious arguments (...)
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  20. David Michael Levin (1984). Logos and Psyche: A Hermeneutics of Breathing. Research in Phenomenology 14 (1):121-147.score: 30.0
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  21. Janet Levin, Functionalism. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 30.0
    Functionalism in the philosophy of mind is the doctrine that what makes something a mental state of a particular type does not depend on its internal constitution, but rather on the way it functions, or the role it plays, in the system of which it is a part. This doctrine is rooted in Aristotle's conception of the soul, and has antecedents in Hobbes's conception of the mind as a “calculating machine”, but it has become fully articulated (and popularly endorsed) only (...)
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  22. Daniel T. Levin, Nausheen Momen, Sarah B. Drivdahl & Daniel J. Simons (2000). Change Blindness Blindness: The Metacognitive Error of Overestimating Change-Detection Ability. Visual Cognition 7 (1):397-412.score: 30.0
  23. Bonnie L. Angelone, Daniel T. Levin & Daniel J. Simons (2003). The Relationship Between Change Detection and Recognition of Centrally Attended Objects in Motion Pictures. Perception 32 (8):947-962.score: 30.0
  24. David Michael Levin (1994). Making Sense: The Work of Eugene Gendlin. Human Studies 17 (3):343 - 353.score: 30.0
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  25. Janet Levin (2012). Imaginability, Possibility, and the Puzzle of Imaginative Resistance. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 41 (3):391-421.score: 30.0
    It is standard practice in philosophical inquiry to test a general thesis (of the form 'F iff G' or 'F only if G') by attempting to construct a counterexample to it. If we can imagine or conceive of1an F that isn't a G, then we have evidence that there could be an F that isn't a G — and thus evidence against the thesis in question; if not, then the thesis is (at least temporarily) secure. Or so it is standardly (...)
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  26. Michael E. Levin (2007). Bundling Hume with Kripkenstein. Synthese 155 (1):35 - 64.score: 30.0
    It is argued that the intuition driving Kripke’s famous version of Wittgenstein’s meaning skepticism is precisely the one that prompted Hume to despair of his bundle theory of the self: there are no necessary connections between distinct mental states. This interpretation is shown to throw light on Wittgenstein’s notorious idea that all proofs “create concepts.” Wittgenstein has invented a new form of skepticism. Personally I am inclined to regard it as the most radical and original skeptical problem that philosophy has (...)
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  27. Janet Levin (1987). Physicalism and the Subjectivity of Secondary Qualities. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 65 (December):400-411.score: 30.0
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  28. Michael E. Levin (1981). Equality of Opportunity. Philosophical Quarterly 31 (123):110-125.score: 30.0
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  29. David Michael Levin (1980). On Heidegger: The Gathering Dance of Mortals. Research in Phenomenology 10 (1):251-277.score: 30.0
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  30. Michael E. Levin (1979). On Theory-Change and Meaning-Change. Philosophy of Science 46 (3):407-424.score: 30.0
    I argue against the currently popular view that a radical change in theory affects the meaning of theoretical terms, and hence render pre- and post-shift theories incomparable. I first show how to pose the meaning-change issue without appeal to meanings reified. I contend that arguments against theory-neutral observation languages are faulty, but that even if they were sound, there are semantic devices that allow a theory to refer to the factual basis of a competitor. This suggests a picture of science (...)
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  31. David Michael Levin (1985). The Body Politic: Political Economy and the Human Body. Human Studies 8 (3):235 - 278.score: 30.0
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  32. Michael Levin (2007). Compatibilism and Special Relativity. Journal of Philosophy 104 (9):433-463.score: 30.0
  33. Michael Levin (1984). Why Homosexuality is Abnormal. The Monist 67 (2):251-283.score: 30.0
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  34. Michael E. Levin (1995). Tortuous Dualism. Journal of Philosophy 92 (6):313-22.score: 30.0
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  35. Michael Levin (2004). Virtue Epistemology: No New Cures. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 69 (2):397–410.score: 30.0
    One version of virtue epistemology defines knowledge as belief whose truth arises from, or is explained by, the motives that produced it. This version is also intended to solve the Gettier problem, by shielding properly caused beliefs from double accidents. Unfortunately, there is no notion of "explains" or "arises from" which explains in the intended sense the truth of true beliefs.
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  36. Daniel J. Simons & Daniel T. Levin (1997). Change Blindness. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 1:241-82.score: 30.0
  37. Michael Levin (2004). J.S. Mill on Civilization and Barbarism. Frank Cass.score: 30.0
    John Stuart Mill's best-known work is On Liberty (1859). In it he declared that Western society was in danger of coming to a standstill. This was an extraordinarily pessimistic claim in view of Britain's global dominance at the time and one that has been insufficiently investigated in the secondary literature. The wanting model was that of China, a once advanced civilization that had apparently ossified. To understand how Mill came to this conclusion requires one to investigate his notion of the (...)
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  38. Janet Levin (2012). Tye's Ptolemaic Revolution (Review of Consciousness Revisited: Materialism Without Phenomenal Concepts). Analytic Philosophy 53 (1):98-117.score: 30.0
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  39. Daniel T. Levin (2002). Change Blindness Blindness as Visual Metacognition. Journal of Consciousness Studies 9:111-30.score: 30.0
  40. Janet Levin (2001). The Myth of Jones and the Return of Subjectivity. Mind and Language 16 (2):173-192.score: 30.0
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  41. Michael Levin (1989). Understanding the Euthyphro Problem. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 25 (2):83 - 97.score: 30.0
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  42. Janet Levin (2007). Nagel Vs. Nagel on the Nature of Phenomenal Concepts. Ratio 20 (3):293–307.score: 30.0
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  43. Margarita R. Levin (1981). On Tymoczko's Argument for Mathematical Empiricism. Philosophical Studies 39 (1):79 - 86.score: 30.0
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  44. Michael E. Levin (1984). Why We Believe in Other Minds. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 44 (March):343-59.score: 30.0
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  45. Daniel T. Levin, Daniel J. Simons, Bonnie L. Angelone & Christopher Chabris (2002). Memory for Centrally Attended Changing Objects in an Incidental Real-World Change Detection Paradigm. British Journal Of Psychology 93:289-302.score: 30.0
  46. Daniel T. Levin & D. Alexander Varakin (2004). No Pause for a Brief Disruption: Failures of Visual Awareness During Ongoing Events. Consciousness and Cognition 13 (2):363-372.score: 30.0
  47. Michael Levin (1993). Reply to Fulda on Animal Rights. Journal of Value Inquiry 27 (1):111-112.score: 30.0
  48. Janet Levin (2000). Dispositional Theories of Color and the Claims of Common Sense. Philosophical Studies 100 (2):151-174.score: 30.0
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  49. Michael Levin (1992). Responses to Race Differences in Crime. Journal of Social Philosophy 23 (1):5-29.score: 30.0
  50. David Michael Levin (1968). Induction and Husserl's Theory of Eidetic Variation. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 29 (1):1-15.score: 30.0
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  51. Janet Levin (1988). Must Reasons Be Rational? Philosophy of Science 55 (2):199-217.score: 30.0
    This paper challenges some leading views about the conditions under which the ascription of beliefs and desires can make sense of, or provide reasons for, a creature's behavior. I argue that it is unnecessary for behavior to proceed from beliefs and desires according to the principles of logic and decision theory, or even from principles that generally get things right. I also deny that it is necessary for behavior to proceed from principles that, though perhaps subrational, are similar to those (...)
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  52. Michael E. Levin (1981). Phenomenal Properties. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 42 (March):42-58.score: 30.0
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  53. Janet Levin (1987). Skepticism, Objectivity, and the Invulnerability of Knowledge. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 48 (1):63-78.score: 30.0
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  54. Jonathan Adler & Michael Levin (2002). Is the Generality Problem Too General? Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (1):87-97.score: 30.0
    Reliabilism holds that knowledge is true belief reliably caused. Reliabilists should say something about individuating processes; critics deny that the right degree of generality can be specified without arbitrariness. It is argued that this criticism applies as well to processes mentioned in scientific explanations. The gratuitous puzzles created thereby show that the "generality problem" is illusory.
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  55. Max Hocutt & Michael Levin (1999). The Bell Curve Case for Heredity. Philosophy of the Social Sciences 29 (3):389-415.score: 30.0
    City College of New York The hereditarian theory of race differences in IQ was briefly revived with the appearance of The Bell Curve but then quickly dismissed. The authors attempt a defense of it here, with an eye to conceptual and logical issues of special interests to philosophers, such as alleged infirmities in the heritability concept. At the same time, some relevant post-Bell Curve empirical data are introduced.
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  56. Michael E. Levin (1980). Reverse Discrimination, Shackled Runners, and Personal Identity. Philosophical Studies 37 (2):139 - 149.score: 30.0
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  57. Michael E. Levin & Margarita R. Levin (1978). The Independence Results of Set Theory: An Informal Exposition. Synthese 38 (1):1 - 34.score: 30.0
  58. David Michael Levin (1976). II. The Concept of Mental Illness: Working Through the Myths. Inquiry 19 (1-4):360-365.score: 30.0
    In ?Some Myths about ?Mental Illness'? (Inquiry, Vol. 18 [1975], No. 3), Michael Moore attempts to clarify and refute what he takes to be the radical (existential) position concerning the nature and diagnosis of mental illness. Moore's dissatisfaction with certain formulations and conceptualizations of the radical position is endorsed; as also the need to introduce greater rigor and precision into the discussion of mental illness. But Moore's clarifications are really misunderstandings and, in consequence, his refutations do not succeed. Moore's five?fold (...)
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  59. Michael E. Levin (1979). Forcing and the Indeterminacy of Translation. Erkenntnis 14 (1):25 - 32.score: 30.0
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  60. Martin Levin (1979). On Animal Laborans and Homo Politicus in Hannah Arendt: A Note. Political Theory 7 (4):521-531.score: 30.0
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  61. Michael Levin (1993). Reliabilism and Induction. Synthese 97 (3):297 - 334.score: 30.0
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  62. Yakir Levin & Itzhak Aharon (2011). What's on Your Mind? A Brain Scan Won't Tell. Review of Philosophy and Psychology 2 (4):699-722.score: 30.0
    Reverse Inference ( RI ) is an imaging-based type of inference from brain states to mental states, which has become highly widespread in neuroscience, most especially in neuroeconomics. Recent critical studies of RI may be taken to show that, if cautiously used, RI can help achieve research goals that may be difficult to achieve by way of behavior-based procedures alone. But can RI exceed the limits of these procedures and achieve research goals that are impossible for them to achieve alone? (...)
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  63. David Michael Levin (1991). Phenomenology in America. Philosophy and Social Criticism 17 (2):103-119.score: 30.0
  64. Melissa R. Beck, Daniel T. Levin & Bonnie L. Angelone (2007). Metacognitive Errors in Change Detection: Lab and Life Converge. Consciousness and Cognition 16 (1):58-62.score: 30.0
  65. David Michael Levin (1968). More Aspects to the Concept of "Aesthetic Aspects". Journal of Philosophy 65 (16):483-490.score: 30.0
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  66. D. M. Levin (2001). The Embodiment of the Categorical Imperative: Kafka, Foucault, Benjamin, Adorno and Levinas. Philosophy and Social Criticism 27 (4):1-20.score: 30.0
  67. D. Alexander Varakin, Daniel T. Levin & Roger Fidler (2004). Unseen and Unaware: Implications of Recent Research on Failures of Visual Awareness for Human-Computer Interface Design. Human-Computer Interaction 19 (4):389-422.score: 30.0
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  68. David S. Levin (1985). Thomson and the Current State of the Abortion Controversy. Journal of Applied Philosophy 2 (1):121-125.score: 30.0
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  69. Michael E. Levin & Margarita Rosa Levin (1977). Flagpoles, Shadows and Deductive Explanation. Philosophical Studies 32 (3):293 - 299.score: 30.0
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  70. Janet Levin (2007). Review of Karsten R. Stueber, Rediscovering Empathy: Agency, Folk Psychology, and the Human Sciences. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (7).score: 30.0
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  71. Yakir Levin (1995). Synthetic Apriority. Erkenntnis 43 (2):137 - 150.score: 30.0
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  72. Michael Levin (2000). Demons, Possibility and Evidence. Noûs 34 (3):422–440.score: 30.0
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  73. Daniel T. Levin, Sarah B. Drivdahl, Nausheen Momen & Melissa R. Beck (2002). False Predictions About the Detectability of Visual Changes: The Role of Beliefs About Attention, Memory, and the Continuity of Attended Objects in Causing Change Blindness Blindness. Consciousness and Cognition 11 (4):507-527.score: 30.0
  74. Yakir Levin, Cartesian Minds.score: 30.0
    According to a basic dualistic conception that originated in Descartes, minds are immaterial, non-spatial and simple thinking particulars that are independent of anything material. Call this view the Cartesian conception, and minds thus conceived, Cartesian minds. In what follows I propose a new version of an argument against the Cartesian conception that can be traced back to Descartes" days (Garber and Ayers 1998, 232). The inspiration behind my version is an argument suggested by Strawson"s seminal discussion of the concept of (...)
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  75. Michael E. Levin & Margarita R. Levin (1978). Lavoisier's Slow Burn. Philosophy of Science 45 (4):626-629.score: 30.0
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  76. Michael Levin (1997). Plantinga on Functions and the Theory of Evolution. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 75 (1):83 – 98.score: 30.0
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  77. Michael Levin (1997). Putnam on Reference and Constructible Sets. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 48 (1):55-67.score: 30.0
    Putnam argues that, by ‘reinterpretation’, the Axiom of Constructibility can be saved from empirical refutation. This paper contends that this argument fails, a failure which leaves Putnam's sweeping appeal to the Lowenheim–Skolem Theorem inadequately motivated.
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  78. Michael E. Levin (1975). Quine on Analyticity in L. Mind 84 (333):114-118.score: 30.0
  79. Steve Mitroff, Daniel J. Simons & Daniel T. Levin (2004). Nothing Compares 2 Views: Change Blindness Results From Failures to Compare Retained Information. Perception and Psychophysics 66 (8):1268-1281.score: 30.0
  80. David Michael Levin (1977). Freud's Divided Heart and Saraha's Cure. Inquiry 20 (1-4):165 – 188.score: 30.0
    This paper has three aims: first, to redeem some of Freud's most fundamental insights, so courageous and revolutionary that they were not even entirely appealing and intelligible to Freud himself; not understanding their teacher, Freud's disciples systematically distorted or suppressed his boldest speculations. By concentrating on an early Buddhist text of great profundity it is hoped to push our understanding of Freud beyond Freud himself. The exotic nature of this text makes it an especially powerful instrument for cutting through the (...)
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  81. Michael E. Levin & Margarita Levin (1979). The Modal Confusion in Rawls' Original Position. Analysis 39 (2):82 - 87.score: 30.0
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  82. Michael Levin (1982). A Hobbesian Minimal State. Philosophy and Public Affairs 11 (4):338-353.score: 30.0
  83. Michael Levin (2002). Is the Generality Problem Too General? Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (1):87 - 97.score: 30.0
    Reliabilism holds that knowledge is true belief reliably caused. Reliabilists should say something about individuating processes; critics deny that the right degree of generality can be specified without arbitrariness. It is argued that this criticism applies as well to processes mentioned in scientific explanations. The gratuitous puzzles created thereby show that the "generality problem" is illusory.
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  84. Margarita R. Levin (1980). Swords' Points: [Analysis "Problem" No. 18]. Analysis 40 (2):69 - 70.score: 30.0
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  85. Michael Levin (1999). Lucius T. Outlaw, Jr., On Race and Philosophy:On Race and Philosophy. Ethics 109 (2):454-456.score: 30.0
  86. Janet Levin (2008). Molyneux Meets Euthyphro. Croatian Journal of Philosophy 8 (3):289-297.score: 30.0
    Many contemporary philosophers contend that a positive answer to Molyneux’s Question -- the question of whether a “man born blind and made to see” would be able to identify spatial figures, without touching them, on first viewing -- requires that there be a *rational connection* between the representations of those figures afforded by vision and by touch. This paper explores the question of what this could mean if the representations are non-discursive, or “pure recognitional” concepts, and argues that the most (...)
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  87. Michael Levin (1987). Rigid Designators: Two Applications. Philosophy of Science 54 (2):283-294.score: 30.0
  88. Michael E. Levin (1976). The Extensionality of Causation and Causal-Explanatory Contexts. Philosophy of Science 43 (2):266-277.score: 30.0
    I argue that 'c' occurs extensionally in 'c caused e' and 'D' occurs extensionally in 'c caused e because c is D'. I claim that this has been insufficiently appreciated because the two contexts are often run together and because it has not been clear that the description D of c is among the referents of an explanatory argument. I argue as well that Hume's analysis of causation is consistent with taking causation to be a relation between single events, and (...)
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  89. Michael Levin (1997). You Can Always Count on Reliabilism. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 57 (3):607-617.score: 30.0
    This article considers some recent objections to reliabilism, particularly those of Susan Haack in Evidence and Inquiry. Haack complains that reliabilism solves the "ratification" problem trivially, making it analytic that evidence relates to truth; this paper defends an analytic solution to this problem. It argues as well that reliabilism is not tacitly committed to "evidentialism." Familiar counterexamples to and repairs of reliabilism are reviewed, with an eye to finding their rationale. Finally, it suggests that the underlying dispute between reliabilism and (...)
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  90. M. Levin (1996). Book Reviews : James Bell, Reconstructing Prehistory: Scientific Method in Archaeology. Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1994. Pp. Xii, 354. $44.95 (Cloth), $24.95 (Paper. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 26 (1):133-136.score: 30.0
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  91. Anatol G. Feldman & Mindy F. Levin (1997). Control Variables in Movement Production: An Experimentally Derived Concept. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (4):773-773.score: 30.0
    The basic concepts of motor control formulated in our target article were derived from specific experiments, a fact which is disregarded in Dalenoort's comments. A purely academic approach to motor control may not result in a clearer understanding of control concepts.
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  92. Arthur C. Graesser, Cheryl A. Bowers, Tom Trabasso, Brian Harvey, Sunil Cherian, Wade O. Troxell, Timothy Joseph day, Robert M. French, Roger Sansom, Kenneth Aizawa, David Shier, Yakir Levin & Nicholas Power (1996). Book Reviews. [REVIEW] Minds and Machines 6 (3).score: 30.0
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  93. Alan Levin (forthcoming). A Top-Down Approach to a Complex Natural System: Protein Folding. Axiomathes.score: 30.0
    We develop a general method for applying functional models to natural systems and cite recent progress in protein modeling that demonstrates the power of this approach. Functional modeling constrains the range of acceptable structural models of a system, reduces the difficulty of finding them, and improves their fidelity. However, functional models are distinctly different from the structural models that are more commonly applied in science. In particular, structural and functional models ask different questions and provide different kinds of answers. As (...)
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  94. David Michael Levin (2003). Cinders, Traces, Shadows on the Page. International Philosophical Quarterly 43 (3):269-288.score: 30.0
    In this paper I examine important texts by Jacques Derrida in which, either implicitly or explicitly, the Shoah, the catastrophe of the Holocaust is signified, interrupting, disrupting, even disfiguring the texture of the text. The question is how appropriately to remember and mourn the dead within philosophical discourse, how to remember what happened and how to understand it as a question not only of ethical and political responsibility but also as an evil deeply and pervasively reflected in the ontology and (...)
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  95. David Michael Levin (1969). Reasons and Religious Belief. Inquiry 12 (1-4):371 – 393.score: 30.0
    This paper purports a limited study of the concept of reason. It analyzes the claim of religious belief to be reasonable. The context for this analysis is an examination of some evidential (criteriological) connections between reasonable belief and ?(good) reasons? for such belief. Consideration of the typical sort of evidential connection shows, not surprisingly, that religious belief cannot claim to be reasonable. But it is argued that there is (at least) one other sort of connection, and that it is philosophically (...)
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  96. David Michael Levin (1969). Some Remarks on Mill's Naturalism. Journal of Value Inquiry 3 (4):291-297.score: 30.0
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  97. Janet Levin (forthcoming). Armchair Methodology and Epistemological Naturalism. Synthese.score: 30.0
    In traditional armchair methodology, philosophers attempt to challenge a thesis of the form ‘F iff G’ or ‘F only if G’ by describing a scenario that elicits the intuition that what has been described is an F that isn’t G. If they succeed, then the judgment that there is, or could be, an F that is not G counts as good prima facie evidence against the target thesis. Moreover, if these intuitions remain compelling after further (good faith) reflection, then traditional (...)
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  98. David S. Levin (1985). Abortion, Personhood, and Vagueness. Journal of Value Inquiry 19 (3).score: 30.0
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  99. Yakir Levin (2004). Cartesians, Strawsonians and the Univocal Meaning of Mental Predicates. Acta Analytica 19 (32):91-106.score: 30.0
    The paper examines the Cartesian and the Strawsonian answers to the question of why self-applied and other-applied mental predicates mean the same. While these answers relate to different, complementary aspects of this question, they seem and are usually considered as incompatible. Indeed, their apparent incompatibility constitutes a major objection to the Cartesian answer. A primary aim of the paper is to show that the Strawsonian answer does not pose a real problem to the Cartesian answer. Unlike other attempts to show (...)
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  100. Yakir Levin (1997). George Boolos (Ed.), Meaning and Method: Essays in Honor of Hilary Putnam, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1990. Minds and Machines 7 (4).score: 30.0
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