Results for '`reasonable man''

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  1.  33
    Imagination Inflation: Imagining a Childhood Event Inflates Confidence that it Occurred.Charles G. Manning & Elizabeth F. Loftus - unknown
    Counterfactual imaginings are known to have far reaching implications. In the present experiment, we ask if imagining events from one's past can affect memory for childhood events. We draw on the social psychology literature showing that imagining a future event increases the subjective likelihood that the event will occur. The concepts of cognitive availability and the source monitoring framework provide reasons to expect that imagination may inflate confidence that a childhood event occurred. However, people routinely produce myriad counterfactual imaginings (i.e., (...)
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  2.  96
    Sign and Symbol in Hegel's "Aesthetics".Paul de Man - 1982 - Critical Inquiry 8 (4):761-775.
    We are far removed, in this section of the Encyclopedia on memory, from the mnemotechnic icons described by Francis Yates in The Art of Memory and much closer to Augustine's advice about how to remember and to psalmodize Scripture. Memory, for Hegel, is the learning by rote of names, or of words considered as names, and it can therefore not be separated from the notation, the inscription, or the writing down of these names. In order to remember, one is forced (...)
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  3. Predicting unethical behavior: A comparison of the theory of reasoned action and the theory of planned behavior. [REVIEW]Man Kit Chang - 1998 - Journal of Business Ethics 17 (16):1825-1834.
    This study is a comparison of the validity of theory of reasoned action and theory of planned behavior as applied to the area of moral behavior (i.e., illegal copying of software) using structural equation modeling. Data were collected from 181 university students on the various components of the theories and used to asses the influence of attitude, subjective norm, and perceived behavioral control on the intention to make unauthorized software copies. Theory of planned behavior was found to be better than (...)
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  4. Interpretation, reasons, and facts.Richard N. Manning - 2003 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 46 (3):346-376.
    Donald Davidson argues that his interpretivist approach to meaning shows that accounting for the intentionality and objectivity of thought does not require an appeal, as John McDowell has urged it does, to a specifically rational relation between mind and world. Moreover, Davidson claims that the idea of such a relation is unintelligible. This paper takes issue with these claims. It shows, first, that interpretivism, contra Davidson's express view, does not depend essentially upon an appeal to a causal relation between events (...)
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  5.  69
    Analogy and falsification in Descartes’ physics.Gideon Manning - 2012 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 43 (2):402-411.
    In this paper I address Descartes’ use of analogy in physics. First, I introduce Descartes’ hypothetical reasoning, distinguishing between analogy and hypothesis. Second, I examine in detail Descartes’ use of analogy to both discover causes and add plausibility to his hypotheses—even though not always explicitly stated, Descartes’ practice assumes a unified view of the subject matter of physics as the extension of bodies in terms of their size, shape and the motion of their parts. Third, I present Descartes’ unique “philosophy (...)
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  6.  2
    First principles of philosophy.Manly Palmer Hall - 1935 - Los Angeles, Calif.,: The Phoenix press.
    This simple and informal approach to the study of philosophy offers a straightforward explanation and interpretation of the seven departments of philosophy: Metaphysics, the Nature of Being and of God; Logic, the Rule of Reason: Ethics, the Code of Conduct: Psychology, the Science of the Soul; Epistemology, the Nature of Knowledge: Esthetics, the Urge to Beauty; and Theurgy, the Living of Wisdom.
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  7.  24
    Wright's Better Reasoning.Rita C. Manning - 1983 - Informal Logic 5 (2).
  8.  8
    First principles of philosophy: metaphysics, logic, ethics, psychology, epistemology, esthetics & theurgy.Manly Palmer Hall - 1963 - Los Angeles, CA: Philosophical Research Society.
    This simple and informal approach to the study of philosophy offers a straightforward explanation and interpretation of the seven departments of philosophy: Metaphysics, the Nature of Being and of God; Logic, the Rule of Reason: Ethics, the Code of Conduct: Psychology, the Science of the Soul; Epistemology, the Nature of Knowledge: Esthetics, the Urge to Beauty; and Theurgy, the Living of Wisdom.
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  9.  14
    The Form of ideology: investigations into the sense of ideological reasoning with a view to giving an account of its place in political life.David John Manning (ed.) - 1980 - Boston: G. Allen & Unwin.
  10.  5
    War and peace in the Western political imagination: from classical antiquity to the age of reason.Roger B. Manning - 2016 - London: Bloomsbury Academic.
    The legacy of classical antiquity -- War and peace in the medieval world -- Holy wars, crusades, and religious wars -- Humanism and Neo-Stoicism -- The search for a science of peace.
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  11.  24
    Changes in View.Richard Manning - 2013 - ProtoSociology 30:124-151.
    In this paper, I assume that a satisfactory account of our thinking requires a conception of perceptual experience on which it provides reasons for judgment, and also that the Myth of the Given—the myth of episodes whose contents can provide reasons without the involve­ment of concepts—must be avoided. From these assumptions it follows that the content of perceptual experience must be conceived as concept-involving. The question I address is whether, given that it involves concepts, the content of perceptual experience is (...)
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  12. Interpreting Davidson’s Omniscient Interpreter.Richard N. Manning - 1995 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 25 (3):335-374.
    Donald Davidson infamously claims that belief is in its nature veridical, and that skepticism is for this reason fundamentally incoherent. To those who take the issue of external world skepticism seriously, Davidson's arguments may seem to involve a conjuring trick. In particular, his invocation of an ‘omniscient interpreter’, whose intelligibility supposedly ensures that our beliefs must be largely true, has the air of incense and lantern-rubbing about it. Davidson's claim has received considerable critical response in the literature, almost all of (...)
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  13.  35
    Argument structure as a locus for binding theory.Christopher D. Manning - unknown
    The correct locus (or loci) of binding theory has been a matter of much discussion. Theories can be seen as varying along at least two dimensions. The rst is whether binding theory is con gurationally determined (that is, the theory exploits the geometry of a phrase marker, appealing to such purely structural notions as c-command and government) or whether the theory depends rather on examining the relations between items selected by a predicate (where by selection I am intending to cover (...)
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  14.  4
    ʻAql dar sih dīn-i buzurg-i āsmānī: Zartusht, Masīḥīyat va Islām: sayrī dar taʻārīf va sābiqah-ʼi mafhūm-i ʻaql va irtibāṭ-i ān bā adyān.Muḥammad Manṣūrʹnizhād - 2004 - Tihrān: Muḥammad Manṣūrʹnizhād.
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  15. Care, Normativity and the Law.Rita Manning - 2015 - In Daniel Engster & Maurice Hamington (eds.), Care Ethics and Political Theory. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 127-145.
    Care ethics can provide a valuable conceptual and normative resource for many issues in law, but given the conservative nature of law in general, much work needs to be done before care ethics can explicitly play such a role. In this paper I survey the landscape of law, discuss two attempts to incorporate care ethics into the normative framework of law, and suggest other avenues for incorporating care ethics in law and legal reasoning.
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  16.  20
    Learning Random Walk Models for Inducing Word Dependency Distributions.Christopher D. Manning & Kristina Toutanova - unknown
    Many NLP tasks rely on accurately estimating word dependency probabilities P(w1|w2), where the words w1 and w2 have a particular relationship (such as verb-object). Because of the sparseness of counts of such dependencies, smoothing and the ability to use multiple sources of knowledge are important challenges. For example, if the probability P(N |V ) of noun N being the subject of verb V is high, and V takes similar objects to V , and V is synonymous to V , then (...)
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  17. Nested Named Entity Recognition.Christopher D. Manning - unknown
    Many named entities contain other named entities inside them. Despite this fact, the field of named entity recognition has almost entirely ignored nested named entity recognition, but due to technological, rather than ideological reasons. In this paper, we present a new technique for recognizing nested named entities, by using a discriminative constituency parser. To train the model, we transform each sentence into a tree, with constituents for each named entity (and no other syntactic structure). We present results on both newspaper (...)
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  18.  26
    Presents embedded under pasts.Christopher Manning - manuscript
    In this paper I will discuss a rather recondite phenomenon in the area of sequence of tense (SOT), exhibited by sentences like (1): (1) John said that Mary is pregnant. According to traditional grammar, this is a sentence where sequence of tense has failed to apply (i.e., concord has been broken): standard sequence of tense rules would dictate use of a past tense when embedding an event contemporaneous to the embedding verb under a past tense verb, giving the sentence John (...)
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  19. Robust Machine Translation Evaluation with Entailment Features.Chris Manning - unknown
    Existing evaluation metrics for machine translation lack crucial robustness: their correlations with human quality judgments vary considerably across languages and genres. We believe that the main reason is their inability to properly capture meaning: A good translation candidate means the same thing as the reference translation, regardless of formulation. We propose a metric that evaluates MT output based on a rich set of features motivated by textual entailment, such as lexical-semantic (in-)compatibility and argument structure overlap. We compare this metric against (...)
     
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  20.  81
    Why Sherlock Holmes can't be replaced by an expert system.Rita C. Manning - 1987 - Philosophical Studies 51 (1):19-28.
  21.  4
    Understanding complex dynamics by visual and symbolic reasoning.Kenneth Man-Kam Yip - 1991 - Artificial Intelligence 51 (1-3):179-221.
  22.  6
    Model simplification by asymptotic order of magnitude reasoning.Kenneth Man-kam Yip - 1996 - Artificial Intelligence 80 (2):309-348.
  23. Reason, Will and Responsibility.Lee Manning Wiggins - 1943 - Philosophical Review 52:222.
     
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  24.  54
    An Interview with Paul de Man.Stephano Rosso & Paul de Man - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 12 (4):788-795.
    Rosso: Can you say something more about the differences between your work and Derrida’s?De Man: I’m not really the right person to ask where the difference is, because, as I feel in many respects close to Derrida, I don’t determine whether my work resembles or is different from of Derrida. My initial engagement with Derrida—which I think is typical and important for all that relationship which followed closely upon my first encounter with him in Baltimore at the colloquium on “The (...)
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  25.  37
    Review: Guyer, Knowledge, Reason, and Taste: Kant's Response to Hume. [REVIEW]Richard N. Manning - 2008 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (9).
  26.  12
    Long-Term Effect of Adverse Childhood Experiences, School Disengagement, and Reasons for Leaving School on Delinquency in Adolescents Who Dropout.Sung Man Bae - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Purpose: The purpose of this study was to verify the long-term effect of adverse childhood experiences, school disengagement, and the reasons for leaving school on adolescent delinquency while adjusting for sex.Methods: Data were collected from 663 teenagers [male 368, female 295; mean age = 16.81 ; age range = 13–19 years] through a Longitudinal Survey and Support Plan for Dropouts.Results: Multivariate latent growth modeling demonstrated that ACEs and school disengagement are positively associated with delinquency and the mediating effect of school (...)
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  27.  12
    Template Sampling for Leveraging Domain Knowledge in Information Extraction.Christopher Cox, Christopher Manning & Pat Langley - unknown
    We initially describe a feature-rich discriminative Conditional Random Field (CRF) model for Information Extraction in the workshop announcements domain, which offers good baseline performance in the PASCAL shared task. We then propose a method for leveraging domain knowledge in Information Extraction tasks, scoring candidate document labellings as one-value-per-field templates according to domain feasibility after generating sample labellings from a trained sequence classifier. Our relational models evaluate these templates according to our intuitions about agreement in the domain: workshop acronyms should resemble (...)
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  28.  14
    Zum Programm einer kritischen Sozialwissenschaft−Empirie und Theorie.Michael Baurmann, Anton Leist & Dieter Mans - 1979 - Analyse & Kritik 1 (1):1-29.
    The article argues for a synthesis between analytical philosophy and social sciences as relevant and necessary. The motivation and framework of such a synthesis is outlined on the basis of a critical social science. The authors illuminate such a perspective negatively in a critique of empirical and theoretical sociology, then positively in a clarification of the critical standpoint. Four theses, two under each-aspect, are defended: 1. Concerning empirical social sciences Neither the quantitative nor the qualitative paradigm of empirical social science (...)
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  29. Sharḥ naẓm muwajjahāt al-tahdhīb.Manṣūr ibn ʻAlī Manūfī - 2019 - Abū Ẓaby, al-Imārāt al-ʻArabīyah al-Muttaḥidah: Majlis Ḥukamāʼ al-Muslimīn.
     
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  30.  40
    Uncertain Inference.Henry E. Kyburg Jr & Choh Man Teng - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    Coping with uncertainty is a necessary part of ordinary life and is crucial to an understanding of how the mind works. For example, it is a vital element in developing artificial intelligence that will not be undermined by its own rigidities. There have been many approaches to the problem of uncertain inference, ranging from probability to inductive logic to nonmonotonic logic. Thisbook seeks to provide a clear exposition of these approaches within a unified framework. The principal market for the book (...)
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  31. Actual causation: a stone soup essay.Clark Glymour David Danks, Bruce Glymour Frederick Eberhardt, Joseph Ramsey Richard Scheines, Peter Spirtes Choh Man Teng & Zhang Jiji - 2010 - Synthese 175 (2):169--192.
    We argue that current discussions of criteria for actual causation are ill-posed in several respects. (1) The methodology of current discussions is by induction from intuitions about an infinitesimal fraction of the possible examples and counterexamples; (2) cases with larger numbers of causes generate novel puzzles; (3) “neuron” and causal Bayes net diagrams are, as deployed in discussions of actual causation, almost always ambiguous; (4) actual causation is (intuitively) relative to an initial system state since state changes are relevant, but (...)
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  32. Environmental ethics beyond principle? The case for a pragmatic contextualism.Ben A. Minteer, Elizabeth A. Corley & Robert E. Manning - 2004 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 17 (2):131-156.
    Many nonanthropocentric environmental ethicists subscribe to a ``principle-ist'''' approach to moral argument, whereby specific natural resource and environmental policy judgments are deduced from the prior articulation of a general moral principle. More often than not, this principle is one requiring the promotion of the intrinsic value of nonhuman nature. Yet there are several problems with this method of moral reasoning, including the short-circuiting of reflective inquiry and the disregard of the complex nature of specific environmental problems and policy arguments. In (...)
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  33.  8
    Interaction between official institutions and influential users of rumor control in online social networks.Shizhen Bai, Wenya Wu & Man Jiang - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Online interactions have become major channels for people to obtain and disseminate information during the new normal of COVID-19, which can also be a primary platform for rumor propagation. There are many complex psychological reasons for spreading rumors, but previous studies have not fully analyzed this problem from the perspective of the interaction between official institutions and influential users. The purpose of this study is to determine optimal strategies for official institutions considering the impact of two different influential user types (...)
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  34.  40
    The reasonable man? a social choice approach.Ariel Rubinstein - 1983 - Theory and Decision 15 (2):151-159.
  35. The Reasonable Man: An Appreciation.Oliver O'Donovan - 1987 - In William J. Abraham & Steven W. Holtzer (eds.), The Rationality of Religious Belief: Essays in Honour of Basil Mitchell. pp. 1--15.
     
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  36. Rape and the reasonable man.C. D. & K. Haely - 1999 - Law and Philosophy 18 (2):113-139.
    Standards of reasonability play an important role in some of the most difficult cases of rape. In recent years, the notion of the ``reasonable person'' has supplanted the historical concept of the ``reasonable man'' as the test of reasonability. Contemporary feminist critics like Catharine MacKinnon and Kim Lane Scheppele have challenged the notion of the reasonable person on the grounds that reasonability standards are ``gendered to the ground'' and so, in practice, the reasonable person is just the reasonable man in (...)
     
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  37.  19
    Rape and the Reasonable Man.Donald Hubin & Karen Haely - 1999 - Law and Philosophy 18 (2):113-139.
    Standards of reasonability play an important role in some of the most difficult cases of rape. In recent years, the notion of the “reasonable person” has supplanted the historical concept of the “reasonable man” as the test of reasonability. Contemporary feminist critics like Catharine MacKinnon and Kim Lane Scheppele have challenged the notion of the reasonable person on the grounds that reasonability standards are “gendered to the ground” and so, in practice, the reasonable person is just the reasonable man in (...)
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  38. Rape and the reasonable man.Donald C. Hubin & Karen Haely - 1999 - Law and Philosophy 18 (2):113-139.
    Standards of reasonability play an important role in some of the most difficult cases of rape. In recent years, the notion of the reasonable person has supplanted the historical concept of the reasonable man as the test of reasonability. Contemporary feminist critics like Catharine MacKinnon and Kim Lane Scheppele have challenged the notion of the reasonable person on the grounds that reasonability standards are gendered to the ground and so, in practice, the reasonable person is just the reasonable man in (...)
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  39.  4
    The Triumph of a Reasonable Man: Stich, Mindreading, and Nativism.Kim Sterelny - 2009-03-20 - In Dominic Murphy & Michael Bishop (eds.), Stich. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 152–166.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Beyond Simulation and the Theory‐Theory A Hybrid Theory of Interpretation and Prediction Innateness on a Hybrid Model The Poverty of the Stimulus Acquisition and General Learning Abilities Optimality, Adaptation, Learning Reprise References.
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  40. Mathematical probability and the reasonable man of the eighteenth century.Lorraine J. Daston - 1983 - In Joseph Warren Dauben & Virginia Staudt Sexton (eds.), History and Philosophy of Science: Selected Papers. New York Academy of Sciences.
     
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  41.  43
    The philosophy of the reasonable man.J. R. Lucas - 1963 - Philosophical Quarterly 13 (51):97-106.
  42.  71
    The triumph of a reasonable man: Stich, mindreading, and nativism.Kim Sterelny - 2004 - In Michael A. Bishop & Dominic Murphy (eds.), Stich and His Critics. Blackwell. pp. 14--152.
    Humans interpret others. We are able to anticipate both the actions and intentional states of other agents. We do not do so perfectly, but since we are complex and flexible creatures even limited success needs explanation. For some years now Steve Stich (frequently in collaboration with Shaun Nichols) has been both participant in, and observer of, debates about the foundation of these capacities (Stich and Nichols 1992; Stich and Nichols 1995). As a commentator on this debate, Stich (with Nichols) gave (...)
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  43. The man of reason: "male" and "female" in Western philosophy.Genevieve Lloyd - 1993 - Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
    This new edition of Genevieve Lloyd's classic study of the maleness of reason in philosophy contains a new introduction and bibilographical essay assessing the ..
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  44.  17
    The Man of Reason: Male and Female in Western Philosophy.Genevieve Lloyd - 1984 - Minneapolis: Routledge.
    This new edition of Genevieve Lloyd's classic study of the maleness of reason in philosophy contains a new introduction and bibliographical essay assessing the book's place in the explosion of writing and gender since 1984.
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  45.  64
    The Man of Reason: "Male" and "Female" in Western Philosophy.Genevieve Lloyd - 1984 - Minneapolis: Routledge.
    This new edition of Genevieve Lloyd's classic study of the maleness of reason in philosophy contains a new introduction and bibliographical essay assessing the book's place in the explosion of writing and gender since 1984.
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  46.  42
    History, Man, and Reason: A Study in Nineteenth-Century Thought.Maurice Mandelbaum - 2019 - Johns Hopkins University Press.
    Mandelbaum believes that views regarding history and man and reason pose problems for philosophy, and he offers critical discussions of some of those problems at the conclusions of parts 2, 3, and 4.
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  47.  19
    The Man of Reason: "Male" and "Female" in Western Philosophy.Genevieve Lloyd, Joan Kelly & Judith Hicks Stiehm - 1986 - Ethics 96 (3):652-654.
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  48. The man of reason.Genevieve Lloyd - 1979 - Metaphilosophy 10 (1):18–37.
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  49.  13
    The Man of Reason: "Male" and "Female" in Western Philosophy.Genevieve Lloyd & Prudence Allen - 1986 - Philosophy 61 (237):414-418.
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  50.  5
    History, man, & reason.Maurice Mandelbaum - 1971 - Baltimore,: Johns Hopkins University Press.
    Originally published in 1971. The purpose of this book is to draw attention to important aspects of thought in the nineteenth century. While its central concerns lie within the philosophic tradition, materials drawn from the social sciences and elsewhere provide important illustrations of the intellectual movements that the author attempts to trace. This book aims at examining philosophic modes of thought as well as sifting presuppositions held in common by a diverse group of thinkers whose antecedents and whose intentions often (...)
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