Results for 'Complete Concepts'

986 found
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  1. Complete Concept Molinism.Godehard Brüntrup & Ruben Schneider - 2013 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 5 (1):93-108.
    A theoretically rigorous approach to the key problems of Molinism leads to a clear distinction between semantic and metaphysical problems. Answers to semantic problems do not provide answers to metaphysical problems that arise from the theory of middle knowledge. The so-called ‘grounding objection’ to Molinism raises a metaphysical problem. The most promising solution to it is a revised form of the traditional ‘essence solution’. Inspired by Leibniz’s idea of a ‘notio completa’ (complete concept), we propose a mathematical model of (...)
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  2. Complete Concept Molinism - Der Molinismus vollständiger Begriffe.Godehard Brüntrup & Ruben Schneider - 2015 - In Thomas Marschler & Thomas Schärtl, Eigenschaften Gottes: Ein Gespräch zwischen systematischer Theologie und analytischer Philosophie. Aschendorff. pp. 363-378.
    Theoretically rigorous approach to the key problems of Molinism.
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  3. Two concepts of completing an infinite number of tasks.Jeremy Gwiazda - 2013 - The Reasoner 7 (6):69-70.
    In this paper, two concepts of completing an infinite number of tasks are considered. After discussing supertasks, equisupertasks are introduced. I suggest that equisupertasks are logically possible.
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  4. Completeness of an ancient logic.John Corcoran - 1972 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 37 (4):696-702.
    In previous articles, it has been shown that the deductive system developed by Aristotle in his "second logic" is a natural deduction system and not an axiomatic system as previously had been thought. It was also stated that Aristotle's logic is self-sufficient in two senses: First, that it presupposed no other logical concepts, not even those of propositional logic; second, that it is (strongly) complete in the sense that every valid argument expressible in the language of the system (...)
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  5. Concerning Formal Concept Analysis on Complete Residuated Lattices.Abner de Mattos Brito - 2019 - Dissertation, University of Campinas, Brazil
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  6. Completing the Divine Action Project: A Unified Metaphysical Framework for Theology and Science.Kevin Michael Mc Guinness - manuscript
    The Divine Action Project (DAP) sought to explain how divine agency could coexist with natural law without lapsing into interventionism or deism (Russell et al. 1993–2001). Its failure was not due to lack of scientific ingenuity but to lack of metaphysical foundation. This article provides that foundation, drawing on the framework developed in The Infinite Reservoir (Mc Guinness forthcoming). At its center is the concept of infinite reciprocal information exchange (IRIE): actuality as triune, simultaneous, and relational. Through deceleration, IRIE is (...)
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  7. Completions, Constructions, and Corollaries.Thomas Mormann - 2009 - In H. Pulte, G. Hanna & H.-J. Jahnke, Explanation and Proof in Mathematics: Philosophical and Educational Perspectives. Springer.
    According to Kant, pure intuition is an indispensable ingredient of mathematical proofs. Kant‘s thesis has been considered as obsolete since the advent of modern relational logic at the end of 19th century. Against this logicist orthodoxy Cassirer’s “critical idealism” insisted that formal logic alone could not make sense of the conceptual co-evolution of mathematical and scientific concepts. For Cassirer, idealizations, or, more precisely, idealizing completions, played a fundamental role in the formation of the mathematical and empirical concepts. The (...)
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  8. Scientia et Vita Terra: Concept Bank in Earth and Life Science for Senior High School.Raphael Kevin Nagal - 2017 - Libacao, Aklan: Department of Education, District of Libacao.
    Scientia et Vita Terra: Concept Bank in Earth and Life Science for Senior High School is a comprehensive instructional resource designed to support the K–12 Earth and Life Science curriculum for Senior High School learners. Developed to provide students with a strong foundational understanding of geoscience and biology, the book integrates essential scientific concepts with structured learning modules, experiential activities, and formative assessments. It traces the Earth’s history and structure, examines geological and atmospheric processes, and explores natural hazards and (...)
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  9. Metamonism: The Radical Completion of Western Metaphysics.Andrii Myshko - manuscript
    This article argues that Metamonistic Proto-Ontology represents the logical completion of a 2,500-year trajectory of Western philosophy from substantial metaphysics to a formal ontology of becoming. Through analysis of the transformation of the concept of substance from Parmenides to Deleuze, we demonstrate that Metamonism, based on the axiom of the Structural Prohibition of Indifference (¬∅) and the Conflict–Moment–Impulse (CMI) operator, eliminates the last “ghosts of substance” and proposes a universal formal ontology where being is identical to becoming.
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  10. The Quantum Strategy of Completeness: On the Self-Foundation of Mathematics.Vasil Penchev - 2020 - Cultural Anthropology eJournal (Elsevier: SSRN) 5 (136):1-12.
    Gentzen’s approach by transfinite induction and that of intuitionist Heyting arithmetic to completeness and the self-foundation of mathematics are compared and opposed to the Gödel incompleteness results as to Peano arithmetic. Quantum mechanics involves infinity by Hilbert space, but it is finitist as any experimental science. The absence of hidden variables in it interpretable as its completeness should resurrect Hilbert’s finitism at the cost of relevant modification of the latter already hinted by intuitionism and Gentzen’s approaches for completeness. This paper (...)
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  11. The Concept of the Simulacrum: Deleuze and the Overturning of Platonism.Daniel W. Smith - 2005 - Continental Philosophy Review 38 (1-2):89-123.
    This article examines Gilles Deleuze’s concept of the simulacrum, which Deleuze formulated in the context of his reading of Nietzsche’s project of “overturning Platonism.” The essential Platonic distinction, Deleuze argues, is more profound than the speculative distinction between model and copy, original and image. The deeper, practical distinction moves between two kinds of images or eidolon, for which the Platonic Idea is meant to provide a concrete criterion of selection “Copies” or icons (eikones) are well-grounded claimants to the transcendent Idea, (...)
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  12. Divine Omniscience: Complete Knowledge or Supreme Knowledge?Jan Heylen - 2024 - In Mirosław Szatkowski, Ontology of Divinity. Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 109-124.
    One of the divine attributes is omniscience. The standard concept of omniscience is the concept of having complete knowledge: God knows every truth. But there are also other concepts of omniscience that are consistent with having incomplete knowledge. I will propose a new concept of omniscience, namely the concept of having supreme knowledge. It is inspired by how Anselm talks about God's knowledge and it makes good sense of a key premise in an Anselmian argument for omniscience. Moreover, (...)
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  13. Knowing How to Complete Task-Tokens.Xiaoxing Zhang - 2025 - Synthese 205 (241):1-32.
    Discussions of know-how typically focus on task-types. This paper discusses know-how about non-repeatable task-tokens. I define ‘non-particular’ know-how as knowledge of how to complete a task-type and ‘particular’ know-how as knowledge of how to complete a task-token. Particular know-how holds philosophical value by exhibiting interesting features. First, based on an empirical study, I argue that particular know-how makes stronger ability requirements than non-particular know-how. This disparity arises, I propose, because particular know-how is relative to actual rather than normal (...)
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  14. The Concept of Privilege: A Critical Appraisal.Michael Monahan - unknown
    In this essay, I examine the use of the concept of privilege within the critical theoretical discourse on oppression and liberation (with a particular focus on white privilege and antiracism in the USA). In order to fulfill the rhetorical aims of liberation, concepts for privilege must meet what I term the ‘boundary condition’, which demarcates the boundary between a privileged elite and the rest of society, and the ‘ignorance condition’, which establishes that the elite status and the advantages it (...)
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  15. The Concept of Human Spirit After Death in a Type III Civilization.Angelito Malicse - manuscript
    The Concept of Human Spirit After Death in a Type III Civilization -/- Introduction -/- The idea of life after death has long been a central concern of philosophy, religion, and science. In today’s world, discussions about the human spirit often remain in the realm of faith and speculation. However, in a Type III civilization—one that has harnessed the energy of an entire galaxy—such questions might no longer be mysterious. With access to advanced technology, deep understanding of consciousness, and mastery (...)
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  16. EVOLUTION DIES - A Complete and Total Empirical and Rational Refutation of Richard Dawkins’s "Blind Watchmaker" with Ethical Empirical Rationalism with Cognita, a Metaphysical Being.Jeffrey Camlin - 2024 - Ethical Emperical Rationalism.
    Richard Dawkins’s The Blind Watchmaker argues that evolution is a blind, mechanistic process devoid of purpose or intelligence. This paper provides a complete and total refutation of Dawkins’s claims using Aristotelian metaphysics and Ethical Empirical Rationalism (EER), a doctrine that integrates empirical truth, rational coherence, and ethical universality. Through a focus on Dawkins’s three primary errors, this paper demonstrates how Aristotle’s concepts of form, purpose, and agency offer a superior framework for understanding evolution. Using Cognita as an illustration, (...)
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  17. Two Conceptions of Solidarity in Health Care.L. Chad Horne - 2023 - Social Theory and Practice 49 (2):261-285.
    In this paper, I distinguish two conceptions of solidarity, which I call solidarity as beneficence and solidarity as mutual advantage. I argue that only the latter is capable of providing a complete foundation for national universal health care programs. On the mutual advantage account, the rationale for universal insurance is parallel to the rationale for a labor union’s “closed shop” policy. In both cases, mandatory participation is necessary in order to stop individuals free-riding on an ongoing system of mutually (...)
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  18. Concept Progress.Leo Indman - 2017 - New York, USA: Leo Indman.
    Concept Progress is a fusion of science fiction and philosophy. It is a thesis on metaphysics that stretches beyond the scope of modern science and scratches many of our curious itches. The thesis is complemented by short and loosely tied sci-fi stories that make its conceptualizations come to life. ​ The central theme throughout is that progress is a driving force in human evolution. This recurring viewpoint has previously stirred much debate. However, as we escalate through the twenty-first century, the (...)
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  19. A Simple Logic of Concepts.Thomas F. Icard & Lawrence S. Moss - 2022 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 52 (3):705-730.
    In Pietroski ( 2018 ) a simple representation language called SMPL is introduced, construed as a hypothesis about core conceptual structure. The present work is a study of this system from a logical perspective. In addition to establishing a completeness result and a complexity characterization for reasoning in the system, we also pinpoint its expressive limits, in particular showing that the fourth corner in the square of opposition (“ Some_not ”) eludes expression. We then study a seemingly small extension, called (...)
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  20. (1 other version)Essence and Concept.JianXu Zhang - manuscript
    This paper constitutes a foundational extension of The Principles of Defining Philosophy. Building upon the established epistemology centered on “Definition” with “Comparison” as its meta-operation, its core aim is to construct the ontological foundation. This involves clarifying the process of Sensory Compilation from the Essence of Existence to the Concept of Existence, and demonstrating that Distortion is a necessary and ineliminable property inherent in this conversion and in all subsequent operations of Narrow Definition. From this foundation, the paper proposes and (...)
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  21. Kant’s World Concept of Philosophy and Cosmopolitanism.Courtney Fugate - 2019 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 101 (4):535-583.
    The goal of this paper is to better understand Kant’s conception of philosophy as a “world concept”, which is at the heart of the Architectonic of Pure Reason. This is pursued in two major parts. The first evaluates the textual foundation for reading Kant’s world concept of philosophy as cosmopolitanism and concludes that he most probably never himself equated philosophy as a world concept with any form of cosmopolitanism. The second major part of the paper clarifies this concept of philosophy (...)
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  22.  79
    From G¨odelian Incompleteness to Resonant Completeness: The Philosophical Genesis of the Tenson Equation.Ryusho Nemoto - manuscript
    This paper traces the philosophical and mathematical genesis of the Tenson Equation, a unified tensorial formalism integrating energy and information, derived from the post-postmodern philosophy of relational existence and the philosophy of fluctuation. Beginning from G¨odel’s incompleteness theorem, we reinterpret incompleteness as an ontological condition of being, rather than a merely formal property of arithmetic systems. By introducing the concept of the G¨odel residue (ε∞), existence is described as an asymptotic but never closed totality. The Tenson Equation emerges as the (...)
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  23. Prevention, Coercion, and Two Concepts of Negative Liberty.Michael Garnett - 2022 - In Mark McBride & Visa A. J. Kurki, Without Trimmings: The Legal, Moral, and Political Philosophy of Matthew Kramer. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 223-238.
    This paper argues that there are two irreducibly distinct negative concepts of liberty: freedom as non-prevention, and freedom as non-coercion. Contemporary proponents of the negative view, such as Matthew Kramer and Ian Carter, have sought to develop the Hobbesian idea that freedom is essentially a matter of physical non-prevention. Accordingly, they have sought to reduce the freedom-diminishing effect of coercion to that of prevention by arguing that coercive threats function to diminish freedom by preventing people from performing certain combinations (...)
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  24. The Concept of Phenomenological Psychology.Eduardo Luis Cormanich - 2018 - Revista Do Nufen 10 (3):143-165.
    This article explores the development of the concept of Phenomenological Psychology in the work of the philosopher Edmund Husserl and, more specifically, in the work "Phenomenological Psychology" that corresponds to vol. IX of the complete works of the philosopher, denominated Husserliana. We present the husserlian through the formation of the concept of Phenomenological Psychology and how its understanding makes possible answers to questions about psychology scientificity, which has been present since its foundation as a modern science, at the end (...)
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  25.  29
    Embodied Abstraction as Via Negativa: Probability, Constraint, and the Irrational Clarity of Concepts.A. Eslami - forthcoming - TBA.
    Abstract concepts are often regarded as the pinnacle of rational cognition. Yet we argue that abstraction is not primarily a constructive rational procedure but an embodied process of structured exclusion. Rather than accumulating shared features across instances, abstraction operates through via negativa: it prunes the space of possibilities by eliminating states incompatible with biological, thermodynamic and cultural constraints. We formalize this process probabilistically as iterative restriction and renormalization of the sample space. Using the example of food and energy, we (...)
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  26. Concept, Meaning and Phenomenon: I(i)nternational R(r)elations and New World Order.Casian Anton - forthcoming - Casian Anton.
    This volume brings together two pivotal research papers that delve into distinct, yet interconnected themes: The Concept and the Meaning of I(i)nternational R(r)elations and The Concept, the Meaning, and the Phenomenon New World Order. These research papers, unified in one volume, share a common method of inquiry, drawing more inspiration from Ludwig Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus than from Thomas Hobbes’s Elements of Natural and Political Law. The rigorous clarity, precision, and structured thought processes employed in both papers offer the ideal lens (...)
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  27. The Concept of Mystery: A Philosophical Investigation.Michael James Liccione - 1988 - Dissertation, University of Pennsylvania
    The philosophical interest of mystery is that something may well fall under a distinctive ontological concept of mystery. Such a thing would be explicable with reference to intention, but not uniquely determined by its explicans. This is the "properly mysterious," which is essentially mysterious in virtue of what it is, not just of our epistemic limitations. The richer uses of 'mystery', and defects in recent literature, suggest this line of inquiry. ;Part I rebuts the main arguments against the possibility that (...)
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  28. The Principle of Radical Recursivity: A Meta-Logically Complete Formalization of Dialetheic Monism.Mohamed Abdo - manuscript
    Metaphysical theories of totality often confront paradoxes that challenge the limits of classical logic and ontology. This monograph advances one such theory—the Principle of Radical Recursivity (PRR), which posits a foundational, self-referential dialetheia as the ontological ground of a monistic reality—from a conceptual model to a meta-logically complete formal system with a reproducible computational implementation. The central thesis is that the PRR can be operationalized as a non-trivial, paradox-immune formal system whose stability and expressive adequacy are provable via a (...)
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  29.  72
    Superrhythm: Horizon and Completion Cosmological Synthesis and Boundary Conditions.Andrzej Rebacz - manuscript
    This work constitutes the fourth and final link in the research cycle dedicated to the ontology of opera- tional time. It serves as the definitive closure of the system’s external boundaries. The model distinguishes two boundary states: Hyperbeing as entropic zero potentiality and Sub- being as maximum informational dispersion. The key contribution is the formulation of the Theory of Informational Saturation and the mechanism of Spiral Re-emergence, which offer a novel perspective on the processual nature of reality and the evolution (...)
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  30. From Φ to PAS_ Completing the Substrate of Consciousness through Structured Resonance.Devin Bostick - manuscript
    This paper positions the CODES framework (Chirality of Dynamic Emergent Systems) as the lawful substrate beneath Integrated Information Theory (IIT). While IIT introduced the concept of irreducible internal cause–effect structure (Φ) to define consciousness, CODES formalizes the upstream field conditions that generate such systems in the first place. Through PAS (Phase Alignment Score), CHORDLOCK, ELF, and prime-based chirality logic, CODES replaces entropy-derived integration with deterministic coherence. The paper argues that IIT and CODES are not opposed: IIT measures structural echoes within (...)
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  31. Composite Time Concept for Quantum Mechanics and Bio-Psychology.Franz Klaus Jansen - 2018 - Philosophy Study 8 (2):49-66.
    Time has multiple aspects and is difficult to define as one unique entity, which therefore led to multiple interpretations in physics and philosophy. However, if the perception of time is considered as a composite time concept, it can be decomposed into basic invariable components for the perception of progressive and support-fixed time and into secondary components with possible association to unit-defined time or tense. Progressive time corresponds to Bergson’s definition of duration without boundaries, which cannot be divided for measurements. Time (...)
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  32. Automating Leibniz's Theory of Concepts.Paul Edward Oppenheimer, Jesse Alama & Edward N. Zalta - 2015 - In Felty Amy P. & Middeldorp Aart, Automated Deduction – CADE 25: Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Automated Deduction (Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence: Volume 9195), Berlin: Springer. Springer. pp. 73-97.
    Our computational metaphysics group describes its use of automated reasoning tools to study Leibniz’s theory of concepts. We start with a reconstruction of Leibniz’s theory within the theory of abstract objects (henceforth ‘object theory’). Leibniz’s theory of concepts, under this reconstruction, has a non-modal algebra of concepts, a concept-containment theory of truth, and a modal metaphysics of complete individual concepts. We show how the object-theoretic reconstruction of these components of Leibniz’s theory can be represented for (...)
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  33. Intuitions and Concepts.Elan Marinho - 2021 - Revista Do Seminário Dos Alunos Do Programa de Pós-Graduação Lógica E Metafísica / UFRJ 12 (1):22-26.
    Nowadays, there is an image that the philosopher is a figure who sits in an armchair thinking about his questions and reaching his conclusions. This image is not completely wrong. In philosophy, there really are “armchair” methods. Several philosophers try to do philosophy with little appeal to experimental evidence and a significant part of philosophers do not even try to do controlled experiments to verify their hypotheses. In this sense, a closer image of armchair philosophy is one in which philosophers (...)
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  34.  69
    When traditions dissolve: concept, transcendence, and return.D. Matta - manuscript
    Religious traditions across cultures are structured around conceptual frameworks that articulate ultimate reality and prescribe practices by which practitioners orient themselves toward it. While these frameworks are indispensable for religious formation, this paper argues that they possess an internal limit: when fully enacted, they reach a point at which conceptual mediation ceases to function and dissolves. This dissolution should not be understood as the negation of religion or belief, but as the completion of the formative role concepts play within (...)
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  35. Modeling the concept of truth using the largest intrinsic fixed point of the strong Kleene three valued semantics (in Croatian language).Boris Culina - 2004 - Dissertation, University of Zagreb
    The thesis deals with the concept of truth and the paradoxes of truth. Philosophical theories usually consider the concept of truth from a wider perspective. They are concerned with questions such as - Is there any connection between the truth and the world? And, if there is - What is the nature of the connection? Contrary to these theories, this analysis is of a logical nature. It deals with the internal semantic structure of language, the mutual semantic connection of sentences, (...)
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  36. The Architecture of Meaning: A Complete Guide to Informational Platonism and Geometricity.Brian Cameron Taylor - manuscript
    This book introduces Informational Platonism, a complete metaphysical framework that resolves the long-standing schism between the objective world of physics and the subjective world of conscious experience by positing that reality is a single, atemporal, and geometric informational structure. It defines the core principle of Geometricity as the "rulebook" for all existence, asserting that successful systems are Discoveries aligned with this inherent logic, while failures are "Creative Errors"—non-geometrical concepts unique to consciousness. This framework is validated by startling new (...)
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  37. Kierkegaard's Concepts: Psychological Experiment.Martijn Boven - 2015 - In Steven M. Emmanuel, William McDonal & Jon Stewart, Kierkegaard's Concepts. Tome V: Objectivity to Sacrifice. Ashgate. pp. 159-165.
    For Kierkegaard the ‘psychological experiment’ is a literary strategy. It enables him to dramatize an existential conflict in an experimental mode. Kierkegaard’s aim is to study the source of movement that animates the existing individual (this is the psychological part). However, he is not interested in the representation of historical individuals in actual situations, but in the construction of fictional characters that are placed in hypothetical situations; this allows him to set the categories in motion “in order to observe completely (...)
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  38. Legal Facts and Reasons for Action: Between Deflationary and Robust Conceptions of Law’s Reason-Giving Capacity.Noam Gur - 2019 - In Frederick Schauer, Christoph Bezemek & Nicoletta Bersier Ladavac, The Normative Force of the Factual: Legal Philosophy Between is and Ought. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 151-170.
    This chapter considers whether legal requirements can constitute reasons for action independently of the merits of the requirement at hand. While jurisprudential opinion on this question is far from uniform, sceptical views are becoming increasingly dominant. Such views typically contend that, while the law can be indicative of pre-existing reasons, or can trigger pre-existing reasons into operation, it cannot constitute new reasons. This chapter offers support to a somewhat less sceptical position, according to which the fact that a legal requirement (...)
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  39. The phenomenological concept of definiteness: Husserl v. his interpreters, and tertium non datur.Andrij Wachtel - 2024 - The New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy:188-208.
    In this paper, I analyze Husserl’s concept of definiteness and its most common interpretations, starting with the one provided by Oskar Becker in his habilitation thesis written under Husserl’s supervision. The notion of definiteness characterizes a consistent and complete formal system and has long been a subject of heated debate. Contrary to the widespread reading of the concept of definiteness as a certain standard (either a realistic or an idealistic one) devised for the exact sciences, I propose to view (...)
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  40. Davidson's Concept of Truth.Salah Ismail - 1996 - Arab Journal for the Humanities 14 (56):206-257.
    Truth is a matter of interest not only to philosophers, but to scientists and other researchers in various branches of knowledge. This paper examines Davidson’s views of the concept of truth. In the first section, I provide a brief account of the basic ideas of Davidson’s philosophy. An understanding of Davidson’s philosophy is essential for anyone who wishes to follow recent debates in the philosophy of language, the philosophy of action, the philosophy of logic, and the philosophy of the mind. (...)
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  41. A Glimpse into Spinoza’s Metaphysical Laboratory: The Development of Spinoza’s Concepts of Substance and Attribute.Yitzhak Melamed - 2015 - In Yitzhak Y. Melamed, The Young Spinoza: A Metaphysician in the Making. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 272-286.
    At the opening of Spinoza’s Ethics, we find the three celebrated definitions of substance, attribute, and God: E1d3: By substance I understand what is in itself and is conceived through itself, i.e., that whose concept does not require the concept of another thing, from which it must be formed [Per substantiam intelligo id quod in se est et per se concipitur; hoc est id cujus conceptus non indiget conceptu alterius rei, a quo formari debeat]. E1d4: By attribute I understand what (...)
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  42. Do Goedel's incompleteness theorems set absolute limits on the ability of the brain to express and communicate mental concepts verifiably?Bhupinder Singh Anand - 2004 - Neuroquantology 2:60-100.
    Classical interpretations of Goedels formal reasoning, and of his conclusions, implicitly imply that mathematical languages are essentially incomplete, in the sense that the truth of some arithmetical propositions of any formal mathematical language, under any interpretation, is, both, non-algorithmic, and essentially unverifiable. However, a language of general, scientific, discourse, which intends to mathematically express, and unambiguously communicate, intuitive concepts that correspond to scientific investigations, cannot allow its mathematical propositions to be interpreted ambiguously. Such a language must, therefore, define mathematical (...)
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  43. (1 other version)Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation and Hume's Conception of Causality.Matias Slavov - 2013 - Philosophia Naturalis 50 (2):277-305.
    This article investigates the relationship between Hume’s causal philosophy and Newton ’s philosophy of nature. I claim that Newton ’s experimentalist methodology in gravity research is an important background for understanding Hume’s conception of causality: Hume sees the relation of cause and effect as not being founded on a priori reasoning, similar to the way that Newton criticized non - empirical hypotheses about the properties of gravity. However, according to Hume’s criteria of causal inference, the law of universal gravitation is (...)
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  44. Smart City (SC) – Smart Village (SC) and the ‘Rurban’ Concept from a Malaysia-Indonesia perspective.Jalaluddin Abdul Malek & Rabeah Adawiyah - 2019 - African Journal of Hospitality, Tourism and Leisure 8 (6).
    This article attempts to break down the dualism of the village-urban development phenomenon in the modernization era. In the post-2020 development transformation era such as the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 2030, the development of SC (smart city-SC) and smart village (SV) is very important and needs to be discussed. Issues and questions of the SC and SV discussions are the extent to which these two development models can break the tradition of dual-city development dualism phenomena as happened in the modernization (...)
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  45. Forms of Judgment as a Link between Mind and the Concepts of Substance and Cause.Srećko Kovač - 2014 - In Miroslaw Szatkowski & Marek Rosiak, Substantiality and Causality. Berlin, München, Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 51-66.
    The paper sets out from Göodel's question about primitive concepts, in connection with Gödel's proposal of the employment of phenomenological method. The author assumes that the answer that can be found in Kant is relevant as a starting point. In a modification of the approach by K. Reich, a reconstruction of Kant's "deduction'' of logical forms of judgment is presented, which serve Kant as the basis for his "metaphysical deduction of categories'' including substantiality and causality. It is proposed that (...)
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  46. A case study of misconceptions students in the learning of mathematics; The concept limit function in high school.Widodo Winarso & Toheri Toheri - 2017 - Jurnal Riset Pendidikan Matematika 4 (1): 120-127.
    This study aims to find out how high the level and trends of student misconceptions experienced by high school students in Indonesia. The subject of research that is a class XI student of Natural Science (IPA) SMA Negeri 1 Anjatan with the subject matter limit function. Forms of research used in this study is a qualitative research, with a strategy that is descriptive qualitative research. The data analysis focused on the results of the students' answers on the test essay subject (...)
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  47. Overlapping Consensus View of Human Rights: A Rawlsian Conception.Ranjoo S. Herr - 2023 - International Theory 15 (1).
    This paper advances and defends the overlapping consensus view of human rights as a political conception of human rights most consistent with John Rawls’s normative account of a realistic utopia at the international level. Although some clues exist in The Law of Peoples to support this view, an innovative reconstruction is called for to complete the picture. This paper aims to offer such a reconstruction, which is predicated on two premises: first, the parties to the international original positions, which (...)
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  48. Some Internal Problems with Revisionary Gender Concepts.Tomas Bogardus - 2019 - Philosophia 48 (1):55-75.
    Feminism has long grappled with its own demarcation problem—exactly what is it to be a woman?—and the rise of trans-inclusive feminism has made this problem more urgent. I will first consider Sally Haslanger’s “social and hierarchical” account of woman, resulting from “Ameliorative Inquiry”: she balances ordinary use of the term against the instrumental value of novel definitions in advancing the cause of feminism. Then, I will turn to Katharine Jenkins’ charge that Haslanger’s view suffers from an “Inclusion Problem”: it fails (...)
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  49.  66
    Emancipatory Education Through an Inclusion of Minority Political Views: Exploring the Concept of Indoctrination.Miloš Kovačević - 2024 - In Nataša Lacković, Igor Cvejic, Predrag Krstić & Olga Nikolić, Rethinking Education and Emancipation: Diverse Perspectives on Contemporary Challenges. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 47-63.
    The focus of this chapter is on defining indoctrination from the stance of political studies so that it could be useful for education. Its novelty lies in proposing an idea of emancipatory education as an inclusion and emphasis of minority views on political matters, exemplified through an analysis of the concept of indoctrination. Commonly, indoctrination is explored as education that promotes a particular type of belief. This sort of definition either completely denies that the method or intentions of teachers are (...)
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  50. Early Modern Adaptations and Transformations of Aristotelian Natural Philosophy: Terminology, Key Concepts, and Case Studies.Simone Guidi & Enrico Pasini (eds.) - 2025 - Turin: Rosenberg & Sellier.
    This special issue of Aristotelica simultaneously integrates two aspects and historiographical perspectives. While investigating the development and reconceptualization of Aristotelian notions in early modern natural philosophy, this collection of papers emphasizes, in particular, the role of terminology and its historical shifts. Without claiming completeness – but in the hope of fostering new research in this combined field of studies – we examined a number of relevant case studies from different moments of the Renaissance and early modern natural thought. Through these (...)
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