Results for 'Johanna Rosenberg'

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  1.  14
    Study Protocol for Teen Inflammation Glutamate Emotion Research.Johanna C. Walker, Giana I. Teresi, Rachel L. Weisenburger, Jillian R. Segarra, Amar Ojha, Artenisa Kulla, Lucinda Sisk, Meng Gu, Daniel M. Spielman, Yael Rosenberg-Hasson, Holden T. Maecker, Manpreet K. Singh, Ian H. Gotlib & Tiffany C. Ho - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
  2.  47
    Sex, Breath, and Force: Sexual Difference in a Post-Feminist Era.Jodi Dean, Cathrine Egeland, Elizabeth Grosz, Sara Heinämaa, Lisa Käll, Johanna Oksala, Kelly Oliver, Tiina Rosenberg, Kristin Sampson & Vigdis Songe-Møller - 2006 - Lexington Books.
    This collection of essays provides a reassessment of the question of sexual difference, taking into account important shifts in feminist thought, post-humanist theories, and queer studies. The contributors offer new and refreshing insights into the complex question of sexual difference from a post-feminist perspective, and how it is reformulated in various related areas of study, such as ontology, epistemology, metaphysics, biology, technology, and mass-media.
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  3. Pure processes and projective metaphysics.Johanna Seibt - 2000 - Philosophical Studies 101 (2-3):253-289.
    There is a well-known tension within Sellars' scheme arising from commitments to both an anti-foundationalist epistemology and a Peircean scientific realism. This tension surfaces conspicuously in his treatment of ontological category theory. On the one hand, Sellars applies and extends Carnap's metalinguistic deflation of ontology. On the other hand, however, Sellars is not prepared to 'go conventionalist' but upholds the possibility of a "positive ontology" (Rosenberg). I offer a new reading of Sellars’ Carus Lectures in which I combine two (...)
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  4.  9
    On Understanding the Difficulty in Understanding Understanding.Jay F. Rosenberg - 1981 - In Herman Parret & Jacques Bouveresse (eds.), Meaning and understanding. New York: W. de Gruyter. pp. 29-43.
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  5. The Structure of Biological Science.Alexander Rosenberg - 1986 - Journal of the History of Biology 19 (1):161-162.
     
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  6.  42
    Beyond Single‐Mindedness: A Figure‐Ground Reversal for the Cognitive Sciences.Mark Dingemanse, Andreas Liesenfeld, Marlou Rasenberg, Saul Albert, Felix K. Ameka, Abeba Birhane, Dimitris Bolis, Justine Cassell, Rebecca Clift, Elena Cuffari, Hanne De Jaegher, Catarina Dutilh Novaes, N. J. Enfield, Riccardo Fusaroli, Eleni Gregoromichelaki, Edwin Hutchins, Ivana Konvalinka, Damian Milton, Joanna Rączaszek-Leonardi, Vasudevi Reddy, Federico Rossano, David Schlangen, Johanna Seibtbb, Elizabeth Stokoe, Lucy Suchman, Cordula Vesper, Thalia Wheatley & Martina Wiltschko - 2023 - Cognitive Science 47 (1):e13230.
    A fundamental fact about human minds is that they are never truly alone: all minds are steeped in situated interaction. That social interaction matters is recognized by any experimentalist who seeks to exclude its influence by studying individuals in isolation. On this view, interaction complicates cognition. Here, we explore the more radical stance that interaction co-constitutes cognition: that we benefit from looking beyond single minds toward cognition as a process involving interacting minds. All around the cognitive sciences, there are approaches (...)
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  7. Fitness.Alexander Rosenberg - 1983 - Journal of Philosophy 80 (8):457-473.
    The diversity, complexity and adaptation of the biological realm is evident. Until Darwin, the best explanation for these three features of the biological was the conclusion of the “argument from design.” Darwin's theory of natural selection provides an explanation of all three of these features of the biological realm without adverting to some mysterious designing entity. But this explanation's success turns on the meaning of its central explanatory concept, ‘fitness’. Moreover, since Darwinian theory provides the resources for a purely causal (...)
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  8.  6
    From Habit-Forming to Habit-Breaking Availability: Experiences on Electronic Gambling Machine Closures During COVID-19.Virve Marionneau & Johanna Järvinen-Tassopoulos - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Electronic gambling machines are among the most harmful forms of gambling. The structural characteristics of EGMs prolong and reinforce gambling similarly to other habit-forming technologies. In Finland, the wide availability of EGMs in non-casino locations is likely to further reinforce the habit-creating nature of gambling offer by incorporating EGMs into everyday practices. The COVID-19 pandemic changed the landscape of gambling in Finland. The most visible change was the closure of land-based EGMs in non-casino environments, arcades, and the casino in March (...)
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  9. How is biological explanation possible?Alex Rosenberg - 2001 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 52 (4):735-760.
    That biology provides explanations is not open to doubt. But how it does so must be a vexed question for those who deny that biology embodies laws or other generalizations with the sort of explanatory force that the philosophy of science recognizes. The most common response to this problem has involved redefining law so that those grammatically general statements which biologists invoke in explanations can be counted as laws. But this terminological innovation cannot identify the source of biology's explanatory power. (...)
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  10.  10
    Predicting visual memory across images and within individuals.Cheyenne D. Wakeland-Hart, Steven A. Cao, Megan T. deBettencourt, Wilma A. Bainbridge & Monica D. Rosenberg - 2022 - Cognition 227 (C):105201.
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  11. Are homologies (selected effect or causal role) function free?Alex Rosenberg & Karen Neander - 2009 - Philosophy of Science 76 (3):307-334.
    This article argues that at least very many judgments of homology rest on prior attributions of selected‐effect (SE) function, and that many of the “parts” of biological systems that are rightly classified as homologous are constituted by (are so classified in virtue of) their consequence etiologies. We claim that SE functions are often used in the prior identification of the parts deemed to be homologous and are often used to differentiate more restricted homologous kinds within less restricted ones. In doing (...)
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  12. Evolutionary Biology and Intentional Psychology: Part One, The Uneasy Analogy.A. Rosenberg - 1986 - Behaviorism 14:15-27.
  13. One World and Our Knowledge of It.Jay F. Rosenberg - 1983 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 34 (4):410-412.
  14. Fitness.Alexander Rosenberg - 1983 - Journal of Philosophy.
    The diversity, complexity and adaptation of the biological realm is evident. Until Darwin, the best explanation for these three features of the biological was the conclusion of the “argument from design.” Darwin's theory of natural selection provides an explanation of all three of these features of the biological realm without adverting to some mysterious designing entity. But this explanation's success turns on the meaning of its central explanatory concept, ‘fitness’. Moreover, since Darwinian theory provides the resources for a purely causal (...)
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  15.  27
    On Multiple Realization and the Special Sciences.Alex Rosenberg - 2001 - Journal of Philosophy 98 (7):365.
  16. How Darwinian reductionism refutes genetic determinism.Philip M. Rosoff & Alex Rosenberg - 2006 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 37 (1):122-135.
    Genetic determinism labels the morally problematical claim that some socially significant traits, traits we care about, such as sexual orientation, gender roles, violence, alcoholism, mental illness, intelligence, are largely the results of the operation of genes and not much alterable by environment, learning or other human intervention. Genetic determinism does not require that genes literally fix these socially significant traits, but rather that they constrain them within narrow channels beyond human intervention. In this essay we analyze genetic determinism in light (...)
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  17.  33
    Beyond Formalism: Naming and Necessity for Human Beings.Stephen P. Schwartz & Jay F. Rosenberg - 1996 - Philosophical Review 105 (1):79.
    Beyond Formalism is Jay Rosenberg’s attempt to articulate his dissatisfactions with the Kripkean “revolution” in the philosophy of language and to propose an alternative to it. According to Rosenberg, even though a “surprisingly large number of philosophers simply adopted the Kripkean ideas, images, and idioms root and branch”, he has been “inarticulately irritated by Kripke’s views for almost twenty years”. Rosenberg claims that Kripke’s semantics for proper names and natural kind terms is a misguided attempt to apply (...)
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  18. How to reconcile physicalism and antireductionism about biology.Alex Rosenberg & David Michael Kaplan - 2005 - Philosophy of Science 72 (1):43-68.
    Physicalism and antireductionism are the ruling orthodoxy in the philosophy of biology. But these two theses are difficult to reconcile. Merely embracing an epistemic antireductionism will not suffice, as both reductionists and antireductionists accept that given our cognitive interests and limitations, non-molecular explanations may not be improved, corrected or grounded in molecular ones. Moreover, antireductionists themselves view their claim as a metaphysical or ontological one about the existence of facts molecular biology cannot identify, express, or explain. However, this is tantamount (...)
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  19. Fitness as primitive and propensity.Alexander Rosenberg & Mary Williams - 1986 - Philosophy of Science 53 (3):412-418.
    In several places we have argued that ‘fitness’ is a primitive term with respect to the theory of evolution properly understood. These arguments have relied heavily on the axiomatization of the theory provided by one of us. In contrast, both John Beatty and Robert Brandon have separately argued for a “propensity“ interpretation of “fitness” ; and in Brandon and Beatty they attack our view that “fitness“ is a primitive term in evolutionary theory, concluding that a definition by way of propensities (...)
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  20.  43
    On the very idea of ideal theory in political philosophy.Alexander Rosenberg - 2016 - Social Philosophy and Policy 33 (1-2):55-75.
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  21.  51
    Reductionism (and antireductionism) in biology.Alexander Rosenberg - 2007 - In David L. Hull & Michael Ruse (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to the Philosophy of Biology. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 349--368.
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  22.  14
    What Price Better Health? Hazards of the Research Imperative.Charles E. Rosenberg & Daniel Callahan - 2004 - Hastings Center Report 34 (4):50.
  23.  7
    Methodology, Theory and the Philosophy of Science.Alexander Rosenberg - 2017 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 66 (3-4):377-393.
  24.  88
    Why Social Science is Biological Science.Alex Rosenberg - 2017 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 48 (3):341-369.
    The social sciences need to take seriously their status as divisions of biology. As such they need to recognize the central role of Darwinian processes in all the phenomena they seek to explain. An argument for this claim is formulated in terms of a small number of relatively precise premises that focus on the nature of the kinds and taxonomies of all the social sciences. The analytical taxonomies of all the social sciences are shown to require a Darwinian approach to (...)
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  25. A brief introduction to the guidance theory of representation.Gregg H. Rosenberg & Michael L. Anderson - unknown
    Recent trends in the philosophy of mind and cognitive science can be fruitfully characterized as part of the ongoing attempt to come to grips with the very idea of homo sapiens--an intelligent, evolved, biological agent--and its signature contribution is the emergence of a philosophical anthropology which, contra Descartes and his thinking thing, instead puts doing at the center of human being. Applying this agency-oriented line of thinking to the problem of representation, this paper introduces the Guidance Theory, according to which (...)
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  26.  52
    Fusing the images.Jay F. Rosenberg - 1990 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 21 (1):1-23.
  27.  43
    Are generic predictions enough?Alexander Rosenberg - 1989 - Erkenntnis 30 (1-2):43 - 68.
    I have argued not that economics has no predictive content, but that it is limited, or at least has so far been limited to generic predictions. Now this is an important kind of prediction, and almost certainly a necessary preliminary to specific or quantitative predictions. But if the sketch of an important episode in the twentieth century history of the subject I have given is both correct and representative, then economics seems pretty well stuck at the level of generic prediction. (...)
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  28. Identity and substance in Hume and Kant.Jay F. Rosenberg - 2000 - Topoi 19 (2):137-145.
    According to Hume, the idea of a persisting, self-identical object, distinct from our impressions of it, and the idea of a duration of time, the mere passage of time without change, are mutually supporting "fictions". Each rests upon a "mistake", the commingling of "qualities of the imagination" or "impressions of reflection" with "external" impressions (perceptions), and, strictly speaking, we are conceptually and epistemically entitled to neither. Among Kant's aims in the First Critique is the securing of precisely these entitlements. Like (...)
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  29.  37
    The Political Philosophy of Biological Endowments: Some Considerations.Alexander Rosenberg - 1987 - Social Philosophy and Policy 5 (1):1-31.
    Is a government required or permitted to redistribute the gains and losses that differences in biological endowments generate? In particular, does the fact that individuals possess different biological endowments lead to unfair advantages within a market economy? These are questions on which some people are apt to have strong intuitions and ready arguments. Egalitarians may say yes and argue that as unearned, undeserved advantages and disadvantages, biological endowments are never fair, and that the market simply exacerbates these inequities. Libertarians may (...)
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  30.  37
    Equality, Sufficiency, and Opportunity in the Just Society.Alexander Rosenberg - 1995 - Social Philosophy and Policy 12 (2):54-71.
    It seems to be almost a given of contemporary Anglo-American political philosophy that the just society is obligated to establish and ensure the equality of its members. Debate begins when we come to delineate the forms and limits of the equality society is obligated to underwrite. In this essay I offer the subversive suggestion that equality is not something the just society should aim for. Instead I offer another objective, one which is to be preferred both because it is more (...)
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  31. Intention and action among the macromolecules.Alexander Rosenberg - 1986 - In Nicholas Rescher (ed.), Current Issues in Teleology. University Press of America. pp. 65--56.
     
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  32. Philosophy’s Self-Image.Jay F. Rosenberg - 1982 - Analyse & Kritik 4 (1):114-128.
    Rorty rejects the idea of a "permanent and neutral matrix of Heuristic concepts". The claim of privilege, however, is separable from the aim of universality, and this idea can be transposed into a regulative ideal, while still preserving the unique intellectual mission of a discipline of philosophy. Rorty's own positive picture of "edifying Philosophy" in contrast is arguably irresponsible and grounded in misreadings both of the epistemology of science and of episodes in the history of philosophy, especially the contributions of (...)
     
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  33. On Sellars's two images of the world.Jay F. Rosenberg - 2009 - In Willem A. DeVries (ed.), Empiricism, Perceptual Knowledge, Normativity, and Realism: Essays on Wilfrid Sellars. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
     
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  34.  12
    On the scattering of phonons by spins at low temperatures experimental.H. M. Rosenberg & B. Sujak - 1960 - Philosophical Magazine 5 (60):1299-1301.
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  35. Perché la tecnica non sa prevedere il suo futuro? Incertezza e cambiamento tecnico.Nathan Rosenberg - 1996 - Nuova Civiltà Delle Macchine 14 (3/4):45-52.
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  36.  10
    Philo of Stockholm. The ecumenical heresies of Rabbi Marcus Ehrenpreis.Göran Rosenberg - 2019 - Nordisk judaistik/Scandinavian Jewish Studies 30 (2):62-72.
    This paper was presented at the conference ‘The Marrano Phenomenon: Jewish Hidden Tradition and Modernity’, Warsaw, 16–19 September 2019. It considers the case of Marcus Ehrenpreis, chief rabbi of Stockholm. Ehrenpreis followed in the tradition from Antiquity of Philo of Alexandria, who expressed his Jewish philosophy in Greek, and Moses Mendelssohn, who attempted to bring the principles of the Englightenment to German Jews and to promote an understanding of Judaism among non­Jews. Ehrenpreis sought to follow a similar path among the (...)
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  37. Philosophy of Social Science, coll. « Dimensions of Philosophy ».Alexander Rosenberg - 1990 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 180 (1):104-105.
     
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  38.  13
    Referential processes of speakers and listeners.Seymour Rosenberg & Bertram D. Cohen - 1966 - Psychological Review 73 (3):208-231.
  39.  12
    Reply to stroud.Jay F. Rosenberg - 1977 - Philosophical Studies 31 (2):117-121.
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  40.  4
    The Life of Dr John Radcliffe 1652-1714, Benefactor of the University of Oxford. Campbell R. Hone.Albert Rosenberg - 1951 - Isis 42 (3):250-251.
  41.  24
    10 The metaphysics of microeconomics.Alex Rosenberg - 2001 - In Uskali Mäki (ed.), The Economic World View: Studies in the Ontology of Economics. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 66--174.
  42.  11
    The Retrieval of Religious Intellectuality.Randall S. Rosenberg - 2011 - Renascence 63 (3):211-228.
  43.  15
    The thermal conductivity of metals at low temperatures. Deviations from ideal behaviour.H. M. Rosenberg - 1957 - Philosophical Magazine 2 (16):541-547.
  44.  8
    The Text in the Machine: Electronic Texts in the Humanities. Toby Burrows.Robert Rosenberg - 2000 - Isis 91 (3):642-643.
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  45.  36
    Unfit for Democracy? Irrational, Rationalizing, and Biologically Predisposed Citizens.Shawn Rosenberg - 2017 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 29 (3):362-387.
    ABSTRACTDecades of research demonstrate that most people have little knowledge or understanding of politics. Two recent works suggest that this reflects the limits of human cognitive capacity. Rather than being reasoned, political thinking is mostly preconscious, automatic, and recall driven. Consequently, it is vulnerable to contextual cueing, preexisting biases, and biological and genetic predispositions. However, this research is oriented by an inadequate understanding of cognition.
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  46.  8
    Untold Lives: The First Generation of American Women Psychologists. Elizabeth Scarborough, Laurel Furumoto.Rosalind Rosenberg - 1988 - Isis 79 (1):114-115.
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  47.  22
    V. B. Kudrávcév. O pokrytiáh prédpolnyh klassov k-značnoj logiki . Diskrétnyj analiz, no. 17 , pp. 32–44.I. G. Rosenberg - 1975 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 40 (1):98-99.
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  48.  31
    Weintraub's Aims: A Brief Rejoinder.Alexander Rosenberg - 1987 - Economics and Philosophy 3 (1):143-144.
    Weintraub is not really interested in whether economics is “science” or not. “Economists are not so unsophisticated as to think that calling economics a ‘science’ says anything about what economists do or should do”. But can it really be a matter of indifference to him whether the subject has the character of chemistry as opposed to literary criticism?
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  49.  10
    William James and George Santayana The Extent of a a Philosophic Vision.Leo T. Rosenberg - 1991 - Overheard in Seville 9 (9):25-35.
  50.  21
    Zaharova É. Ú.. Kritérij polnoty sistém funkcij iz Pκ . Problémy kibérnétiki, vol. 18 , pp. 5–10.Ivo Rosenberg - 1969 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 33 (4):606-607.
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