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  • Articles  (481)
  • Springer  (461)
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  • 2015-2019
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  • 1
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 1-20 
    ISSN: 1572-8730
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Models are constructed for a variety of systems of quantified relevance logic with identity. Models are given for systems with different principles governing the transitivity of identity and substitution, and the relative merits of these principles are discussed. The models in this paper are all extensions of the semantics of Fine's “Semantics for Quantified Relevance Logic” (Journal of Philosophical Logic 17 (1988)).
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 21-47 
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    Notes: Abstract We introduce two new belief revision axioms: partial monotonicity and consequence correctness. We show that partial monotonicity is consistent with but independent of the full set of axioms for a Gärdenfors belief revision sytem. In contrast to the Gärdenfors inconsistency results for certain monotonicity principles, we use partial monotonicity to inform a consistent formalization of the Ramsey test within a belief revision system extended by a conditional operator. We take this to be a technical dissolution of the well-known Gärdenfors dilemma. In addition, we present the consequential correctness axiom as a new measure of minimal revision in terms of the deductive core of a proposition whose support we wish to excise. We survey several syntactic and semantic belief revision systems and evaluate them according to both the Gärdenfors axioms and our new axioms. Furthermore, our algebraic characterization of semantic revision systems provides a useful technical device for analysis and comparison, which we illustrate with several new proofs. Finally, we have a new inconsistency result, which is dual to the Gärdenfors inconsistency results. Any elementary belief revision system that is consequentially correct must violate the Gärdenfors axiom of strong boundedness (K*8), which we characterize as yet another monotonicity condition.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 125-143 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract This paper deals with some strengthenings of the non-directional product-free Lambek calculus by means of additional structural rules. In fact, the rules contraction and expansion are restricted to basic types. For each of the presented systems the usual proof-theoretic notions are discussed, some new concepts especially designed for these calculi are introduced reflecting their intermediate position between the weaker and the stronger sequent-systems.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 195-214 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract The quantified extension of a canonical prepositional intermediate logic is complete with respect to the generalization of Kripke semantics taking into consideration set-valued functors defined on a category.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 279-316 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract The properties of belief revision operators are known to have an informal semantics which relates them to the axioms of conditional logic. The purpose of this paper is to make this connection precise via the model theory of conditional logic. A semantics for conditional logic is presented, which is expressed in terms of algebraic models constructed ultimately out of revision operators. In addition, it is shown that each algebraic model determines both a revision operator and a logic, that are related by virtue of the stable Ramsey test.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 533-550 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract The author has previously introduced an operatorδ into dynamic logic which takes formulae to terms; the suggested reading ofδ A was “the bringing about of A” or “the seeing to it that A”. After criticism from S. K. Thomason and T. J. Surendonk the author now presents an improved version of his theory. The crucial feature is the introduction of an operatorOK taking terms to formulae; the suggested reading of OKα is “α always terminates”.
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  • 7
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 519-532 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract The basic bimodal systemK/K can be interpreted as an analysis of the logic of ability developed in [1]. Where in [1] we would express the claimI can bring it about that P using the formula , with its non-normal operator , we will now use the formula . Here is a normal alethic possibilitation operator. is a normal necessitation operator, but it is independent of , and not subject to an alethic interpretation. Rather, is interpreted to meanI bring it about that P. The result is a simplification and clarification of a combined logic of ability and action like that in [2], but employing only normal operators. A number of extensions of the basic systemK/K are constructed, first by strengthening the two normal sublogics independently and then by linking the two sublogics via axiom schemata involving both operators. The result is a series of increasingly strong systems which more and more adequately fulfill our expectations for a satisfactory logic of action and ability.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 579-589 
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 83-95 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract A principal type-scheme of a λ-term is the most general type-scheme for the term. The converse principal type-scheme theorem (J.R. Hindley, The principal typescheme of an object in combinatory logic, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 146 (1969) 29–60) states that every type-scheme of a combinatory term is a principal type-scheme of some combinatory term. This paper shows a simple proof for the theorem in λ-calculus, by constructing an algorithm which transforms a type assignment to a λ-term into a principal type assignment to another λ-term that has the type as its principal type-scheme. The clearness of the algorithm is due to the characterization theorem of principal type-assignment figures. The algorithm is applicable to BCIW-λ-terms as well. Thus a uniform proof is presented for the converse principal type-scheme theorem for general λ-terms and BCIW-λ-terms.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 113-123 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract This paper is a study of similarities and differences between strong and weak quantum consequence operations determined by a given class of ortholattices. We prove that the only strong orthologics which admits the deduction theorem (the only strong orthologics with algebraic semantics, the only equivalential strong orthologics, respectively) is the classical logic.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 317-335 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Dummett's logic LC quantified, Q-LC, is shown to be characterized by the extended frame 〈Q+, ≤,D〉, where Q+ is the set of non-negative rational numbers, ≤is the numerical relation “less or equal then” and D is the domain function such that for all v, w ∈ Q+, Dv ≠ φ and if v ≤ w, then D v . D v $$ \subseteq $$ D w . Moreover, simple completeness proofs of extensions of Q-LC are given.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 347-378 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract A history of the logic of action is outlined, beginning with St Anselm. Five modern authors are discussed in some detail: von Wright, Fitch, Kanger, Chellas and Pratt.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 485-517 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Recent theories of agency (sees to it that) of Nuel Belnap and Michael Perloff are examined, particularly in the context of an early proposal of the author.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 463-484 
    ISSN: 1572-8730
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract The conditional,if an agent did something, then the agent could have done otherwise, is analyzed usingstit theory, which is a logic of “seeing to it that” based on agents making choices in the context of branching time. The truth of the conditional is found to be a subtle matter that depends on how it is interpreted (e.g., on what “otherwise” refers to, and on the difference between “could” and “might”) and also on whether or not there are “busy choosers” that can make infinitely many choices in a finite span of time.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 379-437 
    ISSN: 1572-8730
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Whileprocess andaction are fundamental notions, in ubiquitous use, they lack satisfactory logical treatment in two critical respects: in analyses of the fundamentals themselves and in logical development. For what treatment they have so far received, under classical systematisation, leaves significant lacunae and induces much paradox. A relevant logical relocation, carried through in detail here, removes such problems, and provides solid ground-work for a satisfactory treatment. Firstly, as to fundamentals: processes should be explicated, so it is argued, as certain sorts of (time) directed functions (from inputs to outputs); thus they can be represented through certain ordered pairs of relations. Significant logical structures they can enter into are investigated: notably, process lattice and coupled logics, and a generalized category theory (tolerating nonassociativity of composition). Actions are types of processes, agent-ascribed process. As stock analyses of the differentia, operators and agency, through intentionality, rationality and so on, demonstrably fail, new causal analyses are proposed. Secondly, as to logical developments: for the most part, the apparently diverse offering of process and action logics to be encountered in the literature are but multiple modal logics: modal logics enriched with further functors of interesting modal sorts. Some, for example, like advertised “process logics” are dynamic logics (themselves basically multiple modal logics) enriched by tense logical functors, themselves modal in character. In a way that is now becoming nonstandardly standard, these modal enterprises can be reworked on relevant logical bases. A main point to such exercises resembles that of other relevant reworkings: namely, the search for correctness, for adequacy to pre-analytic and linguistic data, and therewith removal of paradoxes and anomalies that accumulate under modal analyses. Logical components from a properly expanded Humean model of action are supplied with relevant logics and semantics, in particulardoing, trying andstriving, intention andmotivation. The difficult question of formalising practical inference is then addressed. Relevant dynamic logics, paralleling modal developments, are built up piece by piece, relevant theory change is considered within a dynamic framework, and work on relevant temporal and process logics of programming cast, including functors such asbefore, during andthroughout, is initiated. The present state of logical play is assessed.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. V 
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 97-112 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract We prove that Brouwer-Zadeh logic has the finite model property and therefore is decidable. Moreover, we present a bimodal system (BKB) which turns out to be characterized by the class of all Brouwer-Zadeh frames. Finally, we show that BrouwerZadeh logic can be translated into BKB.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 145-155 
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 241-248 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract We prove that all proofs in ω-logic (a first order logic with ω-rule added) in which ω-rule is used finitely many times can be turned into proofs in which the ω-rule is used at most one time. Next, we prove that the word “finitely” above cannot be changed by the word “infinitely”.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 249-277 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract A nonempty sequence 〈T1,...,Tn〉 of theories is tolerant, if there are consistent theories T 1 + ,..., T n + such that for each 1 ≤i ≤n, T i + is an extension of Ti in the same language and, if i ≤n, T i + interprets T i+1 + . We consider a propositional language with the modality ◊, the arity of which is not fixed, and axiomatically define in this language the decidable logics TOL and TOLω. It is shown that TOL (resp. TOLω) yields exactly the schemata of PA-provable (resp. true) arithmetical sentences, if ◊(A1,..., An) is understood as (a formalization of) “〈 PA+A1, ..., PA+An〉 is tolerant”.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 165-193 
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    Topics: Mathematics , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract We give a Hilbert style axiomatization for the set of formulas in the temporal language with Until and Since which are valid over the real number flow of time. The axiomatization, which is orthodox in the sense of only having the usual temporal rules of inference, is complete with respect to single formulas.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 337-346 
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 439-462 
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    Notes: Abstract In this paper, completed only months before his death, the author studies a number of concepts of importance for the analysis of intentional action. Four themes in particular are discussed: the intentionality of action, the practical syllogism, what the author terms “the practical causality of practical thinking”, and the proximate cause of action. (K. S.)
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. v 
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 551-578 
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    Notes: Abstract Regular dynamic logic is extended by the program constructα∩β, meaning “α andβ executed in parallel”. In a semantics due to Peleg, each commandα is interpreted as a set of pairs (s,T), withT being the set of states “reachable” froms by a single execution ofα, possibly involving several processes acting in parallel. The modalities 〈α〈 and [α] are given the interpretations 〈α〉A is true ats iff there existsT withsRβT andA true throughoutT, and [α]A is true ats iff for allT, ifsRβT thenA is true throughoutT, which make 〈α〉 and [α] no longer interdefinable via negation, as they are in the regular case. We prove that the logic defined by this modelling is finitely axiomatisable and has the finite model property, hence is decidable. This requires the development a new theory of canonical models and filtrations for “reachability” relations.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 323-323 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 345-363 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: Music recognition ; cognitive musicology ; music ; AI
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Tone semantics is a psychoacoustic-based theory of gestalt perception that deals with tone perception and the assignment of functional relationships between tones in the musical context. The theory provides an operational account of semantics in terms of complex dynamic systems theory and forms the basis for non-symbolic research in music imagination. This is illustrated by an application in the automatic recognition of tone centers from acoustical input. An analysis of the basic concepts and related epistemological and methodological principles reveals a promising paradigm for music research.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 365-377 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: Musical competence ; musical processing ; modularity ; musical illusions ; computer models
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract The paper treats issues concerning the modular modelisation of musical mental processes. Some musical phenomena, like musical illusions, are explained in the framework of modularity and hypotheses are advanced in which the modular model seems very promising for the study of musical perception and cognition. In addition, arguments are proposed to distinguish between levels of abstraction and knowledge in musical cognitive processes. Moreover, some aspects about the theory of musical competence and the theory of musical processing are identified and the possibilities for the integration of varying theoretical assertions are considered in light of these distinctions.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 27-49 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: Nonmonotonic ; inference ; logic ; conditionals ; consequence relations ; belief revision ; theory change ; defeasible reasoning ; knowledge representation
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Recently, John Bell has proposed that a specific conditional logic, C, be considered as a serious candidate for formally representing and faithfully capturing various (possibly all) formalized notions of nonmonotonic inference. The purpose of the present paper is to develop evaluative criteria for critically assessing such claims. Inference patterns are described in terms of the presence or absence of residual classical monotonicity and intrinsic nonmonotonicity. The concept of a faithful representation is then developed for a formalism purported to encode a pattern of nonmonotonic inference already captured by another. In the main body of the paper these evaluative criteria are applied to assess (negatively) whether C or any conditional logic provides a faithful representation for nonmonotonic patterns of inference captured by inference operators and relations modeling the dynamics of belief change.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 71-83 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: Neural networks ; dynetic problem ; infinite networks ; neural computability ; neurocomputing ; scalability ; stability problem ; Turing machine ; universal neural network ; cellular automata
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract The importance of the Stability Problem in neurocomputing is discussed, as well as the need for the study of infinite networks. Stability must be the key ingredient in the solution of a problem by a neural network without external intervention. Infinite discrete networks seem to be the proper objects of study for a theory of neural computability which aims at characterizing problems solvable, in principle, by a neural network. Precise definitions of such problems and their solutions are given. Some consequences are explored, in particular, the neural unsolvability of the Stability Problem for neural networks.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 111-111 
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 145-174 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: AI, pragmatics ; ontopragmatics ; sociopragmatics ; psychopragmatics ; Turing Test ; interpretation ; reasoning ; humor ; meaning ; context ; dream ; mind ; language
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Artificial intelligence, conceived either as an attempt to provide models of human cognition or as the development of programs able to perform ‘intelligent’ tasks, is primarily interested in theuses of language. It should be concerned, therefore, withpragmatics. But its concern with pragmatics should not be restricted to the narrow, traditional conception of pragmatics as the theory of communication (or of the social uses of language). In addition to that, AI should take into account also the ‘mental’ uses of language (in reasoning, for example) and the ‘existential’ dimensions of language as a determiner of the world we (and our computers) live in. In this paper, the relevance of these three branches of pragmatics-sociopragmatics, psychopragmatics, and ontopragmatics-for AI are explored.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 49-82 
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    Notes: Abstract This paper is a survey of results concerning embeddings of intuitionistic propositional logic and its extensions into various classical modal systems.
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 157-164 
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    Studia logica 51 (1992), S. 215-239 
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    Notes: Abstract This paper is about the most important technical problem faced by Structured Meanings Semantics: the reiteration of hyperintensional functors (i.e., functors of Θ-categorial languages of the sort defined by Max Cresswell in [6]). A way to solve this problem in a general and natural way by using Scott's Domains is both suggested and shown. The result is a semantics which unrestrictedly allows reiterations of hyperintensional functors. The semantics is also extended to accommodate Θ-categorial languages with variables.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 1-32 
    ISSN: 1572-8587
    Keywords: Wissenschaftstheorie ; Statistik ; Falsifikationismus ; Testtheorie ; Hypothesentests ; Signifikanztests ; Neyman-Pearson-Theorie
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    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary It is widely held that falsification of statistical hypotheses is impossible. This view is supported by an analysis of the most important theories of statistical testing: these theories are not compatible with falsificationism. On the other hand, falsificationism yields a basically viable solution to the problems of explanation, prediction and theory testing in a deterministic context. The present paper shows how to introduce the falsificationist solution into the realm of statistics. This is done mainly by applying the concept of empirical content to statistical hypotheses. It is shown that empirical content is a substitute for ‘power’ as defined by Neyman and Pearson. Since the empirical content of a hypothesis is independent of alternative hypotheses, the proposed theory of statistical testing allows for tests of isolated hypotheses.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 45-60 
    ISSN: 1572-8587
    Keywords: critical philosophy of science ; constructivism ; critical theory of society ; finalization ; social natural science ; projective methodology of science
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    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary It is the purpose of this paper to represent an analysis of four variants of critical philosophy of science: the constructivistic methodology, the reflexion upon science from the viewpoint of the critical theory of society, the ‘social natural science’ as a further development of the finalization conception, and the projective philosophy of science. Special attention is paid to the comparison of these variants. Some points of convergence as well as of divergence among them are revealed. A common shortcoming is indicated.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 61-83 
    ISSN: 1572-8587
    Keywords: General relativity ; alternative proto-physical foundations ; gravity ; inertia ; cosmic redshift phenomena
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    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary It is suggested that the mathematically abstract coordinate frames of reference commonly visualized to be centered at the celestial bodies have real counterparts in the shape of well-defined rigid spatial resonant singularities of infinite extension, which accommodate the matter waves from the superimposition of which the body residing at the coordinate origin results. A universally valid inertial reference frame system is proposed. Qualitative explanations are offered for the inertial and gravitational forces, their observed proportionality, and for the occurrence of second-order gravitational effects in the vicinity of massive bodies. The universal redshift is assumed to result from a closure condition of the eigenspaces introduced.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 33-44 
    ISSN: 1572-8587
    Keywords: intercultural communication ; standardized terminologies ; ordering of knowledge ; cultural diversity
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    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary In this paper we will discuss some epistemological aspects of lexical and terminological usage in the international arena, with special reference to the different rhetorics of the social and natural sciences. Sociolinguistic research confined to monolingual communities suggests that close-knit network structure is an important mechanism of language maintenance, in that speakers are able to form a cohesive group capable of resisting pressure, linguistic and social, from outside the group (MILROY, 1987). The concept of a linguistic norm in sociolinguistic theory can be viewed here as the product of “cultural focusing”. In the same way, intercultural communication is characterized by the spreading of standardized terminologies (ISO) and conceptual modes of thinking associated with a common scientific and technological practice in cross-border communities. A basic feature is frequent language interaction, based upon the need for scientific exchange and upon the extralinguistic models conveyed by powerful inter/transnational links and shared scientific paradigms. In this context, an international standard language could be seen as another case of cultural focusing, where intercultural contact would evolve along monocultural lines. However, a formally standardized language may conceal conceptual fuzziness, as has been shown for example in analyses of the kind of language used by social scientists (INTERCOCTA) or found in political rhetoric (ECCRDSS). The semantic and pragmatic differentiations of these latter forms of intercultural communication, and more generally, the interactions between the ordering of knowledge, the transfer of this knowledge through standardized language and the variety of cultural perceptions, call for a polylogic framework that accounts for their coexistence.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 85-103 
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    Keywords: life ; teleology ; evolution ; reality ; representation ; experience
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary A comprehensive definition of the phenomenon called “life” led to the addition of many dimensions to the natural sciences, and especially the conscious mental dimension. Historical attention is paid not only to those employing the natural philosophical paradigms, but also to evolutionary theories and to the Kantian teleological philosophy. The belief that science can solve the riddle of life is a category of purposal thinking. A revised version of critical teleology is essential for comprehension of life.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 105-128 
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    Keywords: abstraction ; alternative ; conception order ; hermeneutics ; methodology ; thing-in-itself ; transcendental idealism/realism ; truthfulness
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary The researches on Kant are one example of the high degree of differences in opinions about mentalities. The lack of methods is one reason. Kant researchers have regretted this too. But as available methods are not developed, these regrets are not very convincing. For instance, the old method to sort concepts in different degrees of abstraction is not developed as a method of interpretation. This method will be exemplified for the question whether Kant was idealist or realist. It could have been an old well-known method as a method of interpretation, but this has not yet been done. Other reasons for this lack of methods are to be inquired. Some philosophical positions presuppose the lack of methods and this could be a fundamental reason for the lack of methods of interpretation.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 129-151 
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    Keywords: Science ; politics ; acceptance of theories ; dangerous knowledge ; self-censorship ; objectivity
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    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary In contrast to the opinion of numerous authors (e.g. R. Rudner, P. Kitcher, L. R. Graham, M. Dummett, N. Chomsky, R. Lewontin, etc.) it is argued here that the formation of opinion in science should be greatly insulated from political considerations. Special attention is devoted to the view that methodological standards for evaluation of scientific theories ought to vary according to the envisaged political uses of these theories.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 205-210 
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 199-204 
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 153-164 
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    Keywords: social science ; value-neutrality ; criticism ; methodological principles ; incompatibility of value-freedom with value-criticism ; philosophy of the social sciences
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary Among the methodological rules of the social sciences we find the principles of value-neutrality and the principle of criticism. Both principles are of vital importance in the social sciences, but both seem to conflict with one another. The principle of criticism excludes value-judgments from the social sciences, because they cannot be empirically tested. Hence, criticism methodologically implies value-neutrality. Yet there is the opposing view that it is precisely the critical social researcher who looks beyond mere ‘social facts’ taking into account the value framework of the society. Thus, criticism does not lead to value-freedom, but points to the value impact of the so-called social facts. In this paper, the two principles are stated. Then it is shown how and why they are incompatible. Finally, several suggestions are discussed to resolve this methodological conflict.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 165-197 
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    Keywords: Galileo ; Feyerabend ; methodological anarchism vs rationalism ; reasoning “ex suppositione” ; demonstrative regress ; experiment ; mathematics and reality ; falsification
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary In analyzing Galileo's methodology, philosophers of science were using, misusing, and abusing his ideas rather unashamedly to suit their own purposes. Like so many others before him, Paul Feyerabend had come to the conclusion that his methodological ideas might gain momentum by demonstrating their compatibility with those of Galileo. The reinterpretation of Galileo as a true, though disguised, anarchist, was considered by Feyerabend as the most forceful, and indeed conclusive, case against rationalism in methodology which might be conceived in view of the privileged position ascribed to Galileo by both philosophers and historians of science. The paper argues — against Feyerabend — that Galileo was not a methodological anarchist, neither in theory nor in practice. He had firm methodological convictions that remained basically the same throughout his entire career. In his view, essential and accidental causes of phenomena were not given by experience. Although mathematical and geometrical analysis was needed to discriminate between them, experience and experiment was considered by Galileo from his middle periode on as a means to identify among the set of explanations, demonstrable “ex suppositione” as being mathematically correct, those which could in addition be applied to reality. Thus, Galileo was neither an inductivist nor a naive falsificationist, nor a Copernican zealot adapting his methodology to the needs of his presumed fight for heliocentrism, come what be. Only after the reconstruction of mechanics was in a fairly advanced stage, and after his own telescopic observations had provided independent evidence in favor of the new astronomy, Galileo was in a position to appreciate the Copernican system as a most forceful ally in his fight for the recognition of his physical achievements. Through the end of his life, his view of the heliocentric system remained rather traditional in adhering firmly to the principles of epicyclic and circular motion, as far as the heavens were concerned.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 213-222 
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    Keywords: normative epistemology ; naturalistic epistemology ; autopoietic cognitive organization ; transcendental propositions ; internal methodology of science
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    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary Rather than attempting to combine the two meta-methodological programmes for justifying the epistemological study of science, which is the case of Laudan's normative naturalism, this paper aims at presenting a third alternative to the controversy between the traditional normativism and the reductionistic naturalism. The paper is a preliminary move in developing a theory of the autopoietic cognitive organization of science. The underlying assumption of this project calls that science is a self-constructing, self-specifying and homeostatic system. The scrutinizing of these three predicates leads to the view that the epistemological propositions about science cognitive organization are neither normative, nor descriptive, but transcendental ones. The final discussion shows the connection between this project and the theory of group rationality.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 241-263 
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    Keywords: sociology of science ; sociology of translation ; knowledge representations ; strong programme ; scientometrics ; methodology
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    Notes: Summary Several, seemingly unrelated problems of empirical research in the ‘sociology of scientific knowledge’ can be analyzed as following from initial assumptions with respect to the status of the knowledge content of science. These problems involve: (1) the relation between the level of the scientific field and the group level; (2) the boundaries and the status of ‘contexts’, and (3) the emergence of so-called ‘asymmetry’ in discourse analysis. It is suggested that these problems can be clarified by allowing for cognitive factors as independent (‘heterogeneous’) variables, in addition to and in interaction with (i.e., not only as attributes of) social factors. In the ‘sociology of translation’, ‘heterogeneity’ among scientists, cognitions and textual elements has been made a basic assumption. This heterogeneity is bound together in an ‘actor network’. However, since the ‘actor network’ is an empirical category, the methodological problems remain unresolved. This has consequences for the relation between empirical data and theoretical inferences.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 223-239 
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    Keywords: logical positivism ; hermeneutics ; methodological separatism ; unity of science ; understanding ; interpretation ; structuralist view of theories ; holism ; literary criticism
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
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    Notes: Summary This dichotomy is discussed. First, by means of a short historical review, two theses are pointed out: (a) Originally scientific knowledge was regarded as a hermeneutical issue. (b) The separation into two methodological and scientific cultures is rather a ‘modern’ phenomenon. It was accomplished not before the 19th century as a product of the rise and final succes of the empirist-positivist paradigm for the so-called exact (natural) sciences and the analytic methodology. Further it is argued, that this separation turned out to be an unproductive one: The traditional logical positivist philosophy of science failed in integrating the interpretive practice of the humanities. On the other hand hermeneutical methodology failed in explicating its principles in a way, that could satisfy modern analytic standards. So it remained deficient in founding the postulated methodological autonomy of the humanities. However, the more the positivist background of the traditional philosophy of science crumbles, the more interest the methodological intuitions of hermeneutists seem to obtain. Finally, a new possibility to explicate the concept of interpretation by means of analytical instrumentary is drawn out: The so-called structuralist view of scientific theories (J. D. Sneed, W. Stegmüller e.a.) seems to explicate properly just that feature of hermeneutical interpretation, which remained unintelligible for the traditional philosophy of science. So some realistic chance appears to mediate the alleged systematic antithesis and to eliminate that methodological dichotomy. Last but not least, a number of new philosophical theories, not coming from hermeneutical side, are mentioned, in which the concept of interpretation is already used in a presystematic, i.e. an implicit and vague, sense. So to explicate that concept seems to me to be a necessary philosophical task at the present time.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 265-288 
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    Keywords: Evolutionary Epistemology ; Genetic Epistemology ; cognition (human knowledge) ; theories of truth ; explanation of validity claims by genetic means ; adaptation ; unity of selection ; reality ; constructivism ; relativism
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary This essay is a discussion of Eve-Marie Engels' view on Evolutionary Epistemology (EE). In the first part two of the main doctrines of EE are criticized: (1.) that validity of human knowledge is to be explained as the result of evolutionary adaptation; yet (2.), that human cognitive capacities had been adequate to our ancestors life conditions but fail in relevant situations of modern world. In the second part the concept of reality underlying EE's adaptational view is discussed and compared with Jean Piaget's concept of reality. Finally, it is held that some of the questions recently raised by proponents of EE, far from being new, have been dealt with already in historical epistemology.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 313-314 
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    Keywords: special relativity ; Lorentz transformations
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    Notes: Summary U. Hoyer's argument for the linearity is discussed and a modification of the argument is proposed.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 289-311 
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    Keywords: parasitism ; speech-acts ; imperatives ; power ; (social) action ; normativity ; discourse analysis ; social theory
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    Notes: Summary In this article it is argued that throughout Habermas' various treatments of the problem of ‘simple imperatives’ (threats etc.) one can find a remaining contradiction: namely between identifying them on the one hand, for logical reasons, as the ‘unsocial’ acts they are (due to their lack of normativity claims). On the other hand, for fitting into sociological descriptions, Habermas tries to rearrange threats etc. within a so-called ‘continuum’ of all social actions. These difficulties can only be avoided by recognizing the entirely unsocial character of certain ways of acting. This premiss is applied in an alternative analysis of perlocutions and simple imperatives. It leads to the conclusion that for the sake of logical consistency the possibility of ethical (social) ignorance — the Kantian ‘evil’? — must be brought into the categorical account of a grammatical analysis of practical statements.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 315-322 
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    Keywords: knowledge-based systems ; expert systems ; artificial intelligence ; philosophy of science ; philosophy of technology
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    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary The following article is a response to K. Mainzer's ‘Knowledge-Based Systems; Remarks on the Philosophy of Technology and Artificial Intelligence’. We show, that Mainzer does not reach any of his aims to analyse the possibilities and limits of AI-technology. to reduce anxiousness and hostility against AI, which is motivated by phantastic speculations. to evaluate the factual impact of AI on our lives and on society. His article contributes on the contrary to phantastic speculations, which are not technologically justified in any way. There are two main reasons for his misleading view: (a) the state of the art of knowledge-based systems is incorrectly described; (b) the roots, paradigms and alternatives to AI are not in the least sufficiently analysed. We examine issues (a) and (b) in Chapter 1 and Chapter 2. In Chapter 3 we discuss, how the conclusions, which Mainzer draws, have to be modified. In analysing the lines of argumentation of Mainzer we try to clarify the methodological errors and the philosophical attitude of Mainzer, which is in many respects not adequate to the subject of the article.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 323-352 
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    Keywords: constructivism ; naturalism ; epistemology ; realism ; idealism
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    Topics: Philosophy , Nature of Science, Research, Systems of Higher Education, Museum Science
    Notes: Summary Both radical constructivism and constructionism are naturalized approaches to epistemology. They try to fertilize results from biology and psychology for epistemological aims. They both refuse epistemological realism as unsustainable metaphysics. This raises the problem of the range of the naturalistic approach to epistemology. Constructivism, in both forms, turns out to be untenable because it runs in an aporia: it must borrow from realism either, or it must qualify its own position as a metaphysical one. But therewith, constructivism would be blamed to be metaphysical itself.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 353-357 
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    Keywords: East-West cultural relations ; chinese marxism ; maoism ; german idealism
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    Notes: Summary The Congress shows two tendencies: (1) A growing open-mindedness and concern for the surrounding pacific cultures and the West. (2) A Renaissance of classical studies in order to fuse genuine chinese with western ideas in a new transcultural dialogue. Occidental provincialists are invited to enter the debate.
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 359-362 
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 403-405 
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    Journal for general philosophy of science 23 (1992), S. 363-402 
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 1-16 
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    Keywords: Intention ; planning ; practical reasoning
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract I sketch my general model of the roles of intentions in the planning of agents like us-agents with substantial resource limitations and with important needs for coordination. I then focus on the stability of prior intentions: their rational resistance to reconsideration. I emphasize the importance of cases in which one's nonreconsideration of a prior intention is nondeliberative and is grounded in relevant habits of reconsideration. Concerning such cases I argue for a limited form of two-tier consequentialism, one that is restricted in ways that aim at blocking an analogue of Smart's concerns about “rule-worship”. I contrast this with the unrestricted two-tier consequentialism suggested by McClennen. I argue that my restricted approach is superior for a theory of the practical rationality of reflective, planning agents like us. But I also conjecture that an unrestricted two-tier consequentialism may be more appropriate for the AI project of specifying a high level architecture for a resource-bounded planner.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 109-109 
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 309-321 
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 283-307 
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    Keywords: Algorithms ; computers ; computer programs ; program executions (processes) ; program verification (‘correctness’ proofs, testing) ; representations (objects) ; software reliability
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    Notes: Abstract A proof of ‘correctness’ for a mathematical algorithm cannot be relevant to executions of a program based on that algorithm because both the algorithm and the proof are based on assumptions that do not hold for computations carried out by real-world computers. Thus, proving the ‘correctness’ of an algorithm cannot establish the trustworthiness of programs based on that algorithm. Despite the (deceptive) sameness of the notations used to represent them, the transformation of an algorithm into an executable program is a wrenching metamorphosis that changes a mathematical abstraction into a prescription for concrete actions to be taken by real computers. Therefore, it is verification of program executions (processes) that is needed, not of program texts that are merely the scripts for those processes. In this view, verification is the empirical investigation of: (a) the behavior that programs invoke in a computer system and (b) the larger context in which that behavior occurs. Here, deduction can play no more, and no less, a role than it does in the empirical sciences.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 325-327 
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 329-344 
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    Keywords: Tabla drumming ; improvisation ; formal grammars ; experimental ethnomusicology ; music cognition
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Research with computer systems and musical grammars into improvisation as found in the tabla drumming system of North India has indicated that certain musical “sentences” comprise (a) variable prefixes, and (b) fixed suffixes (or “cadences”) identical with those of their original rhythmic “themes”. It was assumed that the cadence functioned as a kind of target in linear musical space, and yet experiments showed that defining what exactly constituted the cadence was problematic. This paper addresses the problem of the status of cadential patterns, and demonstrates the need for a better understanding and formalization of ambiguity in musico-cognitive processing. It would appear from the discussion that the cadence is not a discrete unit in itself, but just part of an ever-present underlying framework comprising the entire original rhythmic theme. Improvisations (variations), it is suggested, merely break away from and rejoin this framework at important structural points. This endorses the theory of simultaneity. However, the general cognitive implications are still unclear, and further research is required to explore musical ambiguity and the interaction of musical, linguistic, and spatio-motor grammars.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 113-144 
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    Keywords: Decision ; plans ; reasoning ; intentions
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Practical reasoning aims at deciding what actions to perform in light of the goals a rational agent possesses. This has been a topic of interest in both philosophy and artificial intelligence, but these two disciplines have produced very different models of practical reasoning. The purpose of this paper is to examine each model in light of the other and produce a unified model adequate for the purposes of both disciplines and superior to the standard models employed by either. The philosophical (decision-theoretic) model directs activity by evaluating acts one at a time in terms of their expected utilities. It is argued that, except in certain special cases, this constitutes an inadequate theory of practical reasoning leading to intuitively incorrect action prescriptions. Acts must be viewed as parts of plans, and plans evaluated as coherent units rather than piecemenal in terms of the acts comprising them. Rationality dictates choosing acts by first choosing the plans prescribing them. Plans, in turn, are compared by looking at their expected values. However, because plans can be embedded in one another, we cannot select plans just by maximizing expected values. Instead, we must employ a more complex criterion here named ‘coextendability’.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 185-201 
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    Keywords: Constraint ; individuation scheme ; infon ; information ; representation ; type
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    Notes: Abstract I argue that the role played by infons in the kind of mathematical theory of information being developed by several workers affiliated to CSLI is analogous to that of the various number systems in mathematics. In particular, I present a mathematical construction of infons in terms of representations and informational equivalences between them. The main theme of the paper arose from an electronic mail exchange with Pat Hayes of Xeroxparc. The exposition derives from a talk I gave at theTheories of Partial Information conference held at the University of Texas at Austin, January 1990.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 175-183 
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    Keywords: Meaning ; representation ; disjunction problem ; information semantics ; Fodor ; asymmetric causal dependency
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    Notes: Abstract InPsychosemantics Jerry Fodor offered a list of sufficient conditions for a symbol “X” to mean something X. The conditions are designed to reduce meaning to purely non-intentional natural relations. They are also designed to solve what Fodor has dubbed the “disjunction problem”. More recently, inA Theory of Content and Other Essays, Fodor has modified his list of sufficient conditions for naturalized meaning in light of objections to his earlier list. We look at his new set of conditions and give his motivation for them-tracing them to problems in the literature. Then we argue that Fodor's conditions still do not work. They are open to objections of two different varieties: they are too strong and too weak. We develop these objections and indicate why Fodor's new, improved list of conditions still do not work to naturalize meaning.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 203-215 
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. iii 
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 239-265 
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    Keywords: Representation ; cognitive architecture ; concepts ; machine learning ; game playing
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    Notes: Abstract The extent to which concepts, memory, and planning are necessary to the simulation of intelligent behavior is a fundamental philosophical issue in Artificial Intelligence. An active and productive segement of the AI community has taken the position that multiple low-level agents, properly organized, can account for high-level behavior. Empirical research on these questions with fully operational systems has been restricted to mobile robots that do simple tasks. This paper recounts experiments with Hoyle, a system in a cerebral, rather than a physical, domain. The program learns to perform well and quickly, often outpacing its human creators at two-person, perfect information board games. Hoyle demonstrates that a surprising amount of intelligent behavior can be treated as if it were situation-determined, that often planning is unnecessary, and that the memory required to support this learning is minimal. Concepts, however, are crucial to this reactive program's ability to learn and perform.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 217-238 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: Chinese Room Argument ; Searle ; Turing Test ; computationalism ; functionalism ; hermeneutics ; implementation ; mind ; other-minds problem ; robotics ; semantics ; symbol grounding ; virtual reality
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract When certain formal symbol systems (e.g., computer programs) are implemented as dynamic physical symbol systems (e.g., when they are run on a computer) their activity can be interpreted at higher levels (e.g., binary code can be interpreted as LISP, LISP code can be interpreted as English, and English can be interpreted as a meaninguful conversation). These higher levels of interpretability are called ‘virtual’ systems. If such a virtual system is interpretable as if it had a mind, is such a ‘virtual mind’ real? This is the question addressed in this ‘virtual’ symposium, originally conducted electronically among four cognitive scientists. Donald Perlis, a computer scientist, argues that according to the computationalist thesis, virtual minds are real and hence Searle's Chinese Room Argument fails, because if Searle memorized and executed a program that could pass the Turing Test in Chinese he would have a second, virtual, Chinese-understanding mind of which he was unaware (as in multiple personality). Stevan Harnad, a psychologist, argues that Searle's Argument is valid, virtual minds are just hermeneutic overinterpretations, and symbols must be grounded in the real world of objects, not just the virtual world of interpretations. Computer scientist Patrick Hayes argues that Searle's Argument fails, but because Searle does not really implement the program: a real implementation must not be homuncular but mindless and mechanical, like a computer. Only then can it give rise to a mind at the virtual level. Philosopher Ned Block suggests that there is no reason a mindful implementation would not be a real one.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 379-400 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: Music recognition ; connectionism ; neural networks ; pattern recognition ; features ; computer simulation
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Current artificial neural network or connectionist models of music cognition embody feature-extraction and feature-weighting principles. This paper reports two experiments which seek evidence for similar processes mediating recognition of short musical compositions by musically trained and untrained listeners. The experiments are cast within a pattern recognition framework based on the vision-audition analogue wherein music is considered an auditory pattern consisting of local and global features. Local features such as inter-note interval, and global features such as melodic contour, are derived from a two-dimensional matrix in which music is represented as a series of frequencies plotted over time. Manipulation of inter-note interval affected accuracy and reaction time measures in a discrimination task, whereas the same variables were affected by manipulation of melodic contour in a classification task. Musical training is thought of as a form of practice in musical pattern recognition and, as predicted, accuracy and reaction time measures of musically trained subjects were significantly better than those of untrained subjects. Given the evidence for feature-extraction and weighting processes in music recognition tasks, two connectionist models are discussed. The first is a single-layer perceptron which has been trained to discriminate between compositions according to inter-note interval. A second network, using the back-propagation algorithm and sequential input of patterns, is also discussed.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 401-426 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: Semiotics ; modalities ; narrativity in music ; generative grammars ; Chopin ; ballades ; structural analysis ; musical signification
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract A new semiotic model for the generation of musical texts is introduced in this article. The idea of a generative “grammar” is here understood in the sense of “the generative trajectory”, a model elaborated by A. J. Greimas. Four levels are chosen from his trajectory for the study of musical texts, namely, those of isotopies, spatial, temporal and actorial categories, modalities and semes or figures. As an illustration, the G minor Ballade by Fr. Chopin has been examined through all these levels. The most formalized aspect of the analysis is constituted by what has been called “a modal grammar” of the piece (the term “modality” understood here in its philosophico-linguistic sense). The analysis tries to show how the musical form emerges from its inner processual traits, kinetic, epistemic and other aspects of a modal nature. It thus approaches for instance the problem of segmentation from the processual and dynamic nature of musical works. Moreover, the analysis is also an attempt to study the narrativity in music, since the narrative content of a piece like Chopin's G minor Ballade is clearly seen as the result of its modal processes.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 51-70 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: Default reasoning ; non-monotonic logic ; preferred models
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract In this paper we analyze two recent conditional interpretations of defaults, one based on probabilities, and the other, on models. We study what makes them equivalent, explore their limitations and develop suitable extensions. The resulting framework ties together a number of important notions in default reasoning, like high-probabilities and model-preference, default priorities and argument systems, and independence assumptions and minimality considerations.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 17-26 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: Intentions ; scheduling ; practical rationality ; AI
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract This comment on Michael Bratman's ‘Planning and the Stability of Intention’ focuses on sources of the rational stability of intentions which are not related to the presence of reflectively overrideable non-deliberative habits of (non)reconsideration. It is true that intentions have a rational resistance to reconsideration, but this stability can be understood as a by-product of the scheduling of cognitive tasks. This scheduling effect is intrinsic to all actual systems, that is, systems whose reasoning is not instantaneous or otherwise costless. Additionally, rules governing practical reasoning, including rules governing reasoning with intentions, will not uniformly be subject to overrides resulting from reflective operations. Hence there is no basis for distinguishing human reasoners from artificial reasoners by reference to an alleged human capacity to reflectivity evaluate its own reasoning operations.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 97-107 
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 85-95 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: Mental representation ; formal condition ; determinate content ; intentionality ; interpretation ; cognition
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract In his response to my ‘Why There Are No Mental Representations’, Robert Cummins accused me of having misinterpreted his views, and attempted to undermine a crucial premise of my argument, which claimed that one could only define a semantic type non-semantically by stipulating which tokens should receive a uniform interpretation. I respond to the charge and defend the premise.
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    Minds and machines 2 (1992), S. 267-282 
    ISSN: 1572-8641
    Keywords: Problem-solving ; strategy ; problem representation ; refinement ; machine learning ; mechanical discovery
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    Topics: Computer Science , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract In this paper we attempt to develop a problem representation technique which enables the decomposition of a problem into subproblems such that their solution in sequence constitutes a strategy for solving the problem. An important issue here is that the subproblems generated should be easier than the main problem. We propose to represent a set of problem states by a statement which is true for all the members of the set. A statement itself is just a set of atomic statements which are binary predicates on state variables. Then, the statement representing the set of goal states can be partitioned into its subsets each of which becomes a subgoal of the resulting strategy. The techniques involved in partitioning a goal into its subgoals are presented with examples.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 91 (1992), S. 1-7 
    ISSN: 1573-0964
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    Topics: Natural Sciences in General , Philosophy
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 90 (1992), S. 379-436 
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    Topics: Natural Sciences in General , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract The problematic features of Quine's ‘set’ theories NF and ML are a result of his replacing the higher-order predicate logic of type theory by a first-order logic of membership, and can be resolved by returning to a second-order logic of predication with nominalized predicates as abstract singular terms. We adopt a modified Fregean position called conceptual realism in which the concepts (unsaturated cognitive structures) that predicates stand for are distinguished from the extensions (or intensions) that their nominalizations denote as singular terms. We argue against Quine's view that predicate quantifiers can be given a referential interpretation only if the entities predicates stand for on such an interpretation are the same as the classes (assuming extensionality) that nominalized predicates denote as singular terms. Quine's alternative of giving predicate quantifiers only a substitutional interpretation is compared with a constructive version of conceptual realism, which with a logic of nominalized predicates is compared with Quine's description of conceptualism as a ramified theory of classes. We argue against Quine's implicit assumption that conceptualism cannot account for impredicative concept-formation and compare holistic conceptual realism with Quine's class Platonism.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 91 (1992), S. 9-28 
    ISSN: 1573-0964
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    Topics: Natural Sciences in General , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract This essay examines Kant's idea of organic teleology. The first two sections are devoted to Kant's analysis and justification of teleological conceptions in biology. Both the idea of teleology and Kant's anti-reductionism are derived from basic elements of his ‘critical’ treatment of the human intellect. The third section discusses the limitations Kant places on accounts of origins in the life world. It is argued that the limitations Kant places on accounts of the origins of species do not follow from his idea of teleology. The final section briefly outlines the fate of the Kantian formulation of teleology in the nineteenth century.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 91 (1992), S. 285-318 
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    Topics: Natural Sciences in General , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract It is argued in this paper that there can be both ‘normative’ and ‘nonnormative, merely factual group beliefs. The former involve the whole social group in question, while the latter only relate to the distributions of personal beliefs within the group. The paper develops a detailed theory, called the positional account of group beliefs, to explicate normative, group-involving group beliefs. Normative group beliefs are characterized within this approach in terms of joint acceptances of views by the group members — or their representatives — acting in their right positions and tasks, and in a sense creating group commitments for all the members to accept (and keep accepting) the view in question. Also ‘aggregate’ accounts of group belief are considered in the paper, especially the ‘shared we-belief’ approach. Such aggregate accounts purport to account for merely factual group beliefs.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 92 (1992), S. 25-37 
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 92 (1992), S. 117-134 
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 92 (1992), S. 83-99 
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    Topics: Natural Sciences in General , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract The existence of an idea of a missing shade of blue contradicts Hume's first principle that simple ideas all derive from corresponding simple impressions. Hume dismisses the ‘exception’ to his principle as unimportant. Why does he do so? His later account of distinctions of reason suggests a systematic way of dealing with simple ideas not derived from simple impressions. Why does he not return to the problem of the missing shade, having offered that account? Several suggestions as to Hume's solution of the problem of the missing shade (not all appealing to distinctions of reason) are explored with an eye both to their adequacy as Humean solutions and their value as clues to his dismissal of the problem. Hypotheses concerning the latter perplexity are formulated and discussed as well. Senses in which the missing shade of blue is or may be a red herring are identified. In course, this author names Hume's missing shade ‘marjorie grene’. Historians of philosophy will want to adopt this nomenclature.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 92 (1992), S. 167-187 
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 92 (1992), S. 313-314 
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 90 (1992), S. 119-143 
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    Topics: Natural Sciences in General , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract A phenomenology of action is outlined, analyzing the structure of volition, kinesthesis, and perception in the experience of action, and, finally, the experience of embodiment in action. The intentionality of action is contrasted with that of thought and perception in regard to the role of the body, and the relations between an action, the experience of acting, and the context of the action are specified.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 90 (1992), S. 145-179 
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    Topics: Natural Sciences in General , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract G. Priest's anti-consistency argument (Priest 1979, 1984, 1987) and J. R. Lucas's anti-mechanist argument (Lucas 1961, 1968, 1970, 1984) both appeal to Gödel incompleteness. By way of refuting them, this paper defends the thesis of quartet compatibility, viz., that the logic of the mind can simultaneously be Gödel incomplete, consistent, mechanical, and recursion complete (capable of all means of recursion). A representational approach is pursued, which owes its origin to works by, among others, J. Myhill (1964), P. Benacerraf (1967), J. Webb (1980, 1983) and M. Arbib (1987). It is shown that the fallacy shared by the two arguments under discussion lies in misidentifying two systems, the one for which the Gödel sentence is constructable and to be proved, and the other in which the Gödel sentence in question is indeed provable. It follows that the logic of the mind can surpass its own Gödelian limitation not by being inconsistent or non-mechanistic, but by being capable of representing stronger systems in itself; and so can a proper machine. The concepts of representational provability, representational maximality, formal system capacity, etc., are discussed.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 90 (1992), S. 233-262 
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    Topics: Natural Sciences in General , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract I document some of the main evidence showing that E. S. Pearson rejected the key features of the behavioral-decision philosophy that became associated with the Neyman-Pearson Theory of statistics (NPT). I argue that NPT principles arose not out of behavioral aims, where the concern is solely with behaving correctly sufficiently often in some long run, but out of the epistemological aim of learning about causes of experimental results (e.g., distinguishing genuine from spurious effects). The view Pearson did hold gives a deeper understanding of NPT tests than their typical formulation as ‘accept-reject routines’, against which criticisms of NPT are really directed. The ‘Pearsonian’ view that emerges suggests how NPT tests may avoid these criticisms while still retaining what is central to these methods: the control of error probabilities.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 90 (1992), S. 349-378 
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    Topics: Natural Sciences in General , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Poincaré was a persistent critic of logicism. Unlike most critics of logicism, however, he did not focus his attention on the basic laws of the logicists or the question of their genuinely logical status. Instead, he directed his remarks against the place accorded to logical inference in the logicist's conception of mathematical proof. Following Leibniz, traditional logicist dogma (and this is explicit in Frege) has held that reasoning or inference is everywhere the same — that there are no principles of inference specific to a given local topic. Poincaré, a Kantian, disagreed with this. Indeed, he believed that the use of non-logical reasoning was essential to genuinely mathematical reasoning (proof). In this essay, I try to isolate and clarify this idea and to describe the mathematical epistemology which underlies it. Central to this epistemology (which is basically Kantian in orientation, and closely similar to that advocated by Brouwer) is a principle of epistemic conservation which says that knowledge of a given type cannot be extended by means of an inference unless that inference itself constitutes knowledge belonging to the given type.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 90 (1992), S. 437-458 
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    Notes: Abstract Michael Dummett's anti-realism is founded on the semantics of natural language which, he argues, can only be satisfactorily given in mathematics by intuitionism. It has been objected that an analog of Dummett's argument will collapse intuitionism into strict finitism. My purpose in this paper is to refute this objection, which I argue Dummett does not successfully do. I link the coherence of strict finitism to a view of confirmation — that our actual practical abilities cannot confirm we know what would happen if we could compute impracticably vast problems. But to state his case, the strict finitists have to suppose that we grasp the truth conditions of sentences we can't actually decide. This comprehension must be practically demonstrable, or the analogy with Dummett's argument fails. So, our actual abilities must be capable of confirming that we know what would be the case if actually undecidable sentences were true, contradicting the view of confirmation. I end by considering objections.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 91 (1992), S. 29-51 
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 91 (1992), S. 73-91 
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    Notes: Abstract Hans Spemann's use of the concept “double assurance”, drawn from engineering models in cytology, is discussed in his work on lens development and the action of the organizer. His transformation of this concept within his neo-Lamarckian program is demonstrated and connected with the cultural factors which shaped engineering and embryology in Weimar Germany.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 92 (1992), S. 385-434 
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    Notes: Abstract ‘Branching space-time’ is a simple blend of relativity and indeterminism. Postulates and definitions rigorously describe the ‘causal order’ relation between possible point events. The key postulate is a version of ‘everything has a causal origin’; key defined terms include ‘history’ and ‘choice point’. Some elementary but helpful facts are proved. Application is made to the status of causal contemporaries of indeterministic events, to how ‘splitting’ of histories happens, to indeterminism without choice, and to Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen distant correlations.
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 93 (1992), S. 1-14 
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    Synthese 〈Dordrecht〉 93 (1992), S. 59-92 
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    Journal of agricultural and environmental ethics 5 (1992), S. 59-85 
    ISSN: 1573-322X
    Keywords: Constructivism ; autonomy ; contextualism ; Rawls ; Kant ; site-specific knowledge ; co-evolution ; ecology ; traditional ; industrialized ; modern and swidden agriculture
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract This paper proposes to test the ethical acceptability of four styles of agricultural resource management: (1) contemporary industrial integrated systems agriculture, (2) modern industrial input dependent agriculture, (3) continuous traditional agriculture and (4) non-continuous (or swidden) traditional agriculture. The test of ethical acceptability is whether or not these styles of agricultural resource management embrace or are even compatible with that pattern of practical reasoning and interaction among ethical agents which we have independent theoretic grounds for preferring. The preferred sorts of practical reasoning and interaction are those which we find operating in ethical theories which are strongly committed to letting the discretion of ethical agents construct what is right for them to do. Thus the discussion distinguishes several different strengths of constructivist ethics relating them to the work of John Rawls, Immanuel Kant and Onora O'Neill. Then it argues for the theoretic preferability of one particular strength of constructivist ethic. The paper winds up by arguing that only traditional continuous agriculture embodies the preferred sort of practical reasoning and interaction among ethical agents. Further, I argue that this is the only style of agriculture which can embody such reasoning and patterns of interaction. Thus, as we consider the role of agriculture in our plans of international development, we have one reason to try to favor traditional continuous agriculture. To do otherwise would ignore the ethical superiority of the practical reasoning and patterns of interaction of traditional agriculturalists.
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    ISSN: 1573-322X
    Keywords: climate change ; food ; agriculture ; ethics ; technologies
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    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Philosophy
    Notes: Abstract Burning fossil fuel in the North American continent contributes more to the CO2 global warming problem than in any other continent. The resulting climate changes are expected to alter food production. The overall changes in temperature, moisture, carbon dioxide, insect pests, plant pathogens, and weeds associated with global warming are projected to reduce food production in North America. However, in Africa, the projected slight rise in rainfall is encouraging, especially since Africa already suffers from severe shortages of rainfall. For all regions, a reduction in fossil fuel burning is vital. Adoption of sound ecological resource management, especially soil and water conservation and the prevention of deforestation, is important. Together, these steps will benefit agriculture, the environment, farmers, and society as a whole.
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    Journal of agricultural and environmental ethics 5 (1992), S. 235-239 
    ISSN: 1573-322X
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    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Philosophy
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