Results for 'Ray Stace'

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  1.  3
    Towards teaching and research parity.Brett Lemass & Ray Stace - 2010 - Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education 14 (1):21-27.
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  2. Mysticism and philosophy.W. T. Stace - 1960 - New York: St. Martin's Press.
    Explores the nature and types of mystical experience and discusses the value of mysticism for humanity.
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  3.  14
    Math abilities in deaf and hard of hearing children: The role of language in developing number concepts.Stacee Santos & Sara Cordes - 2022 - Psychological Review 129 (1):199-211.
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  4.  65
    Religion and the modern mind.Walter Terence Stace - 1953 - Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
  5.  9
    A critical history of Greek philosophy.W. T. Stace - 1920 - London,: Macmillan & co..
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  6.  17
    A logic for default reasoning.Ray Reiter - 1980 - Artificial Intelligence 13 (1-2):81-137.
  7. Effect of Dodine Rates and Concentration on the Control of Pecan Scab1.Ray E. Worley & Silas A. Harmon - 1965 - In Karl W. Linsenmann (ed.), Proceedings. St. Louis, Lutheran Academy for Scholarship. pp. 87--222.
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  8.  72
    Foundations of Language: Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution.Ray Jackendoff - 2002 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Presenting a landmark in linguistics and cognitive science, Ray Jackendoff proposes a new holistic theory of the relation between the sounds, structure, and meaning of language and their relation to mind and brain. Foundations of Language exhibits the most fundamental new thinking in linguistics since Noam Chomsky's Aspects of the Theory of Syntax in 1965—yet is readable, stylish, and accessible to a wide readership. Along the way it provides new insights on the evolution of language, thought, and communication.
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  9.  21
    Ludwig Wittgenstein: the duty of genius.Ray Monk - 1990 - New York: Maxwell Macmillan International.
    Ludwig Wittgenstein is perhaps the greatest philosopher of the twentieth century, and certainly one of the most original in the entire Western tradition. Given the inaccessibility of his work, it is remarkable that he has inspired poems, paintings, films, musical compositions, titles of books -- and even novels. In his splendid biography, Ray Monk has made this very compelling human being come alive in a way that perfectly explains the fascination he has evoked. Wittgenstein's life was one of great moral (...)
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  10.  52
    Review of Filmer Stuart Cuckow Northrop: The Meeting of East and West: An Inquiry Concerning World Understanding[REVIEW]W. T. Stace - 1947 - Ethics 57 (2):137-141.
  11. Consciousness and the Computational Mind.RAY JACKENDOFF - 1987 - MIT Press.
    Examining one of the fundamental issues in cognitive psychology: How does our conscious experience come to be the way it is?
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  12.  15
    Foundations of Language: Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution.Ray Jackendoff - 2002 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Already hailed as a masterpiece, Foundations of Language offers a brilliant overhaul of the last thirty-five years of research in generative linguistics and related fields. "Few books really deserve the cliché 'this should be read by every researcher in the field'," writes Steven Pinker, author of The Language Instinct, "but Ray Jackendoff's Foundations of Language does." Foundations of Language offers a radically new understanding of how language, the brain, and perception intermesh. The book renews the promise of early generative linguistics: (...)
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  13. Belief about Probability.Ray Buchanan & Sinan Dogramaci - forthcoming - Journal of Philosophy.
    Credences are beliefs about evidential probabilities. We give the view an assessment-sensitive formulation, show how it evades the standard objections, and give several arguments in support.
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  14.  92
    Semantic interpretation in generative grammar.Ray Jackendoff - 1972 - Cambridge, Mass.,: MIT Press.
    A study of the contribution semantics makes to the syntactic patterns of English: an intepretive theory of grammar.
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  15. Mysticism and Philosophy.W. T. Stace - 1960 - Philosophy 37 (140):179-182.
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  16. Semantic Structures.Ray S. Jackendoff - 1990 - Cambridge: MIT Press.
    Semantic Structures is a large-scale study of conceptual structure and its lexical and syntactic expression in English that builds on the theory of Conceptual...
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  17. Semantics And Cognition.Ray S. Jackendoff - 1983 - Cambridge: MIT Press.
    This book emphasizes the role of semantics as a bridge between the theory of language and the theories of other cognitive capacities such as visual perception...
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  18.  2
    Threshold Concepts on the Edge.Julie A. Timmermans & Ray Land (eds.) - 2019 - Brill | Sense.
    _Threshold Concepts on the Edge_ explores new directions in threshold concept research and practice and is of relevance to teachers, learners, educational researchers and academic developers.
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  19.  36
    Sir Arthur Eddington and the Physical World.W. T. Stace - 1934 - Philosophy 9 (33):39 - 50.
    Sir arthur edington's brilliantly phrased article, “Physics and Philosophy,” which appeared in the January 1933 issue of Philosophy, seems to me to contain a number of things which are calculated to be provocative to the mere philosopher. And I propose in this article to discuss what appears to be one of the most important of these provocative things, namely, Sir Arthur's view of the status of the physical world.
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  20.  91
    The Age of Intelligent Machines.Ray Kurzweil (ed.) - 1990 - MIT Press.
    Discusses the scientific potential represented by intelligent machines and their social implications.
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  21.  3
    Correspondence.W. T. Stace - 1930 - Philosophy 5 (20):653-.
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  22.  26
    Science and the Explanation of Phenomena.W. T. Stace - 1935 - Philosophy 10 (40):409 - 427.
    My subject to-day falls within that branch of philosophy which is commonly called the philosophy of science. And it is intended, among other things, to illustrate, by the particular case of science, the suggestion which I made in my first lecture that all subjects, scientific, literary, moral, if you examine their first principles, will lead you back into philosophy.
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  23.  73
    Some Misinterpretations of Empiricism.W. T. Stace - 1958 - Mind 67 (268):465 - 484.
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  24.  15
    The Parmenidean Dogma.W. T. Stace - 1949 - Philosophy 24 (90):195 - 204.
    By the Parmenidean dogma I mean the proposition that “something cannot come put of nothing.” If you like to add the other half of the common statement it is that “something cannot become nothing.” But in this paper I shall be thinking mainly of the first proposition. I call it the Parmenidean dogma because, although it may have been implicit in much human thought before Parmenides, it was he, so far as I know, who first made it explicit in the (...)
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  25.  21
    The Philosophical Issues Involved in the War.W. T. Stace - 1941 - Philosophy 16 (63):242 - 256.
    We are familiar with the statement that the present world-conflagration is, or involves, a struggle between two different philosophies. Obviously the statement is very vague, and it is exceedingly difficult to say exactly what it means. But if it has any meaning at all, a professional philosopher ought to be supremely interested in it. Philosophers are too apt to sit in their ivory towers, weaving curious distinctions and debating strange intellectual puzzles, without any consideration of their implications for humanity. For (...)
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  26.  18
    The Place of Philosophy in Human Culture.W. T. Stace - 1937 - Philosophy 12 (47):302 - 316.
    I Think there is scarcely any academic subject regarding which there exists so much general misapprehension as philosophy. If I were to introduce myself to the readers of almost any newspaper as a professor of chemistry, or of classics, or of music, most of them would have a fairly good general idea of the nature of my subject. But if I were to introduce myself as a professor of philosophy, I suspect that many of them would vaguely associate my subject (...)
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  27. A joint communique: The psi ganzfeld controversy.Ray Hyman & C. Honorton - 1986 - Journal of Parapsychology 50:351-64.
  28. The ganzfeld psi experiment: A critical appraisal.Ray Hyman - 1985 - Journal of Parapsychology 49:3-49.
  29.  60
    An Evolutionary Sceptical Challenge to Scientific Realism.Christophe de Ray - 2022 - Erkenntnis 87 (3):969-989.
    Evolutionary scepticism holds that the evolutionary account of the origins of the human cognitive apparatus has sceptical implications for at least some of our beliefs. A common target of evolutionary scepticism is moral realism. Scientific realism, on the other hand, is much less frequently targeted, though the idea that evolutionary theory should make us distrustful of science is by no means absent from the literature. This line of thought has received unduly little attention. I propose to remedy this by advancing (...)
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  30.  11
    Comparison of convolution and matrix distributed memory systems for associative recall and recognition.Ray Pike - 1984 - Psychological Review 91 (3):281-294.
  31.  56
    Stimulus information as a determinant of reaction time.Ray Hyman - 1953 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 45 (3):188.
  32. Semantic Interpretation in Generative Grammar.Ray S. Jackendoff - 1975 - Foundations of Language 12 (4):561-582.
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  33.  52
    Nihil unbound: enlightenment and extinction.Ray Brassier - 2007 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Where much contemporary philosophy seeks to stave off the "threat" of nihilism by safeguarding the experience of meaning--characterized as the defining feature of human existence--from the Enlightenment logic of disenchantment, this book attempts to push nihilism to its ultimate conclusion by forging a link between revisionary naturalism in Anglo-American philosophy and anti-phenomenological realism in recent French philosophy. Contrary to an emerging "post-analytic" consensus which would bridge the analytic-continental divide by uniting Heidegger and Wittgenstein against the twin perils of scientism and (...)
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  34.  40
    A theory of properties.Ray Turner - 1987 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 52 (2):455-472.
  35. The faculty of language: what's special about it?Ray Jackendoff & Steven Pinker - 2005 - Cognition 95 (2):201-236.
    We examine the question of which aspects of language are uniquely human and uniquely linguistic in light of recent suggestions by Hauser, Chomsky, and Fitch that the only such aspect is syntactic recursion, the rest of language being either specific to humans but not to language (e.g. words and concepts) or not specific to humans (e.g. speech perception). We find the hypothesis problematic. It ignores the many aspects of grammar that are not recursive, such as phonology, morphology, case, agreement, and (...)
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  36. Pragmatic Particularism.Ray Buchanan & Henry Ian Schiller - 2021 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 105 (1):62-78.
    For the Intentionalist, utterance content is wholly determined by a speaker’s meaning-intentions; the sentence uttered serves merely to facilitate the audience’s recovering these intentions. We argue that Intentionalists ought to be Particularists, holding that the only “principles” of meaning recovery needed are those governing inferences to the best explanation; “principles” that are both defeasible and, in a sense to be elaborated, variable. We discuss some ways in which some theorists have erred in trying to tame the “wild west” of pragmatics (...)
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  37. A puzzle about meaning and communication.Ray Buchanan - 2010 - Noûs 44 (2):340-371.
  38.  55
    On inference in ecology and evolutionary biology: The problem of multiple causes.Ray Hilborn & Stephen C. Stearns - 1982 - Acta Biotheoretica 31 (3):145-164.
    If one investigates a process that has several causes but assumes that it has only one cause, one risks ruling out important causal factors. Three mechanisms account for this mistake: either the significance of the single cause under test is masked by noise contributed by the unsuspected and uncontrolled factors, or the process appears only when two or more causes interact, or the process appears when there are present any of a number of sufficient causes which are not mutally exclusive. (...)
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  39. Perceptual animacy in schematic motion events.A. Schlottmann & E. Ray - 2004 - In Robert Schwartz (ed.), Perception. Malden Ma: Blackwell. pp. 33--308.
     
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  40.  26
    Hypotheses are like people — some fit, some unfit.Ray H. Bixler - 1983 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (1):104-105.
  41.  15
    Nihil unbound: enlightenment and extinction.Ray Brassier - 2007 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Where much contemporary philosophy seeks to stave off the "threat" of nihilism by safeguarding the experience of meaning--characterized as the defining feature of human existence--from the Enlightenment logic of disenchantment, this book attempts to push nihilism to its ultimate conclusion by forging a link between revisionary naturalism in Anglo-American philosophy and anti-phenomenological realism in recent French philosophy. Contrary to an emerging "post-analytic" consensus which would bridge the analytic-continental divide by uniting Heidegger and Wittgenstein against the twin perils of scientism and (...)
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  42.  27
    Patterns in the Mind: Language and Human Nature.Ray Jackendoff - 1994 - New York: Basic Books.
    The science of linguistics is made accessible by the author of Consciousness and the Computational Mind, who demonstrates evidence for an innate Universal Grammar that provides the building blocks for all human languages.
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  43. Is Belief a Propositional Attitude?Ray Buchanan - 2012 - Philosophers' Imprint 12.
    According to proponents of the face-value account, a beliefreport of the form ‘S believes that p’ is true just in case the agentbelieves a proposition referred to by the that-clause. As againstthis familiar view, I argue that there are cases of true beliefreports of the relevant form in which there is no proposition that thethat-clause, or the speaker using the that-clause, can plausibly betaken as referring to. Moreover, I argue that given the distinctiveway in which the face-value theory of belief-reports (...)
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  44.  14
    Response latency models for signal detection.Ray Pike - 1973 - Psychological Review 80 (1):53-68.
  45. The concept of morals.W. T. Stace - 1937 - New York,: Macmillan.
    Excerpt from The Concept of Morals In morals finally we have the doctrine of ethical rela tivity.' It IS the same story over again. Morality ls doubtless human. It has not descended upon us out of the sky. It has grown out of human nature, and is relative to that nature. Nor could it have, apart from that nature, any meaning whatever. This we must, accept. But if this is interpreted to mean that whatever any social group thinks good is (...)
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  46.  6
    Values in health and social care: an introductory workbook.Ray Samuriwo - 2018 - Philadelphia, PA: Jessica Kingsley Publishers. Edited by Ben Hannigan, Stephen Pattison & A. Todd.
    Rich in case studies, practical photocopiable activities and downloadable resources, this is a beginner's guide to how values are formed and developed in varying professional contexts across health and social care services. It invites the reader to reflect on their own values, and on how these define the quality of the care they deliver.
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  47. http://www.academia.edu/25970251/What_is_it_that_agitates_you_my_dear_Victor_What_is_it_you_fear_SELF-_THOUGHT_@ ... Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 112:43-56. Rituparna Ray Chaudhuri (2016). Http://Www.Academia.Edu/25970251/What_is_it_that_agitates_you_my_dear_Victor_What _is_it_you_fear_SELF-THOUGHT.Rituparna Ray Chaudhuri - 2016
    “What is it that agitates you, my dear Victor? What is it you fear?” -/- “The monster now becomes more vengeful. He murders Victor’s friend Henry Clerval and his wife Elizabeth on the night of her wedding to Victor, and Victor sets out in pursuit of the friend across the icy Artic regions. The monster is always ahead of him, leaving tell tale marks behind and tantalizing his creator. Victor meets with his death in the pursuit of the monster he (...)
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  48. Speculative Realism.Ray Brassier, Iain Hamilton Grant, Graham Harman & Quentin Meillassoux - 2007 - Collapse:306-449.
  49.  37
    On beyond Zebra: The relation of linguistic and visual information.Ray Jackendoff - 1987 - Cognition 26 (2):89-114.
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  50. The Temptations of Phenomenology: Wittgenstein, the Synthetic a Priori and the ‘Analytic a Posteriori’.Ray Monk - 2014 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 22 (3):312-340.
    Wittgenstein’s use of the word ‘phenomenology’ to describe his own work in Philosophical Remarks and The Big Typescript has occasioned much puzzlement and confusion. This paper seeks to shed light on what Wittgenstein meant by the word through a close analysis of key passages in those two works. I argue against both the view of Nicholas Gier that Wittgenstein held ‘grammatical’ phenomenological remarks to be synthetic a priori and that expressed by Moritz Schlick that Wittgenstein held grammar to be tautological. (...)
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