Search results for 'S. Peri' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. C. E. Tidhar & S. Peri (1988). Deceitful Behaviour in Situation Comedy: Effects on Children's Perception of Social Reality. Journal of Moral Education 16 (2):61-76.score: 240.0
    Abstract Research findings in the last decade indicated that although situation comedies were most popular with children, most children did not fully understand the moral of stories or the messages conveyed. Psychologists expressed concern that an adequate comprehension of messages in this genre may require complex intellectual operations which young viewers were not capable of. A broadcast presenting deceitful behaviour in a situation comedy, tested among 314 9?12 year old children in Israel, had no immediate effect on the perception of (...)
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  2. S. Peri (1977). The Problem of Universals and its Perceptual Correlates. Synthese 35 (4):447 - 456.score: 120.0
    This paper deals with the philosophical questions which gave rise to the traditional realist theories of universals. The main thesis is that these same questions may also be interpreted as scientific-empirical questions. The study of these problems has begun only very recently and the relevance of the results for the traditional problem of intensional entities has only been remarked by few workers aware of the philosophical problem. The approach adopted here is that of regarding man as a perceptual system situated (...)
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  3. Kung & Joan Rajala) (1986). The Arguments 'From the Sciences' in Aristotle's Peri Ideon (Review). Journal of the History of Philosophy 24 (2):263-264.score: 45.0
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  4. Ivo Thomas (1968). Book Review:Apuleian Logic, the Nature, Sources, and Influence of Apuleius's Peri Hermeneias Mark W. Sullivan. [REVIEW] Philosophy of Science 35 (2):197-.score: 45.0
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  5. R. W. Jordan (1985). Daniel H. Frank: The Arguments 'From the Sciences' in Aristotle's Peri Ideon. (American University Series.) Pp. 150. New York, Berne, Frankfurt Am Main, Nancy: Peter Lang, 1984. Paper, 29 Sw. Frs. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 35 (02):402-403.score: 45.0
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  6. Lawrence J. Jost (1990). The Arguments “From the Sciences” in Aristotle's Peri Ideon. Ancient Philosophy 10 (2):312-316.score: 45.0
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  7. Lee C. Rice (1968). "Apuleian Logic: The Nature, Sources, and Influence of Apuleius's 'Peri Hermeneias,'" by M. W. Sullivan. The Modern Schoolman 45 (4):355-356.score: 45.0
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  8. D. C. K. Curry (1992). Owen's Proof in the Peri Ideôn and the Indeterminacy of Sensibles in Plato. Ancient Philosophy 12 (2):351-373.score: 36.0
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  9. Leofranc Holford-Strevens (2005). Fronto's Opuscula A. Peri: M. Cornelii Frontonis Opuscula I: Arion—De Feriis Alsiensibus. Edizione Critica E Commento. Pp. Xxviii + 172. Cassino: Università Degli Studi di Cassino, 2004. Paper. ISBN: 88-8317-022-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 55 (02):554-.score: 36.0
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  10. Gail Fine (1993). On Ideas: Aristotle's Criticism of Plato's Theory of Forms. Oxford University Press.score: 21.0
    The Peri ide^on (On Ideas) is the only work in which Aristotle systematically sets out and criticizes arguments for the existence of Platonic forms. Gail Fine presents the first full-length treatment in English of this important but neglected work. She asks how, and how well, Aristotle understands Plato's theory of forms, and why and with what justification he favors an alternative metaphysical scheme. She examines the significance of the Peri ide^on for some central questions about Plato's theory of (...)
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  11. John Magee (2010). On the Composition and Sources of Boethius Second Peri Hermeneias Commentary. Vivarium 48 (1-2):7-54.score: 21.0
    The paper is in three parts, prefaced by general remarks concerning Boethius' logical translations and commentaries: the text of the Peri Hermeneias as known to and commented on by Boethius (and Ammonius); the organizational principles behind Boethius' second commentary on the Peri Hermeneias ; its source(s). One of the main purposes of the last section is to demonstrate that the Peri Hermeneias commentaries of Boethius and Ammonius are, although part of a common tradition, quite independent of one (...)
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  12. Taneli Kukkonen (2010). Al-Ghazai on the Signification of Names. Vivarium 48 (1-2):55-74.score: 15.0
    Al-Ghazālī's most detailed explanation of how signification works occurs in his treatise on The Beautiful Names of God. Al-Ghazālī builds squarely on the commentary tradition on Aristotle's Peri hermeneias : words signify things by means of concepts and correspondingly, existence is laid out on three levels, linguistic, conceptual, and particular (i.e. extramental). This framework allows al-Ghazālī to put forward what is essentially an Aristotelian reading of what happens when a name successfully picks out a being: when a quiddity is (...)
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  13. Peter King (1996). From Intellectus Verus/Falsus to the Dictum Propositionis: The Semantics of Peter Abelard and His Circle. Vivarium 34 (1):15-40.score: 15.0
    In his commentary on Aristotle’s Peri hermeneias,1 Abelard distinguishes the form of an expression2 (oratio) from what it says, that is, its content. The content of an expression is its understanding (intellectus). This distinction is surely the most well-known and central idea in Abelard’s commentary. It provides him with the opportunity to distinguish statements (enuntiationes) from other kinds of expressions without implying a diference in their content, since the ability of a statement to signify something true or false (verum (...)
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  14. Edward Buckner (2013). On Aristotle, On Interpretation, 1–3 by Boethius, And: On Aristotle, On Interpretation, 4–6 by Boethius (Review). Journal of the History of Philosophy 51 (2):311-312.score: 15.0
    Boethius, “the first of the scholastics,” had an influence on the Latin Middle Ages that is difficult to overestimate. His translations of and commentaries on Aristotle’s philosophical and logical works were the main conduit between the Greek classical culture and the early Middle Ages. His two commentaries on Aristotle’s Peri Hermenias (“On Interpretation”), the longer of which is translated in the present two volumes (the first covering Books 1–3 and the second Books 4–6), were particularly influential. Unfortunately, those seeking (...)
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  15. Thomas Sheehan, Hermeneia and Apophansis: The Early Heidegger on Aristotle.score: 12.0
    Aristotle's treatment of logos apophantikos is found within the treatise that bears the title Peri Hermeneias, On Hermeneia. And it was to this treatise -- or, more accurately, to the first four sections of it -- that the early Heidegger turned again and again in his courses during the 1920s in an effort to retrieve from this phenomenon a hidden meaning.
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  16. Raul Corazzon, Peripatetic Logic: Eudemus of Rhodes and Theophrastus of Eresus.score: 12.0
    “Aristotle's successor as director of the Lyceum was Theophrastus, his friend and disciple; Eudemus, another of the Stagirite's important disciples should also be mentioned. Other philosophers belonging to the Peripatetic school were: Aristoxenus, Dikaiarchos, Phanias, Straton, Duris, Chamaeleon, Lycon, Hieronymus, Ariston, Critolaus, Phormio, Sotion, Hermippus, Satyrus and others. Straton even succeeded Theophrastus as director of the Lyceum but his name and those of the other Peripatetics of Aristotle's old school should not be considered in a history of logic as they (...)
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  17. W. H. S. Jones (1979). Philosophy and Medicine in Ancient Greece: With an Edition of Peri Archaiēs Iētrikēs. Arno Press.score: 12.0
    SECTION I THE PRE-HIPPOCRATICS AND PLATO So far as is known Ionian philosophy was not connected with medicine in any way. It was, in fact, a thing apart, ...
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