Search results for 'Given' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Evan Fales (1996). A Defense of the Given. Lanham: Rowman &Amp; Littlefield.score: 18.0
    The Doctrine of the Given The Myth of the Given A Methodological Problem To a convinced foundationalist, the project of establishing the existence of the ...
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  2. Nikolay Milkov (2004). G. E. Moore and the Greifswald Objectivists on the Given and the Beginning of Analytic Philosophy. Axiomathes 14 (4):361-379.score: 18.0
    Shortly before G. E. Moore wrote down the formative for the early analytic philosophy lectures on Some Main Problems of Philosophy (1910–1911), he had become acquainted with two books which influenced his thought: (1) a book by Husserl's pupil August Messer and (2) a book by the Greifswald objectivist Dimitri Michaltschew. Central to Michaltschew's book was the concept of the given. In Part I, I argue that Moore elaborated his concept of sense-data in the wake of the Greifswald concept. (...)
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  3. Tom Rockmore, The Pittsburgh School, The Given and Knowledge. Normative Functionalism and the Pittsburgh School.score: 18.0
    The Pittsburgh School, aka the Pittsburgh Hegelians or as the Pittsburgh neo-Hegelians, is often associated with Sellars, McDowell and Brandom. The views of the Pittsburgh School arise on the heels of Sellars’ rejection of the given, but differ in important ways. The difficulty, if one turns away from the given, lies in justifying objective claims to know. I argue that neither Sellars, nor Brandom, nor McDowell successfully justifies claims to know. I further question their supposed Hegelianism. Hegel is (...)
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  4. Ronald C. Hoy (1985). The Given of the Self-Presenting. Noûs 19 (September):347-364.score: 15.0
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  5. Daniel Howard-Snyder (1998). BonJour's 'Basic Antifoundationalist Argument' and the Doctrine of the Given. Southern Journal of Philosophy 36 (2):163-177.score: 15.0
    Laurence BonJour observes that critics of foundationalism tend to argue against it by objecting to "relatively idiosyncratic" versions of it, a strategy which has "proven in the main to be superficial and ultimately ineffective" since answers immune to the objections emerge quickly (1985: 17). He aims to rectify this deficiency. Specifically, he argues that the very soul of foundationalism, "the concept of a basic empirical belief," is incoherent (1985: 30). This is a bold strategy from which we can learn even (...)
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  6. Jacob J. Ross (1970). The Appeal To The Given: A Study In Epistemology. London,: Allen &Amp; Unwin.score: 15.0
     
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  7. William A. Rottschaefer (1989). The Ghost of the Given: A Case for Epistemological Ghostbusters or Ghostlovers. Bridges 1:59-81.score: 15.0
     
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  8. William P. Alston (2002). Sellars and the "Myth of the Given". Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (1):69-86.score: 12.0
    Sellars is well known for his critique of the "myth of the given" in his "Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind". That text does not make it unambiguous just how he understands the "myth". Here I take it that whatever else may be involved, his critique is incompatible with the view that there is a nonconceptual mode of "presentation" or "givenness" of particulars that is the heart of sense perception and what is most distinctive of perception as a type (...)
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  9. Tim Crane, The Given.score: 12.0
    In The Mind and the World Order, C.I. Lewis made a famous distinction between the immediate data ‘which are presented or given to the mind’ and the ‘construction or interpretation’ which the mind brings to those data (1929: 52). What the mind receives is the datum – literally, the given – and the interpretation is what happens when we being it ‘under some category or other, select from it, emphasise aspects of it, and relate it in particular and (...)
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  10. Matthew S. Bedke (2009). The Iffiest Oughts: A Guise of Reasons Account of End‐Given Conditionals. Ethics 119 (4):672-698.score: 12.0
    It often seems that what one ought to do depends on what contingent ends one has adopted and the means to pursuing them. Imagine, for example, that you are applying for jobs, and a particularly attractive one comes your way. It offers excellent colleagues in a desirable location, the pay is good, and acquiring a job like this is one of your ends. If practicing your job talk is a means to getting the job, the following seems true: (1) If (...)
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  11. Refeng Tang (2010). Conceptualism and the New Myth of the Given. Synthese 175 (1).score: 12.0
    The motivation for McDowell’s conceptualism is an epistemological consideration. McDowell believes conceptualism would guarantee experience a justificatory role in our belief system and we can then avoid the Myth of the Given without falling into coherentism. Conceptualism thus claims an epistemological advantage over nonconceptualism. The epistemological advantage of conceptualism is not to be denied. But both Sellars and McDowell insist experience is not belief. This makes it impossible for experience to justify empirical knowledge, for the simple reason that what (...)
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  12. Lydia Patton (2011). The Paradox of Infinite Given Magnitude: Why Kantian Epistemology Needs Metaphysical Space. Kant-Studien 102 (3):273-289.score: 12.0
    Kant's account of space as an infinite given magnitude in the Critique of Pure Reason is paradoxical, since infinite magnitudes go beyond the limits of possible experience. Michael Friedman's and Charles Parsons's accounts make sense of geometrical construction, but I argue that they do not resolve the paradox. I argue that metaphysical space is based on the ability of the subject to generate distinctly oriented spatial magnitudes of invariant scalar quantity through translation or rotation. The set of determinately oriented, (...)
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  13. Daniel Bonevac (2002). Sellars Vs. The Given. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 64 (1):1-30.score: 12.0
    “My thinking starts,” John McDowell has written, “from a central element in Wilfrid Sellars’s attack on the Myth of the Given”; namely, that nothing “given in experience independently of acquired conceptual capacities . . . . could stand in a justificatory relation to beliefs or a world view” (McDowell 1998a, 365). The Sellarsian assault on the Myth of the Given has itself attained something like mythic status. Various writings by McDowell, Richard Rorty, Robert Brandom, and others invoke (...)
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  14. Eric Watkins (2008). Kant and the Myth of the Given. Inquiry 51 (5):512 – 531.score: 12.0
    Sellars and McDowell, among others, attribute a prominent role to the Myth of the Given. In this paper, I suggest that they have in mind two different versions of the Myth of the Given and I argue that Kant is not the target of one version and, though explicitly under attack from the other, has resources sufficient to mount a satisfactory response. What is essential to this response is a proper understanding of (empirical) concepts as involving unifying functions (...)
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  15. Robert Hanna (2011). The Myth of the Given and the Grip of the Given. Diametros 27:25-46.score: 12.0
    In this paper I argue that the Sellarsian Myth of the Given does not apply to all forms of Non-Conceptualism; that Kant is in fact a non-conceptualist of the right-thinking kind and not a Conceptualist, as most Kant-interpreters think; and that an intelligible and defensible Kantian Non-Conceptualism can be developed which supports the thesis that true perceptual beliefs are non-inferentially justified and also normatively funded by direct, embodied, intentional interactions with the manifest world (a.k.a. the Grip of the (...)). (shrink)
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  16. Mark Schroeder (2012). The Ubiquity of State-Given Reasons. Ethics 122 (3):457-488.score: 12.0
    Philosophers have come to distinguish between ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ kinds of reasons for belief, intention, and other attitudes. Several theories about the nature of this distinction have been offered, by far the most prevalent of which is the idea that it is, at bottom, the distinction between what are known as ‘object-given’ and ‘state-given’ reasons. This paper argues that the object-given/state-given theory vastly overgeneralizes on a small set of data points, and in particular that any adequate (...)
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  17. Jay F. Rosenberg (2006). Still Mythic After All Those Years: On Alston's Latest Defense of the Given. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 72 (1):157-173.score: 12.0
    Wilfrid Sellars' conclusion in "Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind" that "the Given" is a "Myth" quickly elicited philosophical opposition and remains contentious fifty years later. William Alston has challenged that conclusion on several occasions by attempting to devise an acceptable account of perception committed to the givenness of perceived objects. His most recent challenge advances a "Theory of Appearing" which posits irreducible non-conceptual relations, ostensibly overlooked by Sellars, e.g., of "looking red", between the subject and the object perceived, (...)
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  18. J. Brian Pitts, Some Thoughts on Relativity and the Flow of Time: Einstein's Equations Given Absolute Simultaneity.score: 12.0
    The A-theory of time has intuitive and metaphysical appeal, but suffers from tension, if not inconsistency, with the special and general theories of relativity (STR and GTR). The A-theory requires a notion of global simultaneity invariant under the symmetries of the world's laws, those ostensible transformations of the state of the world that in fact leave the world as it was before. Relativistic physics, if read in a realistic sense, denies that there exists any notion of global simultaneity that is (...)
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  19. Anthony Robert Booth (forthcoming). Two Reasons Why Epistemic Reasons Are Not Object‐Given Reasons. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research.score: 12.0
    In this paper I discuss two claims; the first is the claim that state-given reasons for belief are of a radically different kind to object-given reasons for belief. The second is that, where this last claim is true, epistemic reasons are object-given reasons for belief (EOG). I argue that EOG has two implausible consequences: (i) that suspension of judgement can never be epistemically justified, and (ii) that the reason that epistemically justifies a belief that p can never (...)
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  20. Richard Schantz (2001). The Given Regained: Reflections on the Sensuous Content of Experience. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 62 (1):167-180.score: 12.0
    The major part of our beliefs and our knowledge of the world is based on, or grounded in, sensory experience. But, how is it that we can have perceptual beliefs that things are thus and so, and, moreover, be justified in having them? What conditions must experience satisfy to rationally warrant, and not merely to cause, our beliefs? Against the currently very popular contention that experience itself already has to be propositionally and conceptually structured, I will rehabilitate the claim that (...)
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  21. Caleb Liang (2006). Phenomenal Character and the Myth of the Given. Journal of Philosophical Research 31:21-36.score: 12.0
    In “Sellars and the ‘Myth of the Given,’” Alston argues against Sellars’s position in “Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind” (EPM) that there is no nonconceptual cognition. According to him, Sellars ignores phenomenal look-concepts that capture the phenomenal character of experience. I contend that the Sellarsian can agree that the phenomenal aspect of looks should be accommodated, but he is not thereby forced to concede a form of the nonconceptual Given. I examine some of Alston’s arguments, especially the (...)
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  22. Josh Rasmussen (2004). On Creating Worlds Without Evil – Given Divine Counterfactual Knowledge. Religious Studies 40 (4):457-470.score: 12.0
    An important question raised in the Molinist debate is, ‘Given God's access to counterfactual knowledge, could God create a world in which free creatures always refrain from evil?’ An affirmative answer suggests that God cannot possess counterfactual knowledge since such knowledge would allow God to create seemingly more desirable worlds than the actual world. However, Alvin Plantinga has argued that it is at least possible that every possible person is transworld depraved – meaning that each person would perform some (...)
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  23. Matthew J. Donald, Probabilities for Observing Mixed Quantum States Given Limited Prior Information.score: 12.0
    The original development of the formalism of quantum mechanics involved the study of isolated quantum systems in pure states. Such systems fail to capture important aspects of the warm, wet, and noisy physical world which can better be modelled by quantum statistical mechanics and local quantum field theory using mixed states of continuous systems. In this context, we need to be able to compute quantum probabilities given only partial information. Specifically, suppose that B is a set of operators. This (...)
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  24. Rolf A. Eberle (1971). Replacing One Theory by Another Under Preservation of a Given Feature. Philosophy of Science 38 (4):486-501.score: 12.0
    The conditions are examined under which one theory is said to be replaceable by another, while preserving those features of the original theory which made it serviceable for a given purpose. Among such replacements, special attention is given to ones which qualify as so-called reductions of a theory, and some theorems are proved concerning the notion of a reduction.
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  25. John Protevi (1997). Given Time and the Gift of Life. Man and World 30 (1):65-82.score: 12.0
    Given Time and the Gift of Life explores the following nexus in Derrida's thought: the gift, the mother, and life. The first section examines life within the trajectory of the gift, the excess of gift over return in the gift of life, and the rewriting of Aristotelian generation in differantial species-being. The second section shows the quasi-transcendental nature of Derrida's thought. The conclusion sketches some of the political consequences of the gift of life thought as the quasi-transcendental gift of (...)
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  26. Keymanthri Moodley (2007). Microbicide Research in Developing Countries: Have We Given the Ethical Concerns Due Consideration? BMC Medical Ethics 8 (1):1-7.score: 12.0
    Background HIV prevention research has been fraught with ethical concerns since its inception. These concerns were highlighted during HIV vaccine research and have been elaborated in microbicide research. A host of unique ethical concerns pervade the microbicide research process from trial design to post-trial microbicide availability. Given the urgency of research and development in the face of the devastating HIV pandemic, these ethical concerns represent an enormous challenge for investigators, sponsors and Research Ethics Committees (RECs) both locally and internationally. (...)
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  27. Paul Weirich (1983). Conditional Probabilities and Probabilities Given Knowledge of a Condition. Philosophy of Science 50 (1):82-95.score: 12.0
    The conditional probability of h given e is commonly claimed to be equal to the probability that h would have if e were learned. Here I contend that this general claim about conditional probabilities is false. I present a counter-example that involves probabilities of probabilities, a second that involves probabilities of possible future actions, and a third that involves probabilities of indicative conditionals. In addition, I briefly defend these counter-examples against charges that the probabilities they involve are illegitimate.
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  28. Hugo Eduardo Herrera (2010). Salomon Maimon's Commentary on the Subject of the Given in Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. The Review of Metaphysics 63 (3):593-613.score: 12.0
    The article approaches Salomon Maimon’s reinterpretation of the notions of the thing in itself and the given within the framework of criticism. For Maimon they do not refer to a transcendence that is directly unattainable by knowledge. In this attempt, he tries to explain the given on the basis of the action of constitutive understanding. With this, he triggers the passage from transcendental Kantian philosophy to the idealism of Fichte. Nonetheless, his position faces the subsequent problem of explaining (...)
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  29. Michael Marder (2007). Given the Right—of Giving (in Hegel's Grundlinien der Philosophie Des Rechts). Epoché 12 (1):93-108.score: 12.0
    This essay approaches the Hegelian problem of giving and givenness through the marginal figures of the animal, the child, and “superstitious humanity,”representing, in one way or another, the unperturbed relationship with immediacy. I argue that, for Hegel, the process of subjectivization supersedes these figures by learning to reject the immediately given and to accept only what is self-given. Yet, interspersed throughout this process are various imbalances and asymmetries, whereby the subject gives itself more than it takes, undialectically suppressing (...)
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  30. Dieter Freundlieb (2003). The Myth of the Given, Coherentism, and the Justification of Empirical Knowledge Claims. Idealistic Studies 33 (1):39-56.score: 12.0
    In this paper I make some critical comments on John McDowell’s Mind and World and offer suggestions as to how it might be possible to solve John McDowell’s problem of finding a safe passage between the Scylla of the “Myth of the Given” (Sellars) and the Charybdis of a Davidsonian linguistic coherentism. McDowell’s defense of a minimal empiricism depends on the largely unargued and ultimately untenable assumption that epistemic justification can only operate at the level of conceptual or propositional (...)
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  31. Russell Powell (2012). Human Nature and Respect for the Evolutionarily Given: A Comment on Lewens. Philosophy and Technology 25 (4):485-493.score: 12.0
    Any serious ethical discussion of the enhancement of human nature must begin with a reasonably accurate picture of the causal-historical structure of the living world. In this Comment, I show that even biologically sophisticated ethical discussions of the biomedical enhancement of species and speciel natures are susceptible to the kind of essentialistic thinking that Lewens cautions against. Furthermore, I argue that the same evolutionary and developmental considerations that compel Lewens to reject more plausible conceptions of human nature pose equally serious (...)
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  32. Freeman J. Dyson (1988/2004). Infinite in All Directions: Gifford Lectures Given at Aberdeen, Scotland, April-November 1985. Perennial.score: 12.0
    Infinite in All Directions is a popularized science at its best. In Dyson's view, science and religion are two windows through which we can look out at the world around us. The book is a revised version of a series of the Gifford Lectures under the title "In Praise of Diversity" given at Aberdeen, Scotland. They allowed Dyson the license to express everything in the universe, which he divided into two parts in polished prose: focusing on the diversity of (...)
     
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  33. Koichiro Misawa (2013). Education as the Cultivation of Second Nature: Two Senses of the Given. Educational Theory 63 (1):35-50.score: 12.0
    In philosophy, it is almost a platitude to argue that fact and value intertwine. However, in empirically oriented educational research, it is not. Hence, there is some affinity between logical positivism, which is no longer tenable in philosophy, and empirically based contemporary educational research in terms of assumptions each makes about “the given.” In this essay, Koichiro Misawa casts light on how fact and value intertwine by invoking the notion of “second nature” that John McDowell has reanimated. This will (...)
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  34. Shimon Edelman, Learn the Source and Target Languages: (A) Learn a Grammar GA for the Source Language (A). (B) Estimate a Structural Statistical Language Model SSLMA for (A). Given a Grammar (Consisting Of.. [REVIEW]score: 12.0
    (a) Learn a grammar GA for the source language (A). (b) Estimate a structural statistical language model SSLMA for (A). Given a grammar (consisting of terminals and nonterminals) and a partial sentence (sequence of terminals (t1 . . . ti)), an SSLM assigns probabilities to the possible choices of the next terminal ti+1.
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  35. J. M. Hinton (1967). On Not Having What You Are Given. Inquiry 10 (1-4):313-316.score: 12.0
    The statement, that these or those philosophers do not accept the distinction between what is, and what is not, ?given? in perception, has very little content; and should receive only a corresponding degree of emphasis.
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  36. Byeong D. Lee (forthcoming). Fales's Defense of the Given and Requirements for Being a Reason. Philosophia:1-19.score: 12.0
    Fales defends the doctrine of the given against the Sellarsian dilemma. On his view, sensory experiences, to which one has direct access, can justify basic beliefs. He upholds this view by way of defending an expansive conception of inference, according to which a broadly inferential relation can hold between sensory experiences and perceptual beliefs. The purpose of this paper is to show that Fales’s defense of the given fails. For this purpose, I argue that there are two requirements (...)
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  37. A. L. Macfie (ed.) (2007). The Philosophy of History: Talks Given at the Ihr, London, 2000-2006. Palgrave Macmillan.score: 12.0
    The Philosophy of History contains a selection of the talks given at the Philosophy of History seminar in the Institute of Historical Research, London, in the period 2000-6. It puts students of the Philosophy of History, historians, teachers of History and anyone else interested in the subject in touch with what is being researched and discussed today at the cutting edge of Philosophy of History studies. With contributions from, among others, Robert Burns, Keith Jenkins, James Connelly, Beverly Southgate, Ellen (...)
     
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  38. A. L. Macfie (ed.) (2006). The Philosophy of History: Talks Given at the Institute of Historical Research, London, 2000-2006. Palgrave Macmillan.score: 12.0
    The Philosophy of History contains a selection of the talks given at the Philosophy of History seminar in the Institute of Historical Research, London, in the period 2000-6. It puts students of the Philosophy of History, historians, teachers of History and anyone else interested in the subject in touch with what is being researched and discussed today at the cutting edge of Philosophy of History studies. With contributions from, among others, Robert Burns, Keith Jenkins, James Connelly, Beverly Southgate, Ellen (...)
     
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  39. Jean-Luc Marion (2002). Being Given: Toward a Phenomenology of Givenness. Stanford University Press.score: 12.0
    Along with Husserl's Ideas and Heidegger's Being and Time, Being Given is one of the classic works of phenomenology in the twentieth century. Through readings of Kant, Husserl, Heidegger, Derrida, and twentieth-century French phenomenology (e.g., Merleau-Ponty, Levinas, and Henry), it ventures a bold and decisive reappraisal of phenomenology and its possibilities. Its author's most original work to date, the book pushes phenomenology to its limits in an attempt to redefine and recover the phenomenological ideal, which the author argues has (...)
     
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  40. Mark Jeffreys (2007). How Can “Cheap Talk” Yield Coordination, Given a Conflict? Mind and Society 7 (1):95-108.score: 12.0
    ChickenHawk is a social-dilemma game that distinguishes uncoordinated from coordinated cooperation. In tests with players belonging to a culturally homogeneous population, natural-language cheap talk led to efficient coordination, while nonlinguistic signaling yielded uncoordinated altruism. In a subsequent test with players from a moderately more heterogeneous population nearby, the cheap talk condition still produced better coordination than other signaling conditions, but at a lower level and with fewer acts of altruism overall. Implications are: (1) without language, even willing cooperators coordinate poorly; (...)
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  41. William S. Robinson (1975). The Legend of the Given. In Hector-Neri Castaneda (ed.), Action, Knowledge, and Reality. Bobbs-Merrill.score: 11.0
     
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  42. Jerry A. Fodor (2007). The Revenge of the Given. In Brian P. McLaughlin & Jonathan D. Cohen (eds.), Contemporary Debates in Philosophy of Mind. Blackwell.score: 9.0
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  43. John Mcdowell (2009). The Given in Experience: Comment on Gupta. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 79 (2):468-474.score: 9.0
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  44. Walter Hopp (2009). Conceptualism and the Myth of the Given. European Journal of Philosophy 17 (3):363-385.score: 9.0
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  45. Andrew R. Bailey (2004). The Myth of the Myth of the Given. Manuscrito 27 (2):321-60.score: 9.0
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  46. Gail Soffer (2003). Revisiting the Myth: Husserl and Sellars on the Given. Review of Metaphysics 57 (2):301-337.score: 9.0
  47. Wilfrid S. Sellars (1979). More on Givenness and Explanatory Coherence. In Jonathan Dancy (ed.), Justification And Knowledge. Dordrecht: Reidel.score: 9.0
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  48. Laurence Bonjour (2004). C. I. Lewis on the Given and its Interpretation. Midwest Studies in Philosophy 28 (1):195–208.score: 9.0
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  49. John Gregg, Functionalism: Can't We Just Say That Consciousness Depends on the Higher-Level Organization of a Given System?score: 9.0
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  50. C. I. Lewis (1952). The Given Element in Empirical Knowledge. Philosophical Review 61 (2):168-175.score: 9.0
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  51. Charles Echelbarger (1974). Sellars on Thinking and the Myth of the Given. Philosophical Studies 25 (May):231-246.score: 9.0
  52. Franz Clemens Brentano (1987). On the Existence of God: Lectures Given at the Universities of Würzburg and Vienna, 1868-1891. M. Nijhoff.score: 9.0
    INTRODUCTION Of the works by Franz Brentano (-) which have appeared in English thus far, perhaps none is better suited to convey a clear idea of the spirit ...
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  53. Clotilde Calabi & Alberto Voltolini (2005). Should Pride of Place Be Given to the Norms? Intentionality and Normativity. Facta Philosophica 7 (1):85-98.score: 9.0
  54. Ernest Sosa (1997). Mythology of the Given. History of Philosophy Quarterly 14 (3):275 - 286.score: 9.0
  55. Laurence Bonjour (2000). Evan Fales, a Defense of the Given (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 1996). Noûs 34 (3):468–480.score: 9.0
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  56. John McDowell (2001). Comment on Richard Schantz, "the Given Regained". Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 62 (1):181-184.score: 9.0
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  57. Roberto Festa (2012). “For Unto Every One That Hath Shall Be Given”. Matthew Properties for Incremental Confirmation. Synthese 184 (1):89-100.score: 9.0
    Confirmation of a hypothesis by evidence can be measured by one of the so far known incremental measures of confirmation. As we show, incremental measures can be formally defined as the measures of confirmation satisfying a certain small set of basic conditions. Moreover, several kinds of incremental measure may be characterized on the basis of appropriate structural properties. In particular, we focus on the so-called Matthew properties: we introduce a family of six Matthew properties including the reverse Matthew effect; we (...)
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  58. Tracy Colony (2009). Given Time: The Question of Futurity in Heidegger's Contributions to Philosophy. Heythrop Journal 50 (2):284-292.score: 9.0
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  59. Felix Arnold (1906). The Given Situation in Attention. Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 3 (21):567-573.score: 9.0
  60. George Dreyfus (1996). Can the Fool Lead the Blind? Perception and the Given in Dharmakīrti's Thought. Journal of Indian Philosophy 24 (3).score: 9.0
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  61. Thomas Vinci, The Myth of the Myth of the Given. Problems From Wilfrid Sellars- Writing on Sellars.score: 9.0
  62. Bredo C. Johnsen (1986). The Given. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 46 (4):597-613.score: 9.0
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  63. Eric Watkins (2012). Kant, Sellars, and the Myth of the Given. Philosophical Forum 43 (3):311-326.score: 9.0
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  64. Christopher W. Gowans (1989). Two Concepts of the Given in C. I. Lewis: Realism and Foundationalism. Journal of the History of Philosophy 27 (4):573-590.score: 9.0
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  65. Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht (2006). 2. Presence Achieved in Language (with Special Attention Given to the Presence of the Past). History and Theory 45 (3):317–327.score: 9.0
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  66. Terrance Mcconnell (2011). Genetic Enhancement and Moral Attitudes Toward the Given. Journal of Applied Philosophy 28 (4):369-380.score: 9.0
    Several authors, including Michael Sandel, distinguish between two different attitudes toward nature: mastery and giftedness. Giftedness is the superior attitude, Sandel argues, because it better accords with the values of humility, responsibility, and solidarity. And giftedness, in combination with these values, provides a rational basis for opposing the employment of genetic enhancement. Against this, I argue that talents and genetic endowment are more plausibly viewed as undeserved, that not everything undeserved is a gift, and that even if talents and endowment (...)
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  67. Robin Hanson, Economic Growth Given Machine Intelligence.score: 9.0
    A simple exogenous growth model gives conservative estimates of the economic implications of machine intelligence. Machines complement human labor when they become more productive at the jobs they perform, but machines also substitute for human labor by taking over human jobs. At first, expensive hardware and software does only the few jobs where computers have the strongest advantage over humans. Eventually, computers do most jobs. At first, complementary effects dominate, and human wages rise with computer productivity. But eventually substitution can (...)
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  68. Herbert Spiegelberg (1984). Three Types of the Given: The Encountered, the Search-Found and the Striking. Husserl Studies 1 (1):69-78.score: 9.0
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  69. Paul Standish (2001). Data Return: The Sense of the Given in Educational Research. Journal of Philosophy of Education 35 (3):497–518.score: 9.0
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  70. Charles Hartshorne (1958). The Logical Structure of Givenness. Philosophical Quarterly 8 (October):307-316.score: 9.0
  71. D. Macbeth (2002). Knowledge, Mind, and the Given: Reading Wilfrid Sellars's "Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind". Philosophical Review 111 (2):281-284.score: 9.0
  72. Peter Unger (1973). On Being Given More Than Skepticism. Journal of Philosophy 70 (18):628-630.score: 9.0
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  73. John Hick (1969). Edward H. Madden and Peter H. Hare, Evil and the Concept of God. (Springfield Illinois: Charles C. Thomas, 1968. Pp. 142 + Vii. Price Not Given.). [REVIEW] Philosophy 44 (168):160-.score: 9.0
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  74. Raimo Tuomela (1988). The Myth of the Given and Realism. Erkenntnis 29 (2):181 - 200.score: 9.0
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  75. Matthew Burstein (2006). Situating Experience: Agency, Perception, and the Given. Southern Journal of Philosophy 44 (1):1-29.score: 9.0
    William Alston has been a long-time critic of the arguments of Wilfrid Sellars, and he has recently revisited the arguments made by Sellars in “Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind.” Alston’s work attempts to show how Sellarsian views fail to account for our understanding of perception by making a two-part attack on Sellars’s account: part one of the attack takes up the Sellarsian approach to ‘looks’-talk, and part two concerns Sellars’s thoroughgoing conceptualism with regard to perception. In this article, I (...)
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  76. Oliver Martin (1938). The Given and the Interpretative Elements in Perception. Journal of Philosophy 35 (13):337-345.score: 9.0
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  77. James W. Cornman (1978). On the Certainty of Reports About What is Given. Noûs 12 (2):93-118.score: 9.0
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  78. Paul M. McNeill, Ian H. Kerridge, Catherine Arciuli, David A. Henry, Graham J. Macdonald, Richard O. Day & Suzanne R. Hill (2006). Gifts, Drug Samples, and Other Items Given to Medical Specialists by Pharmaceutical Companies. Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 3 (3).score: 9.0
    Aim To ascertain the quantity and nature of gifts and items provided by the pharmaceutical industry in Australia to medical specialists and to consider whether these are appropriate in terms of justifiable ethical standards, empirical research and views expressed in the literature.
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  79. Patrick Madigan (forthcoming). The 'Curse' of Monotheism; or the Search for a Logical Justification to Support It, Given the Heavy Social and Psychological Price We Pay for Retaining It. Heythrop Journal 50 (6).score: 9.0
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  80. John Wild (1940). The Concept of the Given in Contemporary Philosophy--Its Origin and Limitations. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 1 (1):70-82.score: 9.0
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  81. Michael Goldman (1988). Rorty's New Myth of the Given. Metaphilosophy 19 (2):105–112.score: 9.0
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  82. Michael Huemer (1999). A Defense of the Given. Philosophical Review 108 (1):128-130.score: 9.0
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  83. Jay F. Rosenberg (1975). The "Given" and How to Take It: Some Reflections on Phenomenal Ontology. Metaphilosophy 6 (3-4):303-337.score: 9.0
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  84. Donald C. Williams (1933). The Innocence of the Given. Journal of Philosophy 30 (23):617-628.score: 9.0
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  85. Edgar S. Brightman & Donald C. Williams (1934). The Self, Given and Implied--A Discussion. Journal of Philosophy 31 (10):263-269.score: 9.0
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  86. Michael J. Murray & Kurt Meyers (1994). Ask and It Will Be Given to You. Religious Studies 30 (3):311 - 330.score: 9.0
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  87. Reviel Netz (2004). EUCLID'S DATA C. M. Taisbak: ΔEΔOMENA. Euclid's Data, or The Importance of Being Given. The Greek Text Translated and Explained . (Acta Historica Scientiarum Naturalium Et Medicinalium 45.) Pp. 271, Ills. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, University of Copenhagen, 2003. Cased, DKr 335/£30/US$42/€48. ISBN: 87-7289-815-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 54 (02):337-.score: 9.0
  88. Scott L. Pratt (2001). The Given Land: Black Hawk's Conception of Place. Philosophy and Geography 4 (1):109 – 125.score: 9.0
    In the wake of a war against the United States and the displacement of his people from their lands at the confluence of the Rock and Mississippi Rivers, the Sauk leader, Black Hawk, prepared an autobiography published in 1833. At the center of his work was an attempt to offer his readers a strategy that would make it possible for the Sauk and other Native peoples to coexist with the Americans of European descent who had come to the Mississippi valley. (...)
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  89. Rachael Wiseman (2009). Private Objects and the Myth of the Given. Philosophical Topics 37 (1):175-189.score: 9.0
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  90. J. -M. Roy (2003). Phenomenological Claims and the Myth of the Given. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 33 (Supplement):1-32.score: 9.0
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  91. Huston Smith (1972). Man's Western Way: An Essay on Reason and the Given. Philosophy East and West 22 (4):441-459.score: 9.0
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  92. Hao Tang (forthcoming). “It is Not a Something, but Not a Nothing Either!”—McDowell on Wittgenstein. Synthese:1-11.score: 9.0
    This paper corrects a mistake in John McDowell’s influential reading of Wittgenstein’s attack on the idea of private sensations. McDowell rightly identifies a primary target of Wittgenstein’s attack to be the Myth of the Given. But he also suggests that Wittgenstein, in the ferocity of his battles with this myth, sometimes goes into overkill, which manifests itself in seemingly behavioristic denials about sensations. But this criticism of Wittgenstein is a mistake. The mistake is made over two important but notoriously (...)
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  93. Alex Wayman (1975). Discussion of Frederick Streng's "Reflections on the Attention Given to Mental Construction in the Indian Buddhist Analysis of Causality" and Luis O. Gómez' "Some Aspects of the Free-Will Question in the Nikāyas". Philosophy East and West 25 (1):91-93.score: 9.0
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  94. M. M. Austin (2000). Friends Indeed? I. Savalli-Lestrade: Les Philoi Royaux Dans l'Asie Hellénistique . (École Pratique Des Hautes étuDes. Hautes étuDes du Monde Gréco-Romain 25.) Pp. XVII + 453. Geneva: Droz, 1998. Price Not Given. Isbn: 2-600-00290-1. Issn: 1016-7005. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 50 (01):193-.score: 9.0
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  95. Selmer Bringsjord & Naveen Sundar Govindarajulu (2012). Given the Web, What is Intelligence, Really? Metaphilosophy 43 (4):464-479.score: 9.0
    This article argues that existing systems on the Web cannot approach human-level intelligence, as envisioned by Descartes, without being able to achieve genuine problem solving on unseen problems. The article argues that this entails committing to a strong intensional logic. In addition to revising extant arguments in favor of intensional systems, it presents a novel mathematical argument to show why extensional systems can never hope to capture the inherent complexity of natural language. The argument makes its case by focusing on (...)
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  96. Josep E. Corbí (2009). The Insight of Empiricism: In Defence of a Hypothetical but Propositional Given. International Journal of Philosophical Studies 17 (2):289 – 298.score: 9.0
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  97. Thomas A. Goudge (1935). The Views of Charles Peirce on the Given in Experience. Journal of Philosophy 32 (20):533-544.score: 9.0
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  98. Helen Wodehouse (1947). The Case for Pacifism and Conscientious Objection: A Reply to Professor G. C. Field. By Rev. E. L. Allen, Francis E. Pollard, and G. A. Sutherland. (London: Central Board for Conscientious Objectors. 1946. No Price Given.). [REVIEW] Philosophy 22 (83):277-.score: 9.0
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  99. James J. Hoffman, Grantham Couch & Bruce T. Lamont (1998). The Effect of Firm Profit Versus Personal Economic Well Being on the Level of Ethical Responses Given by Managers. Journal of Business Ethics 17 (3):239-244.score: 9.0
    Members of organizations are continually making decisions that have important consequences for themselves and the firms for which they work. In some cases these decisions affect human well being and social welfare and thus have important ethical impacts for those affected by the decisions.This study examines if certain strategic situations (enhancement of firm profits versus personal economic well being) cause decision makers to act more or less ethically. A questionnaire consisting of two vignettes which depicted actual business situations was used (...)
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  100. Juan Rodríguez Larreta (1993). Can We Justify Our Beliefs Which Go Beyond the Given?: Steps Towards a Non-Naturalistic Proposal. Philosophical Issues 4:281-296.score: 9.0
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