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David Finkelstein
University of Chicago
  1.  20
    Expression and the Inner.David H. Finkelstein - 2003 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    At least since Descartes, philosophers have been interested in the special knowledge or authority that we exhibit when we speak about our own thoughts, attitudes, and feelings. This book contends that even the best work in contemporary philosophy of mind fails to account for this sort of knowledge or authority because it does not pay the right sort of attention to the notion of expression. What's at stake is not only how to understand self-knowledge and first-person authority, but also what (...)
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  2. Expression and the Inner.David H. Finkelstein - 2006 - Philosophical Quarterly 56 (224):466-468.
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  3. Wittgenstein on rules and platonism.David H. Finkelstein - 2000 - In Alice Crary & Rupert Read (eds.), The New Wittgenstein. Routledge. pp. 83-100.
  4. On the distinction between conscious and unconscious states of mind.David H. Finkelstein - 1999 - American Philosophical Quarterly 36 (2):79-100.
  5. Space-time code.David Finkelstein - 1969 - Physical Review 184:1261--1271.
     
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  6.  49
    5 Holism and Animal Minds.David H. Finkelstein - 2007 - In Alice Crary (ed.), Wittgenstein and the Moral Life: Essays in Honor of Cora Diamond. MIT Press. pp. 251.
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  7. Space-time code III.David Finkelstein - 1972 - Physical Review:2922.
     
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  8. Space-time code II.David Finkelstein - 1972 - Physical Review:320.
     
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  9.  33
    The Leibniz project.David Finkelstein - 1977 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 6 (1):425 - 439.
    A language for quantum physics is derived from set theory by replacing the classical predicate algebra (Boolean) by a certain quantum predicate algebra (rational projective), time space and the Hamilton-Schroedinger dynamics by a Feynman-like graph dynamics, and the Dirac spin operators by topological switching operators on the graph. The development is described from the basic level of elementary monadic processes to the level of the free Dirac equation.
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  10. Space-time code IV.David Finkelstein - 1974 - Physical Review:2219.
     
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  11. Space-time code V.David Finkelstein, G. Frye & L. Susskind - 1974 - Physical Review:2231.
     
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  12. Cosmological choices.David Finkelstein - 1982 - Synthese 50 (3):399 - 420.
    Present physics is a mix of theories of time, logic, and matter. These may have a common origin in a unitary quantum cosmology founded on process alone. A quantum theory of sets, or something like it, is helpful for such a cosmology, and one is constructed by adding superposition to a slightly reformulated classical set theory. There is an elementary or atomic process in such theories. The size of its characteristic time is estimated from the mass spectrum, although this gives (...)
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  13.  35
    Transquantum Dynamics.James Baugh, David Ritz Finkelstein, Andrei Galiautdinov & Mohsen Shiri-Garakani - 2003 - Foundations of Physics 33 (9):1267-1275.
    Segal proposed transquantum commutation relations with two transquantum constants ħ′, ħ″ besides Planck's quantum constant ħ and with a variable i. The Heisenberg quantum algebra is a contraction—in a more general sense than that of Inönü and Wigner—of the Segal transquantum algebra. The usual constant i arises as a vacuum order-parameter in the quantum limit ħ′,ħ″→0. One physical consequence is a discrete spectrum for canonical variables and space-time coordinates. Another is an interconversion of time and energy accompanying space-time meltdown (disorder), (...)
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  14.  10
    A process conception of nature.David Finkelstein - 1973 - In Jagdish Mehra (ed.), The physicist's conception of nature. Boston,: Reidel. pp. 709--713.
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  15. On 'Law Without Law'.David Finkelstein - 2011 - Mind and Matter 9 (2):145-152.
    A quantum mechanics for nomogenesis is conjectured.
     
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  16. On self-blindness and inner sense.David H. Finkelstein - 1999 - Philosophical Topics 26 (1-2):105-19.
  17.  25
    Quantum time-space and gravity.David Finkelstein & Ernesto Rodriguez - 1986 - In Roger Penrose & C. J. Isham (eds.), Quantum Concepts in Space and Time. New York ;Oxford University Press. pp. 1--247.