Results for 'Schupbach, Jonah'

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  1.  38
    On Schupbach and Sprenger’s Measures of Explanatory Power.Michael P. Cohen - 2015 - Philosophy of Science 82 (1):97-109.
    Jonah N. Schupbach and Jan Sprenger have proposed conditions of adequacy for measures of explanatory power. They derive and defend a measure of explanatory power satisfying their conditions of adequacy. This article furthers the development of their measure. The requirement that the measure be multidimensional analytic is avoided. Several proofs are simplified, and gaps in proofs are filled.
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  2. Paley’s Argument Revisited: Reply to Schupbach.Graham Oppy - 2008 - Philosophia Christi 10 (2):443-450.
    This paper is a reply to Jonah Schupbach's critique of a previous paper of mine on Paley's argument for design. (Bibliographical details for earlier publications are available in the paper.).
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  3.  52
    On Three Measures of Explanatory Power with Axiomatic Representations.Michael P. Cohen - 2016 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 67 (4):1077-1089.
    Jonah N. Schupbach and Jan Sprenger and Vincenzo Crupi and Katya Tentori have recently proposed measures of explanatory power and have shown that they are characterized by certain arguably desirable conditions or axioms. I further examine the properties of these two measures, and a third measure considered by I. J. Good and Timothy McGrew . This third measure also has an axiomatic representation. I consider a simple coin-tossing example in which only the Crupi–Tentori measure does not perform well. The (...)
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  4.  20
    First-Order Logic: A Concise Introduction.John Heil - 2021 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    "In his introduction to this most welcome republication (and second edition) of his logic text, Heil clarifies his aim in writing and revising this book: 'I believe that anyone unfamiliar with the subject who set out to learn formal logic could do so relying solely on [this] book. That, in any case, is what I set out to create in writing An Introduction to First-Order Logic.' Heil has certainly accomplished this with perhaps the most explanatorily thorough and pedagogically rich text (...)
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  5.  87
    Paraphrase, categories, and ontology.Jonah Goldwater - 2023 - Analytic Philosophy 64 (1):39-56.
    Analytic Philosophy, EarlyView. The method of paraphrasing away apparent ontological commitments is a familiar tool for trimming one's ontology. Even so, I argue that aiming to avoid commitment via paraphrase is unjustified. The reason is the standard motivations for paraphrase rest on implicit yet faulty principles regarding ontological categories and categorization- or so I argue. These results also provide indirect support for a permissivist approach to ontology.
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  6.  33
    Musical grouping as prosodic implementation.Jonah Katz - 2023 - Linguistics and Philosophy 46 (4):959-988.
    This paper reviews evidence concerning the nature of grouping in music and language and their interactions with other linguistic and musical systems. I present brief typological surveys of the relationship between constituency and acoustic parameters in language and music, drawing from a wide variety of languages and musical genres. The two domains both involve correspondence between auditory discontinuities and group boundaries, reflecting the Gestalt principles of proximity and similarity, as well as a nested, hierarchical organization of constituents. Typically, computational-level theories (...)
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  7.  42
    Does Presentation Order Impact Choice After Delay?Jonah Berger - 2016 - Topics in Cognitive Science 8 (3):670-684.
    Options are often presented incidentally in a sequence, but does serial position impact choice after delay, and if so, how? We address this question in a consequential real-world choice domain. Using 25 years of citation data, and a unique identification strategy, we examine the relationship between article order and citation count. Results indicate that mere serial position affects the prominence that research achieves: Earlier-listed articles receive more citations. Furthermore, our identification strategy allows us to cast doubt on alternative explanations and (...)
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  8.  10
    Vice into Virtue? Progressive Politics and Welfare Reform in Continental Europe.Jonah D. Levy - 1999 - Politics and Society 27 (2):239-273.
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  9.  80
    Consciousness and false HOTs.Jonah Wilberg - 2010 - Philosophical Psychology 23 (5):617-638.
    In this paper I aim to defend David Rosenthal's higher-order thought theory of consciousness against a prominent objection. The central claim of HOT theory is that a mental state is conscious only if one has the HOT that one is in that state. In broad outline, the objection is that HOT theory is unable to account for cases where the relevant HOTs are false. I consider two variants of the objection, corresponding to two kinds of false HOT: those that merely (...)
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  10. Ryle, the Double Counting Problem, and the Logical Form of Category Mistakes.Jonah Goldwater - 2018 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 56 (2):337-359.
    Gilbert Ryle is most famous for accusing the Cartesian dualist of committing a category mistake. Yet the nature of this accusation, and the idea of a category mistake more generally, remains woefully misunderstood. The aim of this paper is to rectify this misunderstanding. I show that Ryle does not conceive of category mistakes as mistakes of predication, as is so widely believed. Instead I show category mistakes are mistakes of conjunction and quantification. This thesis uniquely unifies and explains the wide (...)
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  11.  83
    Six Arguments Against ‘Ought Implies Can’.Jonah Goldwater - 2020 - Southwest Philosophy Review 36 (1):45-54.
    Opponents of ‘ought implies can’ (OIC) often proceed via cases or counterexamples; hypothetical situations are described in which one is unable to do what one intuitively ought to do. I proceed differently. I offer six arguments against OIC via general principles; no cases. Though each argument would suffice to refute OIC if sound, redundancy is always a failsafe.
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  12.  69
    Nativism and Nature: Rethinking Biological Invasion.Jonah H. Peretti - 1998 - Environmental Values 7 (2):183-192.
    The study of biological invasions raises troubling scientific, political and moral issues that merit discussion and debate on a broad scale. Nativist trends in Conservation Biology have made environmentalists biased against alien species. This bias is scientifically questionable, and may have roots in xenophobic and racist attitudes. Rethinking conservationists' conceptions of biological invasion is essential to the development of a progressive environmental science, politics, and philosophy.
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  13. Uploads, Faxes, and You: Can Personal Identity Be Transmitted?Jonah Goldwater - 2021 - American Philosophical Quarterly 58 (3):233–250.
    Abstract. Could a person or mind be uploaded—transmitted to a computer or network—and thereby survive bodily death? I argue ‘mind uploading’ is possible only if a mind is an abstract object rather than a concrete particular. Two implications are notable. One, if someone can be uploaded someone can be multiply-instantiated, such that there could be as many instances of a person as copies of a book. Second, mind uploading’s possibility is incompatible with the leading theories of personal identity, insofar as (...)
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  14.  31
    Ethics of Procreation and the Defense of Human Life: Contraception, Artificial Fertilization, and Abortion by by Martin Rhonheimer.Jonah Pollock - 2011 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 11 (1):189-192.
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  15. Epistemic Modal Disagreement.Jonah Katz & Joe Salerno - 2017 - Topoi 36 (1):141-153.
    At the center of the debate between contextualist versus relativist semantics for epistemic modal claims is an empirical question about when competent subjects judge epistemic modal disagreement to be present. John MacFarlane’s relativist claims that we judge there to be epistemic modal disagreement across the widest range of cases. We wish to dispute the robustness of his data with the results of two studies. Our primary conclusion is that the actual disagreement data is not consistent with relativist predictions, and so, (...)
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  16.  34
    Idea Habitats: How the Prevalence of Environmental Cues Influences the Success of Ideas.Jonah A. Berger & Chip Heath - 2005 - Cognitive Science 29 (2):195-221.
    We investigate 1 factor that influences the success of ideas or cultural representations by proposing that they have a habitat, that is, a set of environmental cues that encourages people to recall and transmit them. We test 2 hypotheses: (a) fluctuation: the success of an idea will vary over time with fluctuations in its habitat, and (b) competition: ideas with more prevalent habitats will be more successful. Four studies use subject ratings and data from newspapers to provide correlational support for (...)
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  17.  4
    Overlooking damage: art, display, and loss in a time of crisis.Jonah Siegel - 2022 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    What does it mean to look? How does looking relate to damage? These are the fundamental questions addressed in Overlooking Damage. From the Roman triumph to the iconoclasm of ISIS and the Taliban to the aerial views of looted landscapes and destroyed temples visible on Google, the relationship between beauty and violence is far more intimate than we sometimes acknowledge. Jonah Siegel makes the daring argument that a thoughtful reaction to images of damage need not stop at melancholy, but (...)
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  18.  31
    The interaction of affective states and cognitive vulnerabilities in the prediction of non-suicidal self-injury.Jonah N. Cohen, Jonathan P. Stange, Jessica L. Hamilton, Taylor A. Burke, Abigail Jenkins, Mian-Li Ong, Richard G. Heimberg, Lyn Y. Abramson & Lauren B. Alloy - 2015 - Cognition and Emotion 29 (3):539-547.
  19. No Composition, No Problem: Ordinary Objects as Arrangements.Jonah P. B. Goldwater - 2015 - Philosophia 43 (2):367-379.
    On the grounds that there are no mereological composites, mereological nihilists deny that ordinary objects exist. Even if nihilism is true, however, I argue that tables and chairs exist anyway: for I deny that ordinary objects are the mereological sums the nihilist rejects. Instead, I argue, ordinary objects have a different nature; they are arrangements, not composites. My argument runs as follows. First, I defend realism about ordinary objects by showing that there is something that plays the role of ordinary (...)
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  20.  14
    The Human and Humanity that Differentiate Withholding from Withdrawing Life-Sustaining Therapy: An ECMO Bridge to Nowhere.Jonah Rubin, Ellen Robinson & Emily B. Rubin - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (6):62-64.
    In this issue of American Journal of Bioethics, Childress et al. address one of the most challenging modern clinical ethical dilemmas: the awake, competent patient dependent on extracorporeal membr...
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  21. Physicalism and the sortalist conception of objects.Jonah Goldwater - 2018 - Synthese 195 (12):5497-5519.
    The central claim of this paper is that the Aristotelian metaphysics of objects is incompatible with physicalism. This includes the contemporary variant of Aristotelianism I call ‘sortalism’. The core reason is that an object’s identity as an instance of a (natural) kind, as well as its consequent persistence conditions, is neither physically fundamental nor determined by what is physically fundamental. The argument for the latter appeals to what is commonly known as ‘the grounding problem’; in particular I argue that the (...)
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  22.  81
    Freedom and Actual Interference.Jonah Goldwater - 2020 - Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 17 (2).
    Liberal and republican conceptions of freedom differ as to whether freedom consists in noninterference or non-domination. Pettit defends the republican non-domination conception on the grounds that one can be unfree without being interfered with if one is dominated, and that one can be interfered with yet free if not dominated. I show that these claims mistake the scope of actual interference. In particular, I show that cases said to involve unfreedom without interference do involve interference, and that cases said to (...)
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  23.  5
    Sefer Daʻat Rabenu Yonah: yalḳuṭ nifla, otsar balum, ḥidushim u-veʼurim, divre ḥokhmah u-tevunah..Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 2003 - Bene Beraḳ: ha-Hod ṿehe-hadar. Edited by Shimʻon Ṿanunu.
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  24. Sefer Shaʻare teshuvah ha-shalem: kolel Sefer ha-yitʼah, Yesod ha-teshuvav ṿe-Igeret ha-teshuva.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 2009 - Ḳiryat Sefer, Modiʻin ʻIlit: Yitsḥaḳ b.r. Yosef Ben Shoshan. Edited by Itshak Ben Shushan.
     
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  25.  53
    The Recursive Syntax and Prosody of Tonal Music.Jonah Katz - unknown
    Language does not make use of octave-based pitch-collections (scales); music lacks truth-conditional semantics; everyone can talk but not everyone can carry a tune; etc. (Jackendoff 2009).
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  26.  12
    Histology agnosticism: Infra-molecularizing disease?Jonah Campbell, Alberto Cambrosio & Mark Basik - 2024 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 104 (C):14-22.
  27. How Many there Are Isn’t.Jonah P. B. Goldwater - 2020 - Philosophia 48 (3):1037-1057.
    A world where there exists n concrete things is a count-determinate world. The orthodox view is count-determinacy is necessary; if to be is to be the value of a variable and the domain of quantification is enumerable, count-determinacy follows. Yet I argue how many there are can be indeterminate; count-indeterminacy is metaphysically possible and even likely actual. Notably, my argument includes rebuttals of Evans’ reductio of indeterminate identity and the Lewis/Sider ‘argument from vagueness’. Count-indeterminacy should therefore be recognized as another (...)
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  28. Sefer Shaʻare teshuvah: ʻim perush Petaḥ ha-shaʻar... ; ṿe-nilṿeh elaṿ Sefer ha-yirʼah ; Yesod ha-teshuvah.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 1985 - Yerushalayim: Merkaz ha-sefer.
     
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  29. Existence and Strong Uncountability.Jonah P. B. Goldwater - 2017 - Acta Analytica 32 (3):321-331.
    On the standard view for something to exist is for one thing to exist: in slogan form, to be is to be countable. E.J. Lowe argues something can exist without being countable as one, however. His primary example is homogenous “stuff,” i.e., qualitatively uniform and infinitely divisible matter. Lacking nonarbitrary boundaries and being everywhere the same, homogenous stuff lacks a principle of individuation that would yield countably distinct constituents. So, for Lowe, homogenous stuff is strongly uncountable. Olson rejects Lowe’s view (...)
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  30.  7
    On caretakers, rebels and enforcers: The gender politics of Euro 2012.Jonah Bury & Cerelia Athanassiou - 2014 - European Journal of Women's Studies 21 (2):148-164.
    This article examines the gender politics of Euro 2012, an international men’s football tournament that took place in Poland and Ukraine, through two cases of female protest. Informed by Cynthia Enloe’s question ‘Where are the women?’, the case studies focus on Polish football fan and model Natalia Siwiec and Ukrainian women’s organisation FEMEN in order to render visible the heteromasculine nation–sport nexus underpinning Euro 2012. The analysis demonstrates how Siwiec emerges as the ‘caretaker’ of the Polish nation-state during the event (...)
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  31. Shaʻare ha-ʻavodah.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 2002 - Yerushalayim: "Ahavat Torah". Edited by Binyamin Yehoshuʻa Zilber & Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi.
     
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  32.  1
    Sefer ha-yirʼah.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 1923 - Yerushalayim: Mordekhai Refaʼel ben Avraham Naṭan. Edited by Mordekhai Refaʼel ben Avraham Naṭan.
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  33. Sefer Shaʻar ha-tokheḥah.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 1966 - Edited by YeḥIʹel Avraham[From Old Catalog] Zilber, Benjamin Joshua[From Old Catalog] Silber, Jonah Gerondi & Benjamin Joshua Silber.
     
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  34. Sefer Shaʻare teshuvah: ʻim Binat ha-shaʻar: beʼur ʻal ʻeśrim ʻikre ha-teshuvah, ṿe-hu beʼur divre rabenu Yonah le-fi ʻomek ha-peshaṭ ʻim harbeh yesodot she-shamʻanu me-rabotenu, zal, umi-mah she-katvu gedole baʻale ha-musar.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 2019 - Yerushalayim: Yehudah Ṿagshal. Edited by Yehudah Aryeh ben Yiśakhar Tsvi Ṿagshal.
     
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  35. Shaʻare tehsuvah.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 1958 - [Benei Beraq,:
     
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  36. Shaʻare teshuvah lehe-ḥasid Rabenu Yonah Gerondi, zatsal.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 2012 - Yerushalayim: [Yitsḥaḳ Saiferṭ]. Edited by Yitsḥaḳ Saiferṭ.
     
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  37. Shaʻare teshuvah.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 1960 - [New York,: Hotsaʼat sefarim Mesorah. Edited by Silverstein, Shraga & [From Old Catalog].
     
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  38. Yalḳuṭ sheʻarim le-Rabenu Yonah, zal, mi-Gerondi: ʻarukh u-mesudar li-sheʻarim mi-tokh beʼure Rabenu le-Mishle ule-Avot.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 1939 - Bene Beraḳ: Mosheh Yemini. Edited by Mosheh Yemini.
     
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  39. The Lump and the Ledger: Material Coincidence at Little-to-No Cost.Jonah Goldwater - 2019 - Erkenntnis 86 (4):789-812.
    This paper aims to make headway on two related issues—one methodological, the other substantive. The former concerns cost–benefit analyses when applied to metaphysical theory choice. The latter concerns material coincidence, i.e., multiple objects occupying the same space at the same time, such as the statue and the clay from which it’s made. The issues are entwined as many reject coincidence on the grounds that it’s costly. I argue this judgment is unjustified. More generally, I set out and defend a framework (...)
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  40. Self-Concept of College Students: Empirical Evidence from an Asian Setting.Jonah Balba & Manuel Caingcoy - 2020 - Technium Social Sciences Journal 24 (1):26-37.
    Individuals with high self-concept will likely have high life satisfaction, they easily get adjusted to life, and they communicate their feeling more appropriately. However, it was not certain whether self-concept would decline or improve as individuals age, or whether self-concept would vary between genders and ethnic groups. To prove, a study was carried out to compare the self-concept of college students in an Asian context. The inquiry utilized the cross-sectional design in finding out significant differences in the self-concept of participants (...)
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  41.  11
    Did Facebook Cheat?: A Test Case of Antitrust Ethics.Jonah Goldwater - forthcoming - Journal of Business Ethics:1-17.
    Citing corporate concentration and lax enforcement since the Reagan era, the Biden administration has declared a new era of aggressive antitrust prosecution, bringing antimonopoly actions against tech giants such as Meta, Google, and Amazon. But what’s so bad about monopoly or corporate concentration? The standard answer appeals to economic consequences, such as higher prices or deadweight losses. This paper offers a different framework. It argues monopolizing can be a form of cheating, which is a wrong that attaches to means, not (...)
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  42.  18
    Transplantation, Biobanks and the Human Body, volume 3 of About Bioethics by Nicholas Tonti-Filippini.Jonah Pollock - 2014 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 14 (2):387-391.
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  43.  35
    The Principle of Double Effect and Its Inapplicability to the Case of Natural Family Planning.Jonah Pollock - 2011 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 11 (4):661-667.
    In “The Contralife Argument and the Principle of Double Effect” (NCBQ, Spring 2011), Lawrence Masek tries to use the principle of double effect to show that natural family planning (NFP) is morally justified. This essay presents a summary explanation of the principle of double effect. It demonstrates that Masek wrongly applies the principle of double effect to NFP. It presents the teaching of the 1968 papal encyclical Humanae vitae with regard to NFP, and contends that to apply the principle of (...)
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  44.  7
    Paeanic Crises: Euripides' Ion and the Failure to Perform Identity.Jonah Radding - 2017 - American Journal of Philology 138 (3):393-434.
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  45.  50
    The politics of identity in late modern society.Jonah Goldstein & Jeremy Rayner - 1994 - Theory and Society 23 (3):367-384.
  46.  26
    Autonomy to a fault: The confluence of organ donation, euthanasia, and the dead donor rule.Jonah Rubin - 2023 - Bioethics 37 (4):374-378.
    Five countries now permit organ donation after euthanasia, on the basis of respecting donor autonomy. Some now openly consider performing euthanasia itself via organ extraction to better preserve organ viability, albeit in violation of the dead donor rule. Proponents argue that respect for patient autonomy requires this option; the dead donor rule is inapplicable since it fulfills donors’ wishes. Other ethical arguments, not addressed herein, explore issues including dying at home, impact on clinicians, and societal faith in donation enterprise, but (...)
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  47. Sefer Ḥaye ʻolam.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 1946
     
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  48. Sefer Shaʻare teshuvah: ʻim hosafot beʼurim ṿe-ʻiyunim.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 2017 - [Bene Beraḳ]: Irgun "Orḥot Yosher". Edited by Lipa Felman.
     
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  49. Sefer Shaʻare teshuvah: ʻim Sefer ha-yirʼah ṿi-Yesod ha-teshuvah.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 2002 - Ḳiryat Sefer, Modiʻin ʻIlit: Mishpaḥat Ben Shoshan. Edited by Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi & Itshak Ben Shushan.
     
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  50. Sefer Yesod ha-teshuvah: ṿe-hu seder darkhe ha-teshuvah.Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi - 2019 - Monsi, N.Y.: Elʻazar Bodner. Edited by Dan Segal & Elʻazar Bodner.
     
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