Results for 'Love-Lyric'

998 found
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  1.  3
    The medieval German lovelyric: a ritual?Mark Chinca - 1995 - Paragraph 18 (2):112-132.
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  2.  10
    Manuscripts Of English Courtly Love Lyrics In The Later Middle Ages. [REVIEW]G. A. - 1989 - Speculum 64 (1):125-127.
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  3.  11
    An Anthology of Classical Urdu Love Lyrics. Text and Translations.Annemarie Schimmel, D. J. Matthews & C. Shackle - 1973 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 93 (4):569.
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  4.  28
    Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival, trans. Cyril Edwards. With Titurel and the Love-Lyrics, and with an essay on the Munich Parzival illustrations by Julia Walworth.(Arthurian Studies, 56.) Woodbridge, Eng., and Rochester, NY: Boydell and Brewer, 2004. Pp. xxxiii, 331; black-and-white figures and 1 genealogical table. $85. [REVIEW]Stephen Mark Carey - 2006 - Speculum 81 (1):291-292.
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  5.  17
    Andalusian Lyrical Poetry and Old Spanish Love Songs: The Muwashshaḥ and Its KharjaAndalusian Lyrical Poetry and Old Spanish Love Songs: The Muwashshah and Its Kharja.David Wulstan & Linda Fish Compton - 1980 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 100 (3):340.
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  6.  15
    O Lyric Love.A. Sidgwick - 1896 - The Classical Review 10 (02):125-.
  7.  1
    Lyrics for a Love Song: Every Time.Stavros Stavrou & Edmund Keeley - 2018 - Arion 26 (2):15.
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  8.  14
    Love Negative Lyrics: Some Shifts in Stature and Alterations in Song.Peter Hesbacher, K. Peter Etzkorn, R. Serge Denisoff, David G. Berger & Bruce Anderson - 1981 - Communications 7 (1):3-20.
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  9.  10
    The first woman philosopher: love to the lyric wisdom.Fernando Santoro - 2019 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 28:1-26.
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  10.  3
    O Lyric Love[REVIEW]A. Sidgwick - 1896 - The Classical Review 10 (2):125-125.
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  11.  13
    Shards of Love: Exile and the Origins of the Lyric.Julie Scott Meisami, María Rosa Menocal & Maria Rosa Menocal - 1996 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 116 (2):313.
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  12. Shards of Love: Exile and the Origins of the Lyric[REVIEW]James O'donnell - 1996 - The Medieval Review 10.
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  13.  25
    Lyrical Philosophy, or How to Sing with Mind.Mikhail Epstein - 2014 - Common Knowledge 20 (2):204-213.
    The article suggests that, contrary to widespread opinions and standard encyclopedic definitions, philosophy is a domain not only of thoughts and ideas but also of feelings. Philosophy as love for wisdom includes emotions in both of its components. Among the many various feelings that we experience, there is a discrete group that, thanks to their involvement with universals, may be regarded as philosophical. Wonder, grief, compassion, tenderness, hope, despair, and delight are philosophical if they are experienced on behalf of (...)
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  14.  61
    Epico-Lyrical Legends of the Punjab and Sikh Reformism in the 1920s.Denis Matringe & John Fletcher - 1998 - Diogenes 46 (181):57-75.
    Like the other great cultural areas of the Indian subcontinent, the Punjab is endowed with a living heritage of oral tradition: all kinds of songs and tales are hawked by itinerant bards, and after the day's work is done, people particularly like listening to them reciting legends of love, the most moving passages of which they sing to their own accompaniment on various traditional instruments. The stories most popular with village audiences are local epico-lyrical legends; these function like myths (...)
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  15. María Rosa Menocal, Shards of Love: Exile and the Origins of the Lyric. Durham, NC, and London: Duke University Press, 1994. Pp. xv, 295. $49.95 (cloth); $18.95 (paper). [REVIEW]Diana de Armas Wilson - 1996 - Speculum 71 (4):980-983.
     
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  16.  13
    Loving Immigrants in America: An Experiential Philosophy of Personal Interaction.Daniel Campos - 2017 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    This book is a philosophical account of a Central American immigrant's personal experience in the United States. Narrative and reflective at once, it is written from the standpoint of American philosophy enriched by fiction, poetry, song lyrics and memoirs from the Americas. It recommends an ethic of love—resilient loving—for the interpersonal relations and day-to-day interactions between immigrants and hosts in the United States today.
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  17. Love: A Phenomenological Inquiry into the Self-Other Relation in Sartre and Beauvoir.Noelle de la Cruz - 2007 - Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy (Philippine e-journal) 36 (2).
    The author explores the views of two famous philosophers and one-time lovers about the self-other relation, particularly in the context of romantic love. In Being and nothingness , Jean-Paul Sartre famously wrote that any mode of relation between two subjectivities is doomed to fail. One of these modes is love, which is the desire to possess another freedom without altering its fundamental characteristic as a freedom. In contrast to Sartre, meanwhile, Simone de Beauvoir hints at the possibility of (...)
     
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  18.  19
    Introduction: What Is Lyric Philosophy?Warren Heiti - 2015 - Philosophy and Literature 39 (1):188-201.
    What is lyric philosophy? The clearest response to that question is the book-length investigation by Canadian philosopher and poet Jan Zwicky. If philosophy can be defined as thinking in love with clarity, then lyric philosophy might be roughly understood as such thinking in which clarity assumes the form of resonance. Among her paradigmatic lyric philosophers, Zwicky includes (inter alia) the aphorists Herakleitos and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Lyric is distinguished by its deep structure, which is polydimensional and (...)
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  19.  54
    The Transition from the Late Latin Lyric to the Medieval Love Poem. By Stephen Gaselee. Pp. 34. Cambridge: Bowes and Bowes, 1931. Paper, 2s. 6d. net. [REVIEW]F. J. E. Raby - 1932 - The Classical Review 46 (3):142-143.
  20. On Love and Poetry—Or, Where Philosophers Fear to Tread.Jeremy Fernando - 2011 - Continent 1 (1):27-32.
    continent. 1.1 (2011): 27-32. “My”—what does this word designate? Not what belongs to me, but what I belong to,what contains my whole being, which is mine insofar as I belong to it. Søren Kierkegaard. The Seducer’s Diary . I can’t sleep till I devour you / And I’ll love you, if you let me… Marilyn Manson “Devour” The role of poetry in the relationalities between people has a long history—from epic poetry recounting tales of yore; to emotive lyric (...)
     
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  21.  6
    Love Poetry, Women’s Bonding and Feminist Consciousness: The Complex Interaction between Edna St Vincent Millay and Adrienne Rich.Artemis Michailidou - 2006 - European Journal of Women's Studies 13 (1):39-57.
    This article examines Adrienne Rich’s Twenty-One Love Poems in relation to Edna St Vincent Millay’s Fatal Interview. Discussing notions such as lyric voice and innovation within traditional genres, the author analyses how Millay’s attempts to challenge commonplace definitions of female sexuality impacted on Rich’s articulation of sexual desire. The intertextual dialogue between the above works reveals that Millay and Rich produced two remarkably similar erotic narratives, which resist masculinist conceptions of literary history and comment on the self-referentiality of (...)
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  22.  3
    Alkibiades' Love: Essays in Philosophy.Jan Zwicky - 2015 - Mcgill-Queen's University Press.
    Alkibiades, a central character in Plato's Symposium, claims that philosophy touches him to the quick. When Socrates speaks, he's often moved to tears and realizes he must change his life. In Alkibiades' Love, Jan Zwicky demonstrates that this image of philosophy is not anachronistic, but remains the living heart of the discipline. Philosophy can indeed matter to our lives, but for it to do so, we must reconceive the methods that, since the Enlightenment, have dominated its self-image in the (...)
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  23.  35
    Petrarchan Love and the Pleasures of Frustration.Aldo D. Scaglione - 1997 - Journal of the History of Ideas 58 (4):557-572.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Petrarchan Love and the Pleasures of FrustrationAldo Scaglione—Think you, if Laura had been Petrarch’s wife, He would have written sonnets all his life?Lord Byron, Don Juan, canto III, st. 7As Byron ironically intimated, there is a behavioral connection between much of the literature of love and sexual frustration. What is known as medieval “courtly love” was an epiphany of idealized love. Whether self-imposed or forced (...)
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  24.  19
    The 'Love Duet' In Aristophanes' Ecclesiazusae.S. Douglas Olson - 1988 - Classical Quarterly 38 (02):328-.
    Over sixty years ago, Walter Headlam identified Ecclesiazusae 960–76 as a paraclausithyron, or song sung by an excluded lover from the street to his beloved within. In 1958, however, C. M. Bowra suggested that the whole of Eccl. 952–75 was actually the sole surviving example of a previously unrecognized genre of Greek lyric poetry, the informal love duet. The thesis has been widely accepted, and is adopted by Rossi, Henderson and Silk, as well as by the Oxford editor, (...)
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  25.  14
    The 'Love Duet' In Aristophanes' Ecclesiazusae.S. Douglas Olson - 1988 - Classical Quarterly 38 (2):328-330.
    Over sixty years ago, Walter Headlam identified Ecclesiazusae 960–76 as a paraclausithyron, or song sung by an excluded lover from the street to his beloved within. In 1958, however, C. M. Bowra suggested that the whole of Eccl. 952–75 was actually the sole surviving example of a previously unrecognized genre of Greek lyric poetry, the informal love duet. The thesis has been widely accepted, and is adopted by Rossi, Henderson and Silk, as well as by the Oxford editor, (...)
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  26.  14
    A Love Born of Hate.Steve Wright - 2000 - Theory, Culture and Society 17 (3):117-135.
    Perhaps the most distinctive aspect of Italian-language rap in the 1990s has been the close association of some popular performers with the nation's radical Left. Through a critical reading of the imagery, lyrics and other writings of two of Italy's best known rap bands, this essay seeks to explore the tensions between cultural labour and political commitment in the social centres movement.
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  27.  11
    Tokens of Love.Yaakov A. Mascetti - 2021 - Common Knowledge 27 (1):1-39.
    Contextualist scholars working on the rhetoric of corporeal presence in seventeenth-century English religious lyrics have naturally focused their attention on sacramental discourse of the Reformation era. As part of the Common Knowledge symposium on the future of contextualism, this full-length monograph, serialized in installments, argues that the contextualist focus on a single and time-limited “epistemic field” has resulted in a less than adequately ramified understanding of the poetry of John Donne, George Herbert, Aemilia Lanyer, and John Milton. What the contextualist (...)
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  28.  38
    Discourse of Self-Empowerment in Ariana Grande’s ‘thank u, next’ Album Lyrics: A Critical Discourse Analysis.Ekkarat Ruanglertsilp - 2022 - Journal for Cultural Research 26 (2):200-220.
    Due to the increasing concern about gender equity in the U.S., song lyrics with political activism are receiving more attention. As reflected through lyrics and the artist’s tumultuous life events, ‘thank u, next,’ Ariana Grande’s fifth album, has been reviewed by media outlets, such as Billboard as mirroring Grande’s public persona of self-empowerment. iTunes (2019) describes the album as Grande’s embraced position of – ‘complex, independent, tenacious and flawed.’ This study investigates how these claims came about by adopting Fairclough’s Critical (...)
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  29.  12
    Sufi Aesthetics: Beauty, Love, and the Human Form in the Writings of Ibn 'Arabi and 'Iraqi.Cyrus Ali Zargar - 2011 - University of South Carolina Press.
    Perception according to Ibn 'Arabi: God in forms -- Perception according to 'Iraqi: witnessing and divine self-love -- Beauty according to Ibn 'Arabi and 'Iraqi: that which causes love -- Ibn 'Arabi and human beauty: the school of passionate love -- 'Iraqi and the tradition of love, witnessing, and shahidbazi -- The amorous lyric as mystical language: union of the sacred and profane.
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  30.  9
    Human Love[REVIEW]A. S. S. - 1968 - Review of Metaphysics 22 (2):378-378.
    In a lyrical style befitting the nature of his subject-matter, Harper focuses on two kinds of love--man's love for the human and natural, and man's love for God-and attempts to show that both loves, eros and agape, are required for a love which satisfies the deepest human longing. This position is not so much arrived at as it is unfolded in a book which demands to be read many times. Harper turns primarily to the Song of (...)
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  31.  22
    Narrative and Drama in the Lyric: Robert Frost's Strategic Withdrawal.Victor E. Vogt - 1979 - Critical Inquiry 5 (3):529-551.
    Part of Frost's continuing appeal to the "popular imagination" stems from his pronunciamentos on diverse topics: the metaphoric "pleasure of ulteriority," "the sound of sense," poems beginning in wisdom and ending in delight—"a momentary stay against confusion." These phrases along with favorite one-liners have made their way into our lexicon as memorable formulations both of Frost's ars poetica and of quotidian reality. Even schoolboys allegedly know the poet in these or similar terms. And why not? Yet the supposed "commonness" of (...)
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  32.  13
    Sublime are the Intricate Bonds of Love ….Yana L. Zhemoitelite - 2015 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 53 (1):96-110.
    The essay offers lyrical and philosophical-aesthetic reflections on the power and unpredictability of the feeling of love, as celebrated in different times in the “Song of Songs,” in Russian philosopher Vladimir Soloviev's sophiology, and in the poetic work of Oscar Wilde and Russian religious poet Nikolai Klyuev.
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  33.  57
    The Dramatic Monologue and Related Lyric Forms.Ralph W. Rader - 1976 - Critical Inquiry 3 (1):131-151.
    The most distinctive and highly valued poems of the modern era offer an image of a dramatized "I" acting in a concrete setting. The variety and importance of the poems which fall under this description are suggested simply by the mention of such names as "Elegy Written in a Country Courtyard," "Tintern Abbey," "Ode to a Nightingale," "Ulysses," "My Last Duchess," "Dover Beach," "The Windhover," "The Darkling Thrush," "Sailing to Byzantium," "Leda and the Swan," "The Love Song of J. (...)
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  34.  21
    This Girl I Lost Touch With; Monostich in Praise of Four Missed Foul Shots in a Row, Ending with a Line by Shaquille O'Neal; Lost Love Lounge.Hannah Baker Saltmarsh - 2019 - Feminist Studies 45 (1):94-99.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:94 Feminist Studies 45, no. 1. © 2019 by Hannah Baker Saltmarsh Hannah Baker Saltmarsh This Girl I Lost Touch With This girl, who was afraid to enter a room— a girl born in the woods, on moss, whose family dreamt under quilts, who wore dresses that matched anything fabric in the house, even the dresses without loneliness— I held her hand in the corridor-dark until the speaking-in-tongues at (...)
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  35.  7
    Works of Love[REVIEW]Peter A. Kwasniewski - 1996 - Review of Metaphysics 50 (2):408-409.
    Kierkegaard wrote much on the subject of love, but few of his treatments are as eloquent and penetrating as this series of "disputations" built around texts of sacred scripture. His lucid analysis of the parallelism and divergency of worldly and Christian love make this book a great classic in the subject and a fine place to begin reading Kierkegaard if one has not had the pleasure of his acquaintance. As with other works of the author, one finds here (...)
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  36. Truth in history.Walter D. Love - 1962 - In Thomas J. J. Altizer (ed.), Truth, myth, and symbol. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.
     
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  37.  6
    No endings, only beginnings: a doctor's notes on living, loving, and learning who you are.Bernie S. Siegel - 2020 - Carlsbad, California: Hay House. Edited by Cynthia Hurn.
    "Make your own Bible. Select and collect all the words and sentences that in all your readings have been to you like the blast of a trumpet." -Ralph Waldo Emerson We have all come across a sentence in a book or a line of poetry that seems to jump off the page as if it has been patiently waiting for you to discover it in this precise instant. At times, the lyrics of a song or words spoken in a play (...)
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  38.  16
    Evolutionary developmental biology: philosophical issues.Alan Love - 2015 - In Thomas Heams, Philippe Huneman, Guillaume Lecointre & Marc Silberstein (eds.), Handbook of Evolutionary Thinking in the Sciences. Springer. pp. 265-283.
    Evolutionary developmental biology (Evo-devo) is a loose conglomeration of research programs in the life sciences with two main axes: (a) the evolution of development, or inquiry into the pattern and processes of how ontogeny varies and changes over time; and, (b) the developmental basis of evolution, or inquiry into the causal impact of ontogenetic processes on evolutionary trajectories—both in terms of constraint and facilitation. Philosophical issues are found along both axes surrounding concepts such as evolvability, novelty, and modularity. The developmental (...)
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  39. Explaining evolutionary innovations and novelties: Criteria of explanatory adequacy and epistemological prerequisites.Alan C. Love - 2008 - Philosophy of Science 75 (5):874-886.
    It is a common complaint that antireductionist arguments are primarily negative. Here I describe an alternative nonreductionist epistemology based on considerations taken from multidisciplinary research in biology. The core of this framework consists in seeing investigation as coordinated around sets of problems (problem agendas) that have associated criteria of explanatory adequacy. These ideas are developed in a case study, the explanation of evolutionary innovations and novelties, which demonstrates the applicability and fruitfulness of this nonreductionist epistemological perspective. This account also bears (...)
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  40. Functional homology and homology of function: Biological concepts and philosophical consequences.Alan C. Love - 2007 - Biology and Philosophy 22 (5):691-708.
    “Functional homology” appears regularly in different areas of biological research and yet it is apparently a contradiction in terms—homology concerns identity of structure regardless of form and function. I argue that despite this conceptual tension there is a legitimate conception of ‘homology of function’, which can be recovered by utilizing a distinction from pre-Darwinian physiology (use versus activity) to identify an appropriate meaning of ‘function’. This account is directly applicable to molecular developmental biology and shares a connection to the theme (...)
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  41.  35
    SUSTAIN: A Network Model of Category Learning.Bradley C. Love, Douglas L. Medin & Todd M. Gureckis - 2004 - Psychological Review 111 (2):309-332.
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  42. Evolutionary morphology, innovation, and the synthesis of evolutionary and developmental biology.Alan C. Love - 2003 - Biology and Philosophy 18 (2):309-345.
    One foundational question in contemporarybiology is how to `rejoin evolution anddevelopment. The emerging research program(evolutionary developmental biology or`evo-devo) requires a meshing of disciplines,concepts, and explanations that have beendeveloped largely in independence over the pastcentury. In the attempt to comprehend thepresent separation between evolution anddevelopment much attention has been paid to thesplit between genetics and embryology in theearly part of the 20th century with itscodification in the exclusion of embryologyfrom the Modern Synthesis. This encourages acharacterization of evolutionary developmentalbiology as the marriage (...)
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  43.  34
    Love and Rage” in the Classroom: Planting the Seeds of Community Empowerment.Kurt Love - 2012 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 48 (1):52-75.
    Although no one unified anarchist theory exists, educational approaches can be taken to support the full liberation of the self and the construction of an interconnected community that strives to rid itself of eco-sociocultural oppressions. An anarchist pedagogical approach could be one that is rooted in a love/rage unit of analysis occurring along a spectrum of various types of actions and contributions within a community. Anarchism as a violent destruction of the state is a stereotypical view that has perhaps (...)
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  44.  44
    Dimensions of integration in interdisciplinary explanations of the origin of evolutionary novelty.Alan C. Love & Gary L. Lugar - 2013 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 44 (4):537-550.
    Many philosophers of biology have embraced a version of pluralism in response to the failure of theory reduction but overlook how concepts, methods, and explanatory resources are in fact coordinated, such as in interdisciplinary research where the aim is to integrate different strands into an articulated whole. This is observable for the origin of evolutionary novelty—a complex problem that requires a synthesis of intellectual resources from different fields to arrive at robust answers to multiple allied questions. It is an apt (...)
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  45.  98
    Typology Reconfigured: From the Metaphysics of Essentialism to the Epistemology of Representation.Alan C. Love - 2008 - Acta Biotheoretica 57 (1-2):51-75.
    The goal of this paper is to encourage a reconfiguration of the discussion about typology in biology away from the metaphysics of essentialism and toward the epistemology of classifying natural phenomena for the purposes of empirical inquiry. First, I briefly review arguments concerning ‘typological thinking’, essentialism, species, and natural kinds, highlighting their predominantly metaphysical nature. Second, I use a distinction between the aims, strategies, and tactics of science to suggest how a shift from metaphysics to epistemology might be accomplished. Typological (...)
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  46. Theory is as Theory Does: Scientific Practice and Theory Structure in Biology.Alan C. Love - 2013 - Biological Theory 7 (4):325-337, 430.
    Using the context of controversies surrounding evolutionary developmental biology (EvoDevo) and the possibility of an Extended Evolutionary Synthesis, I provide an account of theory structure as idealized theory presentations that are always incomplete (partial) and shaped by their conceptual content (material rather than formal organization). These two characteristics are salient because the goals that organize and regulate scientific practice, including the activity of using a theory, are heterogeneous. This means that the same theory can be structured differently, in part because (...)
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  47.  31
    Conceptual Change in Biology: Scientific and Philosophical Perspectives on Evolution and Development.Alan C. Love (ed.) - 2015 - Berlin: Springer Verlag, Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science.
    This volume explores questions about conceptual change from both scientific and philosophical viewpoints by analyzing the recent history of evolutionary developmental biology. It features revised papers that originated from the workshop "Conceptual Change in Biological Science: Evolutionary Developmental Biology, 1981-2011" held at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin in July 2010. The Preface has been written by Ron Amundson. In these papers, philosophers and biologists compare and contrast key concepts in evolutionary developmental biology and their (...)
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  48. Evolvability, dispositions, and intrinsicality.Alan C. Love - 2003 - Philosophy of Science 70 (5):1015-1027.
    In this paper I examine a dispositional property that has been receiving increased attention in biology, evolvability. First, I identify three compatible but distinct investigative approaches, distinguish two interpretations of evolvability, and treat the difference between dispositions of individuals versus populations. Second, I explore the relevance of philosophical distinctions about dispositions for evolvability, isolating the assumption that dispositions are intrinsically located. I conclude that some instances of evolvability cannot be understood as purely intrinsic to populations and suggest alternative strategies for (...)
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  49.  37
    Interdisciplinary lessons for the teaching of biology from the practice of Evo-devo.Alan C. Love - 2013 - Science & Education 22 (2):255–278.
    Evolutionary developmental biology (Evo-devo) is a vibrant area of contemporary life science that should be (and is) increasingly incorporated into teaching curricula. Although the inclusion of this content is important for biological pedagogy at multiple levels of instruction, there are also philosophical lessons that can be drawn from the scientific practices found in Evo-devo. One feature of particular significance is the interdisciplinary nature of Evo-devo investigations and their resulting explanations. Instead of a single disciplinary approach being the most explanatory or (...)
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  50. The Idealization of Causation in Mechanistic Explanation.Alan C. Love & Marco J. Nathan - 2015 - Philosophy of Science 82 (5):761-774.
    Causal relations among components and activities are intentionally misrepresented in mechanistic explanations found routinely across the life sciences. Since several mechanists explicitly advocate accurately representing factors that make a difference to the outcome, these idealizations conflict with the stated rationale for mechanistic explanation. We argue that these idealizations signal an overlooked feature of reasoning in molecular and cell biology—mechanistic explanations do not occur in isolation—and suggest that explanatory practices within the mechanistic tradition share commonalities with model-based approaches prevalent in population (...)
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