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  1.  36
    Between ontological hubris and epistemic humility: Collingwood, Kant and the role of transcendental arguments.Giuseppina D’Oro - 2019 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 27 (2):336-357.
    This paper explores and defends a form of transcendental argument that is neither bold in its attempt to answer the sceptic, as ambitious transcendental strategies, nor epistemically humble, as modest transcendental strategies. While ambitious transcendental strategies seek to meet the sceptical challenge, and modest transcendental strategies accept the validity of the challenge but retreat to a position of epistemic humility, this form of transcendental argument denies the assumption that undergirds the challenge, namely that truth and falsity may be legitimately predicated (...)
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  2. The touch of King Midas: Collingwood on why actions are not events.Giuseppina D’Oro - 2018 - Philosophical Explorations 21 (1):160-169.
    It is the ambition of natural science to provide complete explanations of reality. Collingwood argues that science can only explain events, not actions. The latter is the distinctive subject matter of history and can be described as actions only if they are explained historically. This paper explains Collingwood’s claim that the distinctive subject matter of history is actions and why the attempt to capture this subject matter through the method of science inevitably ends in failure because science explains events, not (...)
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  3.  69
    The Ontological Backlash: Why did Mainstream Analytic Philosophy Lose Interest in the Philosophy of History?Giuseppina D’Oro - 2008 - Philosophia 36 (4):403-415.
    This paper seeks to explain why mainstream analytic philosophy lost interest in the philosophy of history. It suggests that the reasons why the philosophy of history no longer commands the attention of mainstream analytical philosophy may be explained by the success of an ontological backlash against the linguistic turn and a view of philosophy as a form of conceptual analysis. In brief I argue that in the 1950s and 1960s the philosophy of history attracted the interest of mainstream analytical philosophers (...)
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  4.  23
    Collingwood, Scientism and Historicism.Giuseppina D’Oro & James Connelly - 2017 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 11 (3):275-288.
  5.  50
    Collingwood’s Critique of Scissors-and-Paste History Revisited in the Light of his Conception of Metaphysics.Giuseppina D’Oro - 2000 - International Studies in Philosophy 32 (4):23-45.
  6.  38
    Collingwood on philosophical knowledge and the enduring nature of philosophical problems.Giuseppina D’Oro - 2004 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 12 (1):93 – 109.
  7.  27
    Le fossé dans l’explication n’est pas épistémologique mais sémantique.Giuseppina D’Oro - 2009 - Philosophiques 36 (1):183-192.
    This paper explores an alternative to the metaphysical challenge to physicalism posed by Jackson and Kripke and to the epistemological one exemplified by the positions of Nagel, Levine and Mcginn. On this alternative the mind-body gap is neither ontological nor epistemological, but semantic. I claim that it is because the gap is semantic that the mind body-problem is a quintessentially philosophical problem that is not likely to wither away as our natural scientific knowledge advances.
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  8.  43
    Non-reductivism and the metaphilosophy of mind.Giuseppina D’oro, Paul Giladi & Alexis Papazoglou - 2019 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 62 (5):477-503.
    ABSTRACTThis paper discusses the metaphilosophical assumptions that have dominated analytic philosophy of mind, and how they gave rise to the central question that the best-known forms of non-reductivism available have sought to answer, namely: how can mind fit within nature? Its goal is to make room for forms of non-reductivism that have challenged the fruitfulness of this question, and which have taken a different approach to the so-called “placement” problem. Rather than trying to solve the placement problem, the forms of (...)
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  9. Ragioni e Cause.Giuseppina D’Oro - 2007 - In Robin George Collinwood e la Formazione Estetica. pp. 165-181.
     
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  10. Robin George Collinwood e la Formazione Estetica.Giuseppina D’Oro (ed.) - 2007
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  11.  13
    Why Epistemic Pluralism Does not Entail Relativism: Collingwood’s Hinge Epistemology.Giuseppina D’Oro - 2018 - In Karim Dharamsi, Giuseppina D'Oro & Stephen Leach (eds.), Collingwood on Philosophical Methodology. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 151-175.
    D’Oro asks whether Collingwood’s metaphysics of absolute presuppositions leads to the belief-system relativism that is the target of Boghossian’s sustained criticism in his Fear of Knowledge. She argues that Collingwood’s metaphysics of absolute presuppositions aims to defend a form of epistemic pluralism which is not reducible to the kind of epistemic relativism Boghossian critiques. The decoupling of epistemic pluralism from epistemic relativism rests on a reading of absolute presuppositions as epistemic “hinges” which give rise to the characteristic complexes of questions (...)
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  12.  15
    Defending Humanistic Reasoning.Paul Giladi, Alexis Papazoglou & Giuseppina D’Oro - 2017 - Philosophy Now 123:31-33.
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  13. Hermeneutics and Truth. [REVIEW]Giuseppina D’oro - 1996 - Radical Philosophy 76.
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