Results for 'Mael A. Melvin'

966 found
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  1. Towards unified field theory: Quantitative differences and qualitative sameness.Mael A. Melvin - 1982 - Synthese 50 (3):359 - 397.
    A survey is given of the concepts of interaction (force) and matter, i.e., of process and substance. The development of these concepts, first in antiquity, then in early modern times, and finally in the contemporary system of quantum field theory is described. After a summary of the basic phenomenological attributes (coupling strengths, symmetry quantities, charges), the common ground of concepts of quantum field theory for both interactions and matter entities is discussed. Then attention is focused on the gauge principle which (...)
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  2.  32
    Identification in work, war, sports, and religion: Contrasting the benefits and risks.Fred A. Mael & Blake E. Ashforth - 2001 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 31 (2):197–222.
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  3.  39
    First-order modal logic.Melvin Fitting, R. Mendelsohn & Roderic A. Girle - 2002 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 8 (3):429-430.
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  4. Philosophy in the Education of Teachers.Melvin A. Glutz - 1958 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 32:139.
     
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  5. The Formal Subject of Metaphysics.Melvin A. Glutz - 1956 - The Thomist 19:59.
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  6. The manner of demonstrating in natural philosophy.Melvin A. Glutz - 1956 - River Forest, Ill.: [Dominican House of Studies].
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  7.  17
    Error reinforcement in a modified serial perceptual-motor task.Melvin H. Marx & Robert A. Goldbeck - 1957 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 54 (4):288.
  8.  5
    Toward an Integrated Psychology.Melvin A. Glutz - 1958 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 32:139-148.
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  9.  30
    Obtención de la oleorresina de la berenjena (Solanum melongena L) y su posible uso industrial.Melvin A. Durán Rincón, Nelson Contreras Coronel, Valencia Sánchez & Hoover Albeiro - forthcoming - Scientia.
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  10.  42
    Obtención y caracterización de la oleoresina del ajo (allium sativum).Melvin A. Durán Rincón, Paula Andrea González Patiño & Leonardo Cardona Pareja - forthcoming - Scientia.
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  11.  15
    Bertram Emil Jessup 1899-1972.Melvin Rader & Henry A. Alexander - 1972 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 46:186 - 188.
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  12.  39
    Being and Metaphysics.Melvin A. Glutz - 1958 - Modern Schoolman 35 (4):271-285.
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  13.  32
    Toward an Integrated Psychology.Melvin A. Glutz - 1958 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 32:139-148.
  14.  80
    Modeling Organogenesis from Biological First Principles.Maël Montévil & Ana M. Soto - 2023 - In Matteo Mossio (ed.), Organization in Biology. Springer. pp. 263-283.
    Unlike inert objects, organisms and their cells have the ability to initiate activity by themselves and thus change their properties or states even in the absence of an external cause. This crucial difference led us to search for principles suitable for the study organisms. We propose that cells follow the default state of proliferation with variation and motility, a principle of biological inertia. This means that in the presence of sufficient nutrients, cells will express their default state. We also propose (...)
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  15. Measurement in biology is methodized by theory.Maël Montévil - 2019 - Biology and Philosophy 34 (3):35.
    We characterize access to empirical objects in biology from a theoretical perspective. Unlike objects in current physical theories, biological objects are the result of a history and their variations continue to generate a history. This property is the starting point of our concept of measurement. We argue that biological measurement is relative to a natural history which is shared by the different objects subjected to the measurement and is more or less constrained by biologists. We call symmetrization the theoretical and (...)
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  16.  70
    First-Order Modal Logic.Roderic A. Girle, Melvin Fitting & Richard L. Mendelsohn - 2002 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 8 (3):429.
  17. Emotivity in the Voice: Prosodic, Lexical, and Cultural Appraisal of Complaining Speech.Maël Mauchand & Marc D. Pell - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Emotive speech is a social act in which a speaker displays emotional signals with a specific intention; in the case of third-party complaints, this intention is to elicit empathy in the listener. The present study assessed how the emotivity of complaints was perceived in various conditions. Participants listened to short statements describing painful or neutral situations, spoken with a complaining or neutral prosody, and evaluated how complaining the speaker sounded. In addition to manipulating features of the message, social-affiliative factors which (...)
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  18. In memoriam: Bertram Jessup.Henry A. Alexander & Melvin Rader - 1972 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 31 (2):149-152.
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  19. Why Zeno’s Paradoxes of Motion are Actually About Immobility.Bathfield Maël - 2018 - Foundations of Science 23 (4):649-679.
    Zeno’s paradoxes of motion, allegedly denying motion, have been conceived to reinforce the Parmenidean vision of an immutable world. The aim of this article is to demonstrate that these famous logical paradoxes should be seen instead as paradoxes of immobility. From this new point of view, motion is therefore no longer logically problematic, while immobility is. This is convenient since it is easy to conceive that immobility can actually conceal motion, and thus the proposition “immobility is mere illusion of the (...)
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  20. Defining disease beyond conceptual analysis: an analysis of conceptual analysis in philosophy of medicine.Maël Lemoine - 2013 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 34 (4):309-325.
    Conceptual analysis of health and disease is portrayed as consisting in the confrontation of a set of criteria—a “definition”—with a set of cases, called instances of either “health” or “ disease.” Apart from logical counter-arguments, there is no other way to refute an opponent’s definition than by providing counter-cases. As resorting to intensional stipulation is not forbidden, several contenders can therefore be deemed to have succeeded. This implies that conceptual analysis alone is not likely to decide between naturalism and normativism. (...)
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  21.  28
    A pragmatic logic for commands.Melvin Joseph Adler - 1980 - Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
    The purpose of this essay is to both discuss commands as a species of speech act and to discuss commands within the broader framework of how they are used and ...
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  22.  14
    Perspectives On Organisms: Biological Time, Symmetries And Singularities.Maël Montévil & Giuseppe Longo - 2014 - Springer.
    This authored monograph introduces a genuinely theoretical approach to biology. Starting point is the investigation of empirical biological scaling including their variability, which is found in the literature, e.g. allometric relationships, fractals, etc. The book then analyzes two different aspects of biological time: first, a supplementary temporal dimension to accommodate proper biological rhythms; secondly, the concepts of protension and retention as a means of local organization of time in living organisms. Moreover, the book investigates the role of symmetry in biology, (...)
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  23.  19
    The development of the principles of medical malpractice in the United States.Louis B. Harrison, Melvin H. Worth & Michael A. Carlucci - 1985 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 29 (1):41.
  24.  14
    A modern book of esthetics.Melvin Miller Rader - 1960 - New York,: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
  25.  1
    A modern book of esthetics.Melvin Miller Rader - 1973 - New York,: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
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  26.  15
    Effects of within-session incentive contrast on instrumental acquisition and performance.W. A. Pieper & Melvin H. Marx - 1963 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 65 (6):568.
  27. Possibility spaces and the notion of novelty: from music to biology.Maël Montévil - 2019 - Synthese 196 (11):4555-4581.
    We provide a new perspective on the relation between the space of description of an object and the appearance of novelties. One of the aims of this perspective is to facilitate the interaction between mathematics and historical sciences. The definition of novelties is paradoxical: if one can define in advance the possibles, then they are not genuinely new. By analyzing the situation in set theory, we show that defining generic (i.e., shared) and specific (i.e., individual) properties of elements of a (...)
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  28. Defining aging.Maël Lemoine - 2020 - Biology and Philosophy 35 (5):1-30.
    Aging is an elusive property of life, and many important questions about aging depend on its definition. This article proposes to draw a definition from the scientific literature on aging. First, a broad review reveals five features commonly used to define aging: structural damage, functional decline, depletion, typical phenotypic changes or their cause, and increasing probability of death. Anything that can be called ‘aging’ must present one of these features. Then, although many conditions are not consensual instances of aging, aging (...)
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  29.  23
    How to Make a Meaningful Comparison of Models: The Church–Turing Thesis Over the Reals.Maël Pégny - 2016 - Minds and Machines 26 (4):359-388.
    It is commonly believed that there is no equivalent of the Church–Turing thesis for computation over the reals. In particular, computational models on this domain do not exhibit the convergence of formalisms that supports this thesis in the case of integer computation. In the light of recent philosophical developments on the different meanings of the Church–Turing thesis, and recent technical results on analog computation, I will show that this current belief confounds two distinct issues, namely the extension of the notion (...)
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  30.  14
    Differential recall of problem names and clues as a function of problem solution or nonsolution.Robert A. Bottenberg, Melvin H. Marx & Edward J. Pavur - 1976 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 7 (5):445-448.
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  31.  22
    Impact of Enforcement on Healthcare Billing Fraud: Evidence from the USA.Renee Flasher & Melvin A. Lamboy-Ruiz - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 157 (1):217-229.
    Each state’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit prosecutes billing fraud cases against individual healthcare providers who fraudulently bill Medicaid for services provided. Once an individual is convicted of billing fraud, the Office of Inspector General for the Department of Health and Human Services may exclude the individual from billing any federal government healthcare program, including Medicaid. Excluded individuals are added to a public list of exclusions, which restricts their ability to practice professionally. Prompted by criminology research into the impact of policing (...)
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  32.  21
    How We Think about Temporal Words: A Gestural Priming Study in English and Chinese.Melvin M. R. Ng, Winston D. Goh, Melvin J. Yap, Chi-Shing Tse & Wing-Chee So - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
  33.  64
    The prospects of precision psychiatry.Kathryn Tabb & Maël Lemoine - 2021 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 42 (5):193-210.
    Since the turn of the twenty-first century, biomedical psychiatry around the globe has embraced the so-called precision medicine paradigm, a model for medical research that uses innovative techniques for data collection and analysis to reevaluate traditional theories of disease. The goal of precision medicine is to improve diagnostics by restratifying the patient population on the basis of a deeper understanding of disease processes. This paper argues that precision is ill-fitting for psychiatry for two reasons. First, in psychiatry, unlike in fields (...)
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  34.  19
    Entropies and the Anthropocene crisis.Maël Montévil - 2021 - AI and Society:1-21.
    The Anthropocene crisis is frequently described as the rarefaction of resources or resources per capita. However, both energy and minerals correspond to fundamentally conserved quantities from the perspective of physics. A specific concept is required to understand the rarefaction of available resources. This concept, entropy, pertains to energy and matter configurations and not just to their sheer amount. However, the physics concept of entropy is insufficient to understand biological and social organizations. Biological phenomena display both historicity and systemic properties. A (...)
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  35.  57
    Trust and Trust-Engineering in Artificial Intelligence Research: Theory and Praxis.Melvin Chen - 2021 - Philosophy and Technology 34 (4):1429-1447.
    In this paper, I will identify two problems of trust in an AI-relevant context: a theoretical problem and a practical one. I will identify and address a number of skeptical challenges to an AI-relevant theory of trust. In addition, I will identify what I shall term the ‘scope challenge’, which I take to hold for any AI-relevant theory of trust that purports to be representationally adequate to the multifarious forms of trust and AI. Thereafter, I will suggest how trust-engineering, a (...)
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  36.  28
    A History of Philosophy. [REVIEW]Melvin A. Glutz - 1959 - New Scholasticism 33 (1):101-105.
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  37.  54
    A theoretical analysis of the functional matrix.Melvin L. Moss - 1968 - Acta Biotheoretica 18 (1-4):195-202.
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  38.  37
    Does State Community Benefits Regulation Influence Charity Care and Operational Efficiency in U.S. Non-profit Hospitals?Melvin A. Lamboy-Ruiz, James N. Cannon & Olena V. Watanabe - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 158 (2):441-465.
    Using a comprehensive sample of U.S. non-profit hospitals from 2011 to 2015, we examine the effects of state community benefits regulation on the amount of charity care provided by and the operational efficiency of U.S. non-profit hospitals. First, we document that, under such regulations, non-profit hospitals provide more charity care and less compensated care as a proportion of net revenue. We infer from these findings that CBR has the potential to increase both non-profit hospitals’ amount of charity care and their (...)
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  39.  65
    First-Order Modal Logic.Melvin Fitting & Richard L. Mendelsohn - 1998 - Dordrecht, Netherland: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    This is a thorough treatment of first-order modal logic. The book covers such issues as quantification, equality (including a treatment of Frege's morning star/evening star puzzle), the notion of existence, non-rigid constants and function symbols, predicate abstraction, the distinction between nonexistence and nondesignation, and definite descriptions, borrowing from both Fregean and Russellian paradigms.
  40.  35
    Animal extrapolation in preclinical studies: An analysis of the tragic case of TGN1412.Maël Lemoine - 2017 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 61:35-45.
    According to the received view, the transportation view, animal extrapolation consists in inductive prediction of the outcome of a mechanism in a target, based on an analogical mechanism in a model. Through an analysis of the failure of preclinical studies of TGN1412, an innovative drug, to predict the tragic consequences of its first-in-man trial in 2006, the received view is challenged by a proposed view of animal extrapolation, the chimera view. According to this view, animal extrapolation is based on a (...)
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  41.  46
    The Undiscovered Dewey: Religion, Morality, and the Ethos of Democracy.Melvin L. Rogers - 2008 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    _The Undiscovered Dewey_ explores the profound influence of evolution and its corresponding ideas of contingency and uncertainty on John Dewey's philosophy of action, particularly its argument that inquiry proceeds from the uncertainty of human activity. Dewey separated the meaningfulness of inquiry from a larger metaphysical story concerning the certainty of human progress. He then connected this thread to the way in which our reflective capacities aid us in improving our lives. Dewey therefore launched a new understanding of the modern self (...)
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  42.  61
    The philosophy of the metaverse.Melvin Chen - 2023 - Ethics and Information Technology 25 (3):1-13.
    How might we philosophize about the metaverse? It is traditionally held that the four main branches of philosophy are metaphysics, epistemology, axiology, and logic. In this article, I shall demonstrate how virtual walt-fictionalism, a particular version of virtual irrealism, is able to offer a straightforward, internally consistent, and powerful response about the metaphysics, epistemology, and axiology (ethics) of the metaverse. I will first characterize the metaverse in terms of a reality-virtuality (RV) continuum and distinguish between virtual realism and virtual irrealism, (...)
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  43.  13
    Understanding living beings by analogy with computers or understanding computers as an emanation of the living.Maël Montévil - 2022 - Tropos 13 (2):59-75.
    The analogy between living beings and computers was introduced with circumspection by Schrödinger and has been widely propagated since, rarely with a precise technical meaning. Critics of this perspective are numerous. We emphasize that this perspective is mobilized to justify what may be called a regressive reductionism by comparison with physics or the Cartesian method. Other views on the living are possible, and we focus on an epistemological and theoretical framework where historicity is central, and the regularities susceptible to mathematization (...)
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  44.  16
    Some relations between the intensive properties of the consummatory response and reinforcement.George Collier, Frederick A. Knarr & Melvin H. Marx - 1961 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 62 (5):484.
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  45.  31
    Exposition of the Posterior Analytics of Aristotle. [REVIEW]Melvin A. Glutz - 1958 - New Scholasticism 32 (2):262-264.
  46.  9
    Open Vistas. [REVIEW]Melvin A. Glutz - 1963 - New Scholasticism 37 (2):249-252.
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  47.  17
    Philosophy of Nature. [REVIEW]Melvin A. Glutz - 1963 - New Scholasticism 37 (1):86-88.
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  48. A Tale of Two Deficits: Causality and Care in Medical AI.Melvin Chen - 2020 - Philosophy and Technology 33 (2):245-267.
    In this paper, two central questions will be addressed: ought we to implement medical AI technology in the medical domain? If yes, how ought we to implement this technology? I will critically engage with three options that exist with respect to these central questions: the Neo-Luddite option, the Assistive option, and the Substitutive option. I will first address key objections on behalf of the Neo-Luddite option: the Objection from Bias, the Objection from Artificial Autonomy, the Objection from Status Quo, and (...)
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  49.  48
    A Family of Strict/Tolerant Logics.Melvin Fitting - 2020 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 50 (2):363-394.
    Strict/tolerant logic, ST, evaluates the premises and the consequences of its consequence relation differently, with the premises held to stricter standards while consequences are treated more tolerantly. More specifically, ST is a three-valued logic with left sides of sequents understood as if in Kleene’s Strong Three Valued Logic, and right sides as if in Priest’s Logic of Paradox. Surprisingly, this hybrid validates the same sequents that classical logic does. A version of this result has been extended to meta, metameta, … (...)
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  50.  85
    How does a psychiatrist infer from an observed condition to a case of mental disorder?Maël Lemoine - 2012 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (5):979-983.
    The main thesis of this paper is that mental health practitioners can legitimately infer that a patient's given condition is a case of mental disorder without having diagnosed any specific mental disorder. The article shows how this is justifiable by relying either on psychopathological reasoning, on 'intentional' analysis or possibly on other modes of reasoning. In the end, it highlights the clinical and philosophical consequences of the plurality of modes of 'inferences to mental disorder'.
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