Results for 'Natural Signs'

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  1.  19
    Natural signs and knowledge of God: a new look at theistic arguments.C. Stephen Evans - 2012 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Is there such a thing as natural knowledge of God? C. Stephen Evans presents the case for understanding theistic arguments as expressions of natural signs in order to gain a new perspective both on their strengths and weaknesses. Three classical, much-discussed theistic arguments - cosmological, teleological, and moral - are examined for the natural signs they embody. At the heart of this book lie several relatively simple ideas. One is that if there is a God (...)
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  2.  43
    Natural Signs.Laird Addis - 1983 - Review of Metaphysics 36 (3):543 - 568.
    AN entity is a natural sign if by its very nature it represents some other entity or would-be entity. Many different kinds of things are said to represent other things, and in many cases it is recognized that the connection is purely conventional, in others that it is partly conventional being based in some sense on natural relations, and perhaps in yet others purely natural. My thesis is that a thought and a thought alone is, or contains (...)
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  3. BURNHAM Douglas and Martin JESINGHAUSEN: Nietzsche's 'The Birth'.Evans C. Stephen & Natural Signs - 2010 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 18 (4):737-740.
  4.  53
    Natural Signs and the Origin of Language.Anton Sukhoverkhov - 2012 - Biosemiotics 5 (2):153-159.
    This article considers natural signs and their role in the origin of language. Natural signs, sometimes called primary signs, are connected with their signified by causal relationships, concomitance, or likeliness. And their acquisition is directed by both objective reality and past experience (memory). The discovery and use of natural signs is a required prerequisite of existence for any living systems because they are indispensable to movement, the search for food, regulation, communication, and many (...)
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  5.  35
    Natural Signs: A Theory of Intentionality.Laird Addis - 1989 - Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  6.  10
    How to hygge: the Nordic secrets to a happy life.Signe Johansen - 2017 - New York: St. Martin's Griffin.
    Nature & the seasons -- Outdoor pursuits -- The spirit of self-sufficiency -- The joy of fika -- The Nordic kitchen -- Healthy hedonism -- Design & home -- Kinship, conviviality & openness -- How to hygge-at a glance.
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  7.  20
    Natural Signs: A Theory of Intentionality.Reinhardt Grossmann - 1992 - Noûs 26 (4):551-555.
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  8.  20
    Natural Signs and Knowledge of God: A New Look at Theistic Arguments.James E. Bruce - 2012 - Philosophia Christi 14 (2):477-481.
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  9.  19
    Natural Signs[REVIEW]Francis Collingwood - 1992 - Review of Metaphysics 46 (1):143-145.
    All we have are appearances, memories, and words, in our consciousness. Addis writes about several entities which are not simply any of the above but are deemed essential to discussion of what consciousness is and does. He directs praise and criticism to other writers as he approves or disapproves of their assertions about reductionism, materialism, dualism, aboutness, and physical particulars, to name a few items. To read the book one must learn of all these things and see how the author (...)
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  10.  13
    Reviews - Natural Signs and Knowledge of God By C. Stephen Evans Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010, ISBN 978-0-19-921716-8x + 207 pp., £45.00. [REVIEW]Richard Norman - 2011 - Philosophy 86 (2):299-303.
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  11.  7
    Reid on Natural Signs, Taste and Moral Perception.Esther R. Kroeker - 2009 - In Sabine Roeser (ed.), Reid on ethics. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
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  12.  59
    Thomas Reid on Natural Signs, Natural Principles, and the Existence of the External World.Dale Jacquette - 2003 - Review of Metaphysics 57 (2):279-300.
    AN EMPIRICIST, ONE MIGHT THINK, OUGHT TO BE AGNOSTIC about the existence of the external world. That, anyway, is the received wisdom of respected empiricists such as David Hume. In A Treatise of Human Nature, book I, part II, section VI, Of the idea of existence, and of external existence, Hume argues that.
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  13.  7
    Persuading consumers: The use of conditional constructions in British hotel websites.Carmen Gregori-Signes & Miguel Fuster-Márquez - 2018 - Discourse and Communication 12 (6):587-607.
    Hotel websites display textual and non-textual strategies with the aim of turning online visitors into customers. This article focuses on two related textual aspects: how consumers are discursively construed and how conditional constructions are used in order to persuade and convince consumers of the adequacy of the hotel. The framework adopted for the analysis combines Stern’s notion of ‘implied consumer’ with a corpus-driven approach. The corpus data comprises 114 British hotel websites and totals half a million words. This is a (...)
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  14.  31
    An Examination of C. Stephen Evans’s “Natural Signs and Knowledge of God: A New Look at Theistic Arguments”.Ulrich Schmidt - 2014 - Philosophy and Theology 26 (1):151-185.
    In his excellent book Natural Signs and Knowledge of God: A New Look at Theistic Arguments, C. Stephen Evans argues that what underlies the classical theistic arguments are theistic natural signs. The awareness of our own contingency underlies the cosmological argument, beneficial order underlies the teleological argument, our experience of feeling moral obligations underlies the moral argument, and the intrinsic value of human beings underlies the axiological argument. Natural signs point to an entity without (...)
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  15.  1
    Lusting for the natural sign.James A. W. Heffernan - 1994 - Semiotica 98 (1-2):219-228.
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  16. Laird Addis, Natural Signs: A Theory of Intentionality Reviewed by.Dale Jacquette - 1991 - Philosophy in Review 11 (1):1-3.
     
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  17.  21
    Natural Signs: A Theory of Intentionality, by Laird Addis. [REVIEW]Ausonio Marras - 1992 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 52 (1):222-227.
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  18.  38
    Natural Signs and Knowledge of God: A New Look at Theistic Arguments, by C. Stephen Evans. [REVIEW]Joshua C. Thurow - 2013 - Faith and Philosophy 30 (2):221-224.
  19.  25
    "Review of" Natural Signs and Knowledge of God: A New Look at Theistic Arguments". [REVIEW]Jonathan Fuqua - 2012 - Essays in Philosophy 13 (2):611-616.
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  20. Are Locke's 'Ideas' Images, Intentional Objects or Natural Signs?M. Ayers - 1986 - Locke Studies 25:3.
  21.  9
    Incarnate Arguments and Natural Signs[REVIEW]Leigh Vicens - 2016 - Syndicate Theology 3.
  22. Laird Addis, Natural Signs: A Theory of Intentionality. [REVIEW]Dale Jacquette - 1991 - Philosophy in Review 11:1-3.
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  23.  7
    Representation in Words and in Drama: The Illusion of the Natural Sign.Murray Krieger - 1990 - In Frederick Burwick & Walter Pape (eds.), Aesthetic illusion: theoretical and historical approaches. New York: W. de Gruyter. pp. 1989--183.
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  24.  53
    Natural sciences as textual interpretation: The hermeneutics of the natural sign.James Franklin - 1984 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 44 (4):509-520.
    There are close parallels between perception (the interpretation of sensory experience as representing physical objects) and hermeneutics (the interpretation of signs as having meaning). Perceptual illusions corresponds to ambiguities in texts; naive realism corresponds to fundamentalism; the scientist's reinterpretation of the "manifest image" to the global/local interplay of the "hermeneutic circle" in the interpretation of large texts.
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  25.  7
    Review of Natural Signs and Knowledge of God: A New Look at Theistic Arguments, by C. Stephen Evans. [REVIEW]Jonathan Fuqua - 2012 - Essays in Philosophy 13 (2):611-616.
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  26.  9
    Logic, Signs and Nature in the Renaissance: The Case of Learned Medicine.Ian Maclean - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    This is a major work by Ian Maclean exploring the foundations of learning in the Renaissance. Logic, Signs and Nature offers a profoundly learned, compelling and original account of the range of what was thinkable and knowable by learned medics of the period c.1530-1630. This is a study of great significance to the history of medicine, as well as the history of European ideas in general.
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  27. Natural meaning, probabilistic meaning, and the interpretation of emotional signs.Constant Bonard - 2023 - Synthese 201 (5):1-24.
    When we see or hear a spontaneous emotional expression, we usually immediately, effortlessly, and often correctly interpret it to mean happiness, sadness, or some other emotion as well as what this emotion is about. How do we do that? In this article, I evaluate how useful the concepts of natural meaning and probabilistic meaning are when it comes to explaining how we and other animals interpret emotional signs displayed without communicative intentions. I argue that Grice’s notion of (...) meaning, because it is a factive relation, is too restrictive for this purpose. I then present the notion of probabilistic meaning. The latter seems adequate for analyzing our ability to interpret non-communicative emotional signs, but it faces several difficulties when it comes to analyzing how we and other animals interpret emotional _signals_, i.e. signs that have the function to communicate emotional information. I present three of these difficulties. En passant, I suggest that a teleosemantic notion may be better suited for these challenges. (shrink)
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  28.  3
    Communicative signs meaning naturally.Jonas Pfister - 2010 - Pragmatics and Cognition 18 (1):40-67.
    Paul Grice distinguishes between natural meaning and non-natural meaning, where the first notion is especially connected to something's being a natural sign and the second to communication. It is argued that some of the arguments against the distinction being exhaustive are based on a misinterpretation of Grice, but also that the distinction cannot be exhaustive if one takes into account both the criterion of factivity and the connection to communication. If one makes a distinction between natural (...)
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  29.  93
    Inference from signs: ancient debates about the nature of evidence.James V. Allen - 2001 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Original and penetrating, this book investigates of the notion of inference from signs, which played a central role in ancient philosophical and scientific method. It examines an important chapter in ancient epistemology: the debates about the nature of evidence and of the inferences based on it--or signs and sign-inferences as they were called in antiquity. As the first comprehensive treatment of this topic, it fills an important gap in the histories of science and philosophy.
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  30.  52
    Nature as the image of God: Reflections on the signs of the sacred.Langdon Gilkey - 1994 - Zygon 29 (4):489-505.
    . This is a brief survey of aspects of the modern scientific view of nature to see if implied therein are signs or traces of the sacred–as early religious apprehension surely supposed. Nature's power and order are discussed as is the strange dialectic of death and life, evident in modern biology as it also is in all early religion.
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  31. "Signs for a People Who Reason": Religious Experience and Natural Theology.Amber L. Griffioen - 2017 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 9 (2):139-163.
    In this paper, I examine various philosophical approaches to religious experience and natural theology and look at some ways in which the former might be relevant for the latter. I argue that by thinking more about oft-overlooked or -underemphasized understandings of a) what might constitute religious experience and b) what functions natural theology might serve, we can begin to develop a more nuanced approach to natural theological appeals to religious experience — one that makes use of materially (...)
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  32.  13
    Signs of Invisibility: Nonrecognition of Natural Environments as Persons in International and Domestic Law.Bruce Baer Arnold - 2023 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 36 (2):457-475.
    Recognition of legal personhood in contemporary international and domestic law is a matter of signs. Those signs identify the existence of the legal person: human animals, corporations and states. They also identify facets of that personhood that situate the signified entities within webs of rights and responsibilities. Entities that are not legal persons lack agency and are thus invisible. They may be acted on but, absent the personhood that is communicated through a range of indicia and shapes both (...)
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  33.  28
    Minimal Properties of a Natural Semiotic System: Response to Commentaries on “How Molecules Became Signs”.Terrence W. Deacon - 2023 - Biosemiotics 16 (1):1-13.
    In the target article “How molecules became signs” I offer a molecular “thought experiment” that provides a paradigm for resolving the major incompatibilities between biosemiotic and natural science accounts of living processes. To resolve these apparent incompatibilities I outline a plausible empirically testable model system that exemplifies the emergence of chemical processes exhibiting semiotic causal properties from basic nonliving chemical processes. This model system is described as an autogenic virus because of its virus-like form, but its nonparasitic self-repair (...)
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  34.  10
    The Signing Action of Nature.W. John Coletta - 1991 - Semiotics:351-354.
  35. Social signs and natural bodies: On T.J. Clark’s Farewell to an Idea.Jay Bernstein - 2000 - Radical Philosophy 104.
     
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  36.  16
    Le statut des signes et la présupposition mutuelle de la nature et de l’art dans le système de Condillac.Élisabeth Schwartz - 2019 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 128 (1):19-55.
    Condillac a tenu à souligner l’originalité radicale de la thèse défendue dans l’ Essai au sujet du statut des signes dans leur rapport originaire à la pensée. Il la maintiendra jusque dans l’ Art de penser inchangée malgré de profonds remaniements intervenus avec le Traité des sensations quant au contenu de cette interaction, que sa Grammaire et sa Logique lui semblent avoir pourtant « achevé de démontrer ». Ce statut des signes se trouve soumis à la critique dès les Lettres (...)
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  37.  12
    The line through the heart: natural law as fact, theory, and sign of contradiction.J. Budziszewski - 2011 - Wilmington, DE: Intercollegiate Studies Institute.
    Natural law as fact, theory, and sign of contradiction -- The second tablet project -- The mystery of what? -- The natural, the connatural, and the unnatural -- Accept no imitations: natural law vs. naturalism -- Thou shalt not kill . . . whom? the meaning of the person -- Capital punishment: the case for justice -- Constitution vs. constitutionalism -- Constitutional metaphysics -- The liberal, illiberal religion.
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  38.  4
    Empty signs? Reading the book of nature in renaissance science.Paula Findlen - 1990 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 21 (3):511-518.
  39.  57
    Natural Propositions: The Actuality of Peirce's Doctrine of Dici-signs by Frederik Stjernfelt.Helmut Pape - 2015 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 51 (1):108-120.
    Frederik Stjernfelt’s book Natural Propositions is much more than just a study arguing for the actuality of Peirce’s notion of dicisign. Not unlike his 2007 treatise Diagrammatology, FS does many things at the same time, not all of them closely related to the project of a functional, naturalistic interpretation of Peirce’s concept of dicisigns and the relation of human cognition and animal, even microbiological processes to one another. The result is an inter- and transdisciplinary study that discusses and criticizes (...)
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  40. Social Signs and Natural Bodies: On TJ Clark's Farewell to an Idea: Episodes from a History of Modernism.J. Bernstein - forthcoming - Radical Philosophy.
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  41.  30
    Le geste de Dieu. Nature et origine du signe chez Spinoza.Lorenzo Vinciguerra - 2010 - Rivista di Storia Della Filosofia 65 (1):57-71.
    God’s gesture. Nature and the origin of the sign in Spinoza. The Author provides the textual and conceptual elements to outline a thought of event in Spinoza’s philosophy. On the one hand necessitas and contingentia are known to exclude one another while, on the other, necessitas and contingere are not opposite. They are the same when seen in relation to the conception of libera necessitas and to the doctrine of the unity of intellect and will. Also, the unity of a (...)
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  42.  37
    Vital Signs: Nature, Culture, Psychoanalysis. Charles Shepherdson. London, New York: Routledge, 2000.Ewa Plonowska Ziarek - 2002 - Hypatia 17 (4):247-251.
  43.  17
    The Signs in Nature: Toward an Emersonian Semiotic Theory.Timothy Michaels - 2016 - Semiotics:149-158.
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  44.  20
    Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society by Catherine R. Stimpson; Woman and Nature: The Roaring within Her by Susan Griffin.Sandra Harding - 1980 - Isis 71:662-664.
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  45. James Allen, Inference from Signs: Ancient Debates about the Nature of Evidence.Diego E. Machuca - 2004 - Philosophie Antique 4 (4):214-219.
    Cet ouvrage est consacré à l’analyse des notions de signe et d’infé­rence à partir de signes chez Aristote et chez des penseurs et des écoles philosophiques et médicales postérieurs. Outre une introduction et un chapitre conclusif, le livre consiste en quatre longues études : « Aristotle on Sign-Inference and Related Forms of Argument », « Rationalism, Empiricism, and Scepticism : Sextus Empiricus’ Treatment of Sign-Inference », « The Stoics on Sign-Inference and Demonstration », « Epicurean...
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  46.  11
    From Thing to Sign and “Natural Object”: Toward a Genetic Phenomenology of Graph Interpretation.Domenico Masciotra, G. Michael Bowen & Wolff-Michael Roth - 2002 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 27 (3):327-356.
    This study was designed to find out what scientists and science students actually do when they are reading familiar and unfamiliar graphs. This study provides rich details of the subtle changes in the ontologies of scientists and science students as they engage in the reading tasks assigned to them. In the course of the readers’ interpretation work, initially unspecified marks on paper are turned into objects with particular topologies that are said to correspond to specific features in the world. We (...)
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  47.  34
    From Umwelt to Mitwelt: Natural laws versus rule-governed sign-mediated interactions (rsi's).Guenther Witzany - 2006 - Semiotica 2006 (158):425-438.
    Within the last decade, thousands of studies have described communication processes in and between organisms. Pragmatic philosophy of biology views communication processes as rule-governed sign-mediated interactions (rsi's). As sign-using individuals exhibit a relationship to following or not-following these rules, the rsi's of living individuals dier fundamentally from cause-and-effect reactions with and between non-living matter, which exclusively underlie natural laws. Umwelt thus becomes a term in investigating physiological influences on organisms that are not components of rsi's. Mitwelt is a term (...)
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  48.  63
    Natural probabilistic information.Daniel M. Kraemer - 2015 - Synthese 192 (9):2901-2919.
    Natural information refers to the information carried by natural signs such as that smoke is thought to carry natural information about fire. A number of influential philosophers have argued that natural information can also be utilized in a theory of mental content. The most widely discussed account of natural information holds that it results from an extremely strong relation between sign and signified. Critics have responded that it is doubtful that there are many strong (...)
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  49.  31
    Pascal's birds: Signs and significance in nature.Yuval Avnur - 2024 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 108 (1):3-20.
    I address a puzzle in Pascal's Pensées. While Pascal emphasized that God is hidden, he also seemed to think that signs of God are everywhere in nature. How does he reconcile these two claims? I offer a novel solution which emphasizes the role of love and what I call “second-personal” significance, and which results in a distinctively Pascalian account of religious experience of nature. By distinguishing implication from various senses of ‘proof’, I explain why, though deeply significant, such experiences (...)
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  50.  6
    Mixing signs and bones: John Deely’s case for global semiosis.Petre Petrov - 2013 - Sign Systems Studies 41 (4):404-423.
    The article develops a critique of John Deely’s ontological realism, specifically in its relevance for the project of global semiotics. Deely, whose theorizations rely heavily on the pre-modern philosophical systems of Thomas Aquinas and the Latin scholastics, has made the most sustained attempt to give philosophical grounding to Charles Peirce’s famous intuition that “all this universe is perfused with signs, if it is not composed exclusively of signs”. The critique developsalong two main lines. Firstly, I contend that Deely’s (...)
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