Results for 'W. S. Sellars'

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  1.  15
    Language and Myth.W. S. Sellars - 1948 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 9 (2):326-329.
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  2. Counterfactuals.W. S. Sellars - 1975 - In Ernest Sosa (ed.), Causation and conditionals. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 126--146.
  3.  5
    Professor Dewey's View of Agreement.R. W. Sellars - 1907 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 4 (16):432-435.
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  4.  47
    The seventeenth annual meeting of the western philosophical association.E. H. Hollands, R. W. Sellars, A. W. Moore, B. H. Bode, E. S. Ames, G. D. Walcott, Edwin D. Starbuck, J. M. Mecklin, H. B. Alexander, V. T. Thayer, R. C. Lodge, Ellsworth Faris & Edward L. Schaub - 1917 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 14 (15):403-414.
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  5. Hurchman and Ackoff's methods of inquiry. [REVIEW]W. Sellars - 1951 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 12:149.
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  6.  9
    Professor Dewey's view of agreement.R. W. Sellars - 1907 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 4 (16):432-435.
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  7.  14
    obbermin's Christian Belief in God. [REVIEW]R. W. Sellars - 1919 - Journal of Philosophy 16 (10):277.
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  8.  5
    offey's Epistemology. [REVIEW]R. W. Sellars - 1918 - Journal of Philosophy 15 (20):557.
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  9.  7
    Lord Justice Bowen's Virgil. [REVIEW]W. Y. Sellar - 1888 - The Classical Review 2 (3):66-70.
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  10.  26
    Master Virgil Master Virgil: the Author of the Aeneid as he seemed in the Middle Ages. A series of studies by J. S. Tunison. Cincinnati, 1888. 10s. [REVIEW]W. Y. Sellar - 1889 - The Classical Review 3 (06):265-269.
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  11. Reply to Alan Donagan on my views on 'determinism and freedom'.Wilfrid S. Sellars - 1975 - Philosophical Studies 27 (March):149-184.
  12.  10
    Some Remarks on Kant's Theory of Experience (Translated by M. Evstigneev).Wilfrid Sellars - 2021 - Studies in Transcendental Philosophy 2 (1).
    Kant never tires of telling us that Nature and the Space and Time which are its forms exist as a system of “representations.” Now a prepresentation is either a representing or a something represented. Does Kant mean that nature is a system of representings? Or that it is a system of representeds? And, in any case, what would the claim amount to? (Sellars W. (1974) Some Remarks on Kant’s Theory of Experience. In: Essays in Philosophy and Its History. Philosophical (...)
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  13. Action, knowledge, and reality.Wilfrid Sellars & Hector-Neri Castañeda (eds.) - 1975 - Indianapolis,: Bobbs-Merrill.
    Studies in Wilfrid Sellars' philosophy: Aune, B. Sellars on practical reason.--Castañeda, H.-N. Some reflections on Wilfrid Sellars' theory of intentions.--Donagan, A. Determinism and freedom: Sellars and the reconciliationist thesis.--Robinson, W. S. The legend of the given.--Clark, R. The sensuous content of perception.--Grossmann, R. Perceptual objects, elementary particles, and emergent properties.--Rosenberg, J. F. The elusiveness of categories, the Archimedean dilemma, and the nature of man: a study in Sellarsian metaphysics.--Turnbull, R. G. Things, natures, and properties.--Wells, R. The (...)
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  14. SELLARS, R. W. -The Principles and Problems of Philosophy. [REVIEW]L. S. S. L. S. S. - 1927 - Mind 36:514.
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  15. Mind and Nature: A Study of the Naturalistic Philosophy of Cohen, Woodbridge and Sellars[REVIEW]A. W. W. - 1972 - Review of Metaphysics 25 (3):552-553.
    This is a study of "three metaphysical naturalists" who, although minor figures in their own right, nonetheless substantially influenced the direction and cast of American naturalism. The theme that unites them, according to Delaney, is their reaction to the bifurcation of mind and corporeal nature bequeathed to modern philosophy by Descartes and Locke. Morris R. Cohen, as a logician and philosopher of science, saw such a bifurcation as engendering conventionalism and a type of nominalism in science, and he reacted against (...)
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  16. Sellars' treatment of sensation.Theodore S. Voelkel - 1973 - Personalist 54 (2):130-148.
  17.  14
    Roy Wood Sellars on the Materialist Theory of Knowledge.A. S. Bogomolov - 1962 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 1 (3):31-32.
    Prof. R. W. Sellars' article "Three Levels of Materialism," published in the present number of our journal, marks an important stage in the philosophical development of the noted American philosopher. In it he gives something in the nature of a summation of his views on one of the most important problems in the theory of knowledge—that of perception—to which Sellars has devoted many years of work and quite a number of articles.
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  18. Review of Norman P. Melchert's "Realism, Materialism, and the Mind: The Philosophy of Roy Wood Sellars". [REVIEW]Arthur W. Munk - 1970 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 51 (4):547.
     
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  19. Experience and Content: Consequences of a Continuum Theory.W. M. Davies - 1996 - Avebury.
    This book is about experiential content: what it is; what kind of account can be given of it. I am concerned with identifying and attacking one main view - I call it the inferentialist proposal. This account is central to the philosophy of mind, epistemology and philosophy of science and perception. I claim, however, that it needs to be recast into something far more subtle and enriched, and I attempt to provide a better alternative in these pages. The inferentialist proposal (...)
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  20. W. Sellars's myth of the Given.R. Gloznek - 2003 - Filozofia 58 (7):462-470.
     
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  21. Experience and Content: Consequences of a Continuum Theory.W. Martin Davies - 1993 - Dissertation,
    This thesis is about experiential content: what it is; what kind of account can be given of it. I am concerned with identifying and attacking one main view - I call it the inferentialist proposal. This account is central to the philosophy of mind, epistemology and philosophy of science and perception. I claim, however, that it needs to be recast into something far more subtle and enriched, and I attempt to provide a better alternative in these pages. The inferentialist proposal (...)
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  22.  57
    Sellars’s Ryleans Revisited.Robert M. Gordon - 2000 - ProtoSociology 14:102-114.
    Wilfrid Sellars's essay, "Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind," (1) introduced, although it did not exactly endorse, what many philosophers consider the first defense of functionalism in the philosophy of mind and the original "theory" theory of commonsense psychology.
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  23. Meaning as Use: A Critique and Reconstruction of Robert Brandom's Practice-Based Account of Semantic Norms.Ronald W. Loeffler - 2001 - Dissertation, Northwestern University
    This dissertation defends an account of linguistic meaning and propositional mental content in terms of linguistic practice. In other words, it clarifies and defends the counterintuitive claim that linguistic communication is prior, rather than posterior, in the order of explanation to the semantic features of thought and talk. The project's point of departure is Robert Brandom's comprehensive recent theory of linguistic practice. Two core theses characterize Brandom's theory. First, meaning and content are to be understood in terms of the norms (...)
     
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  24.  22
    Philosophical logic.J. W. Davis (ed.) - 1969 - Dordrecht,: D. Reidel.
    The purpose of this brief introduction is to describe the origin of the papers here presented and to acknowledge the help of some of the many individuals who were involved in the preparation of this volume. Of the eighteen papers, nine stem from the annual fall colloquium of the Depart ment of Philosophy at the University of Western Ontario held in London, Ontario from November 10 to November 12, 1967. The colloquium was entitled 'Philosophical Logic'. After some discussion, the editors (...)
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  25.  10
    New Readings in Philosophical Analysis. [REVIEW]G. W. - 1973 - Review of Metaphysics 26 (4):751-752.
    The best that has been thought and said in the analytical tradition since 1950 is here enshrined in a monumental testament to an idea. The naked sense of the idea is that the deepest problems encountered by man in understanding himself and his world will yield more readily to rapier-sharp conceptual analysis than to bold, creative, oracular, synoptic Anschauungen [[sic]] which are hard to get a handle on empirically. Although this beguiling idea, this analytical imperative, is itself only heuristic and (...)
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  26.  10
    Arthur W. Munk's "Roy Wood Sellars as Creative Thinker and Critic". [REVIEW]Norman Melchert - 1973 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 34 (2):286.
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  27.  52
    Teleology without tears: Naturalism, neo-naturalism, and evaluationism in the analysis of function statements in biology (and a bet on the twenty-first century).K. W. M. Fulford - 2000 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 7 (1):77-94.
    This article is a response to the proposal, made by Thornton elsewhere in this special issue of PPP, that the "space of reasons" (as defined by the work particularly of Sellars and McDowell) might contain the conceptual resources for naturalizing biological function statements without reducing their ostensibly teleological meanings to the "space of causes". I agree with Thornton, (1) that ordinary reductive naturalism (as in Wakefield's work) is unable to mark the key distinction between a functional system's function(s) and (...)
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  28.  5
    Special Relativity from the Viewpoint of R. W. Sellars’ The Philosophy of Physical Realism.Matthias Neuber - 2023 - In Chiara Russo Krauss & Luigi Laino (eds.), Philosophers and Einstein's Relativity: The Early Philosophical Reception of the Relativistic Revolution. Springer Verlag. pp. 183-200.
    Roy Wood Sellars (1880–1973) is often reduced to his role as father of Wilfrid Sellars. This is unfair because during the 1920s, ‘30s, and ‘40s, Roy Wood was one of the leading figures of the then prevailing American realist movement. In the present paper, I will focus on one particular facet of R. W. Sellars’ philosophical approach: his continual examination of Albert Einstein’s special theory of relativity. I shall primarily reconstruct his discussion of Einstein’s theory, as it (...)
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  29. Sellarsian materialism.William S. Robinson - 1982 - Philosophy of Science 49 (June):212-27.
    Wilfrid Sellars has proposed a materialist account of sensation which relies in part on the postulation of special kinds of individuals. This postulational strategy appears to be analogous to the one that introduces such entities as electrons. After setting out Sellars' account, I focus on his application of the postulational strategy. I argue that this application requires the discovery of new effects for familiar properties; that this kind of discovery is disanalogous to what postulation usually does; and that (...)
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  30.  55
    The place of color in the scheme of things: A roadmap to sellar's Carus lectures.Jay F. Rosenberg - 1982 - The Monist 65 (July):315-335.
    Sellars’s views on the Myth of the Given and the ontological status of secondary qualities, one would have thought, are well-known, even if not always well-understood. One would not have expected his Carus Lectures, then, to offer anything radically new and exciting. The ground that they cover is, after all, familiar—from “Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind”, from “Philosophy and the Scientific Image of Man”, from “The Identity Approach to the Mind-Body Problem”, and from the ensuing debates with Cornman (...)
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  31.  73
    Professor Sellars on meaning and aboutness.Sid Thomas - 1962 - Philosophical Studies 13 (5):68-74.
    Professor sellars has written a paper in which he holds that the statement (1) "karl's mind believes it is raining" is logically equivalent to a statement of the form (2) "karl's body is in state 'p'." in thomas' analysis of these two statements he argues that the plausibility of this position depends upon whether the facts expressed by (1) and (2) possess the same sort of "intentionality" and "aboutness." he offers various formulations of these statements which he argues show (...)
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  32.  9
    Notes on Seneca's Letters.W. S. Watt - 1982 - Classical Quarterly 32 (2):399-403.
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  33. The legend of the given.William S. Robinson - 1975 - In Hector-Neri Castañeda (ed.), Action, Knowledge, and Reality. Indianapolis,: Bobbs-Merrill.
     
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  34.  18
    The Philosophical Inheritance of Rabindranath Tagore.W. S. Urquhart - 1916 - International Journal of Ethics 26 (3):398-413.
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  35.  1
    Ten Notes On Apuleius, Apologia.W. S. Watt - 1994 - Mnemosyne 47 (4):517-520.
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  36.  9
    'Moderne eksegese' van die nuwe testament - 'n ondermyning van die skrifgesag?W. S. Vorster - 1979 - HTS Theological Studies 35 (1/2).
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  37.  9
    Maniliana.W. S. Watt - 1994 - Classical Quarterly 44 (2):451-457.
    Housman reads assueta euolitans; the former word is a conjecture of his own, the latter a conjecture of Ellis, which I think he would have ignored if the relevant fascicle of the Thesaurus had been available to show that euolitare occurs once in Columella and then not before the sixth century. If assueto is sound, mundi must be changed to mundo or to another noun. Bentley read mundo, and this may well be the right solution: the eagle carries thunderbolts to (...)
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  38. Lucretiana.W. S. Watt - 1996 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 140 (2):248-256.
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  39.  13
    A reader-response approach to Matthew 24:3-28.W. S. Vorster - 1991 - HTS Theological Studies 47 (4).
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  40.  13
    Die brief aan Rheginos: Oor geloof en rede en die opstanding.W. S. Vorster - 1986 - HTS Theological Studies 42 (2).
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  41.  15
    Jesus: Eschatological prophet and/or wisdom teacher?W. S. Vorster - 1991 - HTS Theological Studies 47 (2).
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  42.  11
    Op weg na 'n post-kritiese Nuwe-Testamentiese Wetenskap.W. S. Vorster - 1987 - HTS Theological Studies 43 (3).
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  43.  18
    The production of the Gospel of Mark: An essay on intertextuality.W. S. Vorster - 1993 - HTS Theological Studies 49 (3).
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  44.  38
    Mutationism, not Lamarckism, captures the novelty of CRISPR–Cas.Jeremy G. Wideman, S. Andrew Inkpen, W. Ford Doolittle & Rosemary J. Redfield - 2019 - Biology and Philosophy 34 (1):12.
    Koonin, in an article in this issue, claims that CRISPR–Cas systems are mechanisms for the inheritance of acquired adaptive characteristics, and that the operation of such systems comprises a “Lamarckian mode of evolution.” We argue that viewing the CRISPR–Cas mechanism as facilitating a form of “directed mutation” more accurately represents how the system behaves and the history of neoDarwinian thinking, and is to be preferred.
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  45.  20
    Supplementary Note on the Name of the Black Sea.W. S. Allen - 1948 - Classical Quarterly 42 (1-2):60-.
    Since my article in C.Q. xli, pp. 86 ff., a further discussion of the problem has come to my notice. H. Jacobsohn, in an article entitled Σκνθικ in Zeitschr. f. vergleichende Sprachforschung, liv, pp. 254 ff., anticipates my point that the Greek ᾊξενƿς is borrowed not from Avestan but from some other Iranian language, probably Scythian. He also makes outan attractive case, based on the word παφδεισ¿ς, for considering the Iranian pronunciation at the period when the loan occurred to have (...)
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  46.  23
    The Name of the Black Sea in Greek.W. S. Allen - 1947 - Classical Quarterly 41 (3-4):86-.
    In an article on ‘The Name of the Euxine Pontus’ in C.Q.xxxiv , pp. 123 ff., A. C. Moorhouse rejects the suggestion made by M. Vasmer and supported by Boisacq that the original Greek title ξενος was a popular rendering of the Avestan adjective αχṦαệνα, ‘of dark colour’. Moorhouse raises the following objections to this theory: i. There is no direct evidence of the Avestan adjective ever being applied to the Black Sea. ii. In historical times ‘Avestan is a long (...)
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  47.  33
    Alfred Pretor.W. S. A. - 1908 - The Classical Review 22 (01):26-.
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  48. Behaviour therapy in anorexia nervosa: A data-based approach to the question.W. S. Agras & J. Werne - 1978 - In John Paul Brady & Harlow Keith Hammond Brodie (eds.), Controversy in psychiatry. Philadelphia: Saunders. pp. 655--75.
     
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  49.  9
    Inadequacy of "Sublimation" as a Concept for Ethics.W. S. Taylor - 1931 - International Journal of Ethics 42 (2):210.
  50.  2
    The Fascination of Pantheism.W. S. Urquhart - 1910 - International Journal of Ethics 21 (3):313.
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