Results for 'Benoit Godin'

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  1.  61
    The Linear Model of Innovation: The Historical Construction of an Analytical Framework.Benoît Godin - 2006 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 31 (6):639-667.
    One of the first frameworks developed for understanding the relation of science and technology to the economy has been the linear model of innovation. The model postulated that innovation starts with basic research, is followed by applied research and development, and ends with production and diffusion. The precise source of the model remains nebulous, having never been documented. Several authors who have used, improved, or criticized the model in the past fifty years rarely acknowledged or cited any original source. The (...)
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  2.  10
    National Innovation System: The System Approach in Historical Perspective.Benoît Godin - 2009 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 34 (4):476-501.
    In the late 1980s, a new conceptual framework appeared in the science, technology, and innovation studies: the National Innovation System. The framework suggests that the research system's ultimate goal is innovation, and that the system is part of a larger system composed of sectors such as government, university, and industry and their environment. The framework also emphasized the relationships between the components or sectors, as the ``cause'' that explains the performance of innovation systems. Most authors agree that the framework came (...)
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  3.  17
    The changing identity of research: A cultural and conceptual history.Benoît Godin & Désirée Schauz - 2016 - History of Science 54 (3):276-306.
    Science as a body of knowledge and as a method has been discussed and debated for centuries among philosophers and ‘men of science’. This paper looks at research, the latest element added to the discourse on science. Science as research, conducted at the level of individuals or organizations, has received increased attention over the course of the twentieth century in public discourse on what science is. This paper documents how different players enlarged the meaning of research from the academic sphere (...)
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  4.  5
    Outline for a History of Science Measurement.Benoît Godin - 2002 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 27 (1):3-27.
    The measurement of science and technology is now fifty years old. It owes a large part of its existence to the work of the National Science Foundation and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development in the 1950s and 1960s. Given the centrality of S&T statistics in science studies, it is surprising that no history of the measurement exists in the literature. This article outlines such a history. The history is cast in the light of social statistics. Like social statistics, (...)
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  5.  24
    Argument from Consequences and the Urge to Polarize.Benoît Godin - 1999 - Argumentation 13 (4):347-365.
    Polarization is a generalized feature of intellectual life. Few authors however have studied polarities as they actually occur in every day life and discourse. This paper proposes two hypotheses to account for the pervasiveness of polarities. The first relates to uncertainty. Almost everything that touches our lives is filled with irreducible uncertainty. As a rhetoric, polarization uses arguments from (future) consequences in order to manage the future. The second hypothesis relates to phenomenology: body and behavior incorporate tensions or dualistic properties (...)
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  6.  24
    Innovation: A Study in the Rehabilitation of a Concept.Benoît Godin - 2015 - Contributions to the History of Concepts 10 (1):45-68.
    For centuries, _innovation_ was a political and contested concept and linguistic weapon used against one's enemy. To support their case, opponents of innovation made use of arguments from ethos and pathos to give power and sustenance to their criticisms and to challenge the innovators. However, since the nineteenth century the arguments have changed completely. _Innovation_ gradually got rehabilitated. This article looks at one type of rehabilitation: the semantic rehabilitation. People started to reread history and to redescribe what _innovation_ is. What (...)
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  7.  20
    “Innovation Studies”: Staking the Claim for a New Disciplinary “Tribe”.Benoît Godin - 2014 - Minerva 52 (4):489-495.
    If anyone in Victoria’s reign had tried to put himself outside the mystique of that society and, from outside, coldly to dissect the word gentleman, we can guess what would have happened to him. Wherever he had found confusion he would have been told ‘But of course you can’t understand. That is because you yourself are not a gentleman’ .In recent years the phrase “innovation studies” has come to be used by a group of scholars to name what was previously (...)
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  8.  21
    L'opinion publique et la science: A chacun son ignorance. Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent.Benoit Godin - 2001 - Isis 92 (4):817-817.
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  9.  11
    Representation of Innovation in Seventeenth-Century England.Benoît Godin - 2016 - Contributions to the History of Concepts 11 (2):24-42.
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  10.  10
    The English Reformation and the Invention of Innovation, 1548–1649.Benoît Godin - 2022 - Contributions to the History of Concepts 17 (1):1-22.
    Innovation is a key concept of modernity. It acquired its lettres de noblesse in the twentieth century, thanks to or because of economics and technology. However, for centuries the concept was essentially pejorative. How can we explain this connotation? This article suggests that one of the crucial moments is the Reformation. Using official documents of the time, the article studies the vocabulary of the English Reformation and documents the meanings and the uses made of innovation. The article suggests that innovation (...)
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  11. The Number Makers: Fifty Years of Official Statistics on Science and Technology.Benoit Godin - 2002 - Minerva 40 (4):375-397.
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  12.  13
    What Business Are You In, Mr Barber?Benoît Godin - 2013 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 45 (10):989-991.
  13. Innovation Without the Word: William F. Ogburn’s Contribution to the Study of Technological Innovation. [REVIEW]Benoît Godin - 2010 - Minerva 48 (3):277-307.
    The history of innovation as a category is dominated by economists and by the contribution of J. A. Schumpeter. This paper documents the contribution of a neglected but influential author, the American sociologist William F. Ogburn. Over a period of more than 30 years, Ogburn developed pioneering ideas on three dimensions of technological innovation: origins, diffusion, and effects. He also developed the first conceptual framework for innovation studies—based on the concept of cultural lags—which led to studying and forecasting the impacts (...)
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  14. In the Shadow of Schumpeter: W. Rupert Maclaurin and the Study of Technological Innovation. [REVIEW]Benoît Godin - 2008 - Minerva 46 (3):343-360.
    J. Schumpeter is a key figure, even a seminal one, on technological innovation. Most economists who study technological innovation refer to Schumpeter and his pioneering role in introducing innovation into economic studies. However, despite having brought forth the concept of innovation in economic theory, Schumpeter provided few if any analyses of the process of innovation itself. This paper suggests that the origin of systematic studies on technological innovation owes its existence to the economist W. Rupert Maclaurin from MIT. In the (...)
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  15.  13
    Pushes and Pulls: Hi(S)tory of the Demand Pull Model of Innovation. [REVIEW]Joseph P. Lane & Benoit Godin - 2013 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 38 (5):621-654.
    Much has been written about the linear model of innovation. While it may have been the dominant model used to explain technological innovation for decades, alternatives did exist. One such alternative—generally discussed as being the exact opposite of the linear model—is the demand-pull model. Beginning in the 1960s, people from different disciplines started looking at technological innovation from a demand rather than a supply perspective. The theory was that technological innovation is stimulated by market demand rather than by scientific discoveries. (...)
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  16.  9
    The Numbers Makers: Fifty Years of Science and Technology Official Statistics. [REVIEW]Benoit Godin - 2002 - Minerva 40 (4):375-397.
    Official science and technology statistics arefifty years old. Among industrial countries,the forerunners were the United States, Canadaand Great Britain. This paper traces thedevelopment and the construction of S&Tstatistics in these three countries, and theirsubsequent standardization, mainly by theOECD, in the 1960s. It shows how military andscience policy needs drove the construction ofstatistics, until economic considerations cameto dominate their development. It alsodiscusses how statistics interacted withpolitics by way of studies that documentedgaps between OECD Member countries and betweenthe OECD and the USSR.
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  17. “Innovation Studies”: The Invention of a Specialty. [REVIEW]Benoît Godin - 2012 - Minerva 50 (4):397-421.
    Innovation has become a very popular concept over the twentieth century. However, few have stopped to study the origins of the category and to critically examine the studies produced on innovation. This paper conducts such an analysis on one type of innovation, namely technological innovation. The study of technological innovation is over one hundred years old. From the early 1900s onward, anthropologists, sociologists, historians, and economists began theorizing about technological innovation, each from his own respective disciplinary framework. However, in the (...)
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  18.  15
    Benoît Godin. Measurement and Statistics on Science and Technology: 1920 to the Present. xx + 360 pp., apps., index. London/New York: Routledge, 2004. [REVIEW]Geoffrey C. Bowker - 2007 - Isis 98 (2):403-404.
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  19.  7
    Jorge Niosi;, André Manseau;, Benoît Godin. Canada’s National System of Innovation. xvi + 222 pp., illus., figs., tables, bibl., index. Montreal/London: McGill‐Queen’s University Press, 2000. $65. [REVIEW]Paul Dufour - 2002 - Isis 93 (4):759-760.
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  20.  12
    ‘From Blindness to Light’: A Review of Benoît Godin and Dominique Vinck (eds.), Critical Studies of Innovation: Alternative Approaches to the Pro-Innovation Bias. [REVIEW]Logan D. A. Williams - 2020 - Minerva 58 (2):309-314.
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  21.  10
    Grands-parents et familles recomposées.Benoît Schneider & Marie-Claude Mietkiewicz - 2001 - Dialogue: Families & Couples 1 (1):61-71.
    Les recompositions familiales touchent l’ensemble des liens familiaux et des liens intergénérationnels. Or, si l’on observe, tant sur le plan juridique que dans les pratiques des familles conjugales, une acception plus complexe et plus riche de la parentalité, les grands-parents restent souvent méconnus. Comment construisent-ils leurs rapports à leurs « beaux-petits-enfants »? Nous avons examiné la littérature et interrogé des « belles-grands-mères » pour tenter d’y voir plus clair. Quelles représentations le champ social offre-t-il des beaux-grands-parents? Et quelles sont concrètement (...)
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  22.  65
    Achievements, Safety and Environmental Epistemic Luck.Benoit Gaultier - 2014 - Dialectica 68 (4):477-497.
    Theories of knowledge as credit for true belief, or as cognitive achievement, have to face the following objection: in the famous Barn façades case, it seems that the truth of Barney's belief that he is in front of a barn is to be explained by the correct functioning of his cognitive capacities, although we are reluctant to say that he knows he is in front of a barn. Duncan Pritchard concludes from this that a safety clause, irreducible to the conditions (...)
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  23. Skills, procedural knowledge, and knowledge-how.Benoit Gaultier - 2017 - Synthese 194 (12):4959-4981.
    My main intention in this article is to settle the question whether having the ability to \ is, as Ryleans think, necessary for knowing how to \, and to determine the kind of role played by procedural knowledge in knowing how to \ and in acquiring and possessing the ability to \. I shall argue, in a seemingly anti-Rylean fashion, that when it comes to know-hows that are ordinarily categorised as physical skills, or—to be, for the moment, philosophically neutral—as enabling (...)
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  24.  16
    Santé mentale et vie chrétienne: Importance et complexité des recherches scientifiques.Godin S. J. André - 1962 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 7 (1):224-237.
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  25.  20
    The Iconicity of Thought and its Moving Pictures: Following the Sinuosities of Peirce's Path.Benoit Gaultier - 2017 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 53 (3):374.
    When one tries to determine what the iconic dimension of thought consists in for Peirce and what its range is, one might have the impression that his remarks on this matter are inconsistent. For instance, on the one hand he writes the following: Remember it is by icons only that we really reason, and abstract statements are valueless in reasoning except so far as they aid us to construct diagrams. The sectaries of the opinion I am combating seem, on the (...)
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  26.  92
    The Ecumenical Route.Christian Godin - 1996 - Diogenes 44 (175):119-136.
    Ecumenicism is a synthesis of syncretism and universalism. It combines, in fact, the religious totalization of syncretism with the human totalization of universalism, using syncretism to correct what might be unilateral in the universal religion, and using universalism to complete what might be particularistic in syncretism.
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  27.  59
    The Notion of Totality in Indian Thought.Christian Godin - 2000 - Diogenes 48 (189):58-67.
    The East has seen totality in a far more consistent and systematic way than the West; and India more so than any other civilisation in the East. When the Swami Siddheswarananda came to France to lecture on Vedic philosophy, he entitled his address, Outline of a Philosophy of Totality’. The expression could have been applied to the philosophies of India as a whole. But the world of thought, coextensive with culture, is far broader than philosophy. It is no exaggeration to (...)
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  28. An epistemic distinction among essences, its metaphysical ground, and the role of philosophy.Benoit Gaultier - 2024 - Synthese 203 (179):1-16.
    Uniformism is the view that one and the same epistemology should apply for all modal knowledge. I argue that, whether or not all modal knowledge can be accounted for in terms of knowledge of essences, uniformism about knowledge of essences is untenable. I do this by showing that, while some essences are empirically discoverable, others are not. I then argue that the uniquely realisable–non-uniquely realisable distinction is a better metaphysical candidate for grounding this epistemic difference than the concrete–abstract distinction. I (...)
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  29. Tod Chambers, The Fiction of Bioethics: Cases as Literary Texts Reviewed by.Benoit Morin - 2000 - Philosophy in Review 20 (1):14-16.
     
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  30.  50
    A Neglected Ramseyan View of Truth, Belief, and Inquiry.Benoit Gaultier - 2017 - Journal of Philosophy 114 (7):366-380.
    For F. P. Ramsey, “there is no separate problem of truth,” but, rather, substantive problems about the nature of belief and judgment and the place and function of truth in these propositional attitudes. In this paper, I expound and defend an important but largely overlooked aspect of Ramsey’s view of belief and inquiry: his thesis that truth does not intervene at all in one’s ordinary beliefs, nor in one’s ordinarily inquiring into—in the sense of wondering, or reflecting on—whether or not (...)
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  31.  10
    Aides informatiques à la lecture d’un ouvrage de philosophie.Benoit Hufschmitt - 2010 - L’Enseignement Philosophique 60 (2):48-67.
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  32. Pour un point de vue d’immanence en sciences humaines.Benoît Ghislain Kanabus - 2009 - Studia Phaenomenologica 9:333-350.
    This article shows how, starting from Schelling and Henry, one can build a radical critique of objectification and subjectification within humanities. This critique opens the way for the construction of a point of view of immanence, which is characterized by the experimentation of a constitution of affects in a process from which proceeds the subjectivity. This point of view of immanence questions the accepted attitudes in the production of social relationships and the norms that govern them, so as to increase (...)
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  33.  44
    When is epistemic dependence disvaluable?Benoit Gaultier - 2021 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 10 (3):178-187.
    There clearly seems to be something problematic with certain forms of epistemic dependence. However, it has proved surprisingly difficult to articulate what this problem is exactly. My aim in this paper is to make clear when it is problematic to rely on others or on artefacts and technologies that are external to us for the acquisition and maintenance of our beliefs, and why. In order to do so, I focus on the neuromedia thought experiment. After having rejected different ways in (...)
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  34. Historia dicax : rire, discours et rhétorique chez Tite-Live.Benoît Sans - 2023 - Methodos 23.
    La présente étude rassemble les passages de l’Ab Vrbe condita de Tite-Live où un terme lié au rire est associé à un discours ou à une parole rapportée, afin de les confronter aux vues exprimées par Cicéron et Quintilien sur le rire en contexte rhétorique. Si tous les passages étudiés s’insèrent très bien dans la conception rhétorique du rire, l’historien latin s’appuie sur celle-ci pour offrir une répartition originale entre usages acceptables et formes abusives du rire qui participe à la (...)
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  35.  26
    Human Evolution and the Origins of Hierarchies: The State of Nature.Benoît Dubreuil (ed.) - 2010 - Cambridge University Press.
    In this book, Benoît Dubreuil explores the creation and destruction of hierarchies in human evolution. Combining the methods of archaeology, anthropology, cognitive neuroscience and primatology, he offers a natural history of hierarchies from the point of view of both cultural and biological evolution. This volume explains why dominance hierarchies typical of primate societies disappeared in the human lineage and why the emergence of large-scale societies during the Neolithic period implied increased social differentiation, the creation of status hierarchies, and, eventually, political (...)
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  36.  38
    Thought Experiments and Knowledge of Metaphysical Modality.Benoit Gaultier - 2016 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 93 (4):525-547.
    According to Timothy Williamson, philosophy is not a mere conceptual investigation and does not involve a specific cognitive ability, different in nature from those involved in acquiring scientific or ordinary knowledge of the world. The author holds that Williamson does not succeed in explaining how it is possible for us to acquire, through thought experiments, the type of knowledge that, according to him, philosophy predominantly aims to acquire—namely, knowledge of metaphysical modality. More specifically, the author considers in detail Russell’s stopped (...)
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  37.  9
    Médecine, humanisation et décoïncidence : une articulation exploratrice de nouvelles ressources pour la pensée tillichienne sur la santé.Benoit Mathot - 2022 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 78 (1):81-94.
    Benoit Mathot À partir du cadre théorique de la décoïncidence proposé par le philosophe François Jullien, cet article explore les enjeux d’humanisation des soins médicaux, ainsi que l’introduction de la dimension spirituelle dans la prise en charge des patients. Il revient enfin sur le dialogue possible entre ces réflexions contemporaines et les considérations du théologien luthérien Paul Tillich sur la santé.
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  38.  8
    La Russie de Poutine et la collaboration des extrêmes droites occidentales.Benoit Massin - 2022 - Cités 93 (1):113-126.
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  39. Perception de Dieu chez L. Lavelle et le dialogue interreligieux.Benoit Standaert - 2003 - Filosofia Oggi 26 (103):277-290.
     
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  40.  21
    René Girard in France.Benoît Chantre & William A. Johnsen - 2016 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 23:13-61.
    The reception of René Girard’s work in France deserves book-length treatment to fully describe the heated debates, conflicting expectations, and controversy that it inspired before its lasting importance was eventually recognized. We must keep in mind that, although he lived in the US and became a citizen in 1956, he always kept his sights on his native land. He watched the transformations of French thought from the other side of the ocean; he forged his own writing strategies in response to (...)
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  41.  21
    Has provoking microbiota aggression driven the obesity epidemic?Benoit Chassaing & Andrew T. Gewirtz - 2016 - Bioessays 38 (2):122-128.
    Alterations in the gut microbiome have increasingly been implicated in driving obesity and its associated diseases, but underlying mechanisms remain poorly defined. Herein, in addition to reviewing the field, we hypothesize that a highly significant causative factor of such inflammatory disease‐associated microbiome alterations is a more aggressive microbiota that encroaches upon its host, with components having high potential to activate host pro‐inflammatory gene expression in a manner that drives metabolic disease. We further hypothesize that a range of societal changes, including (...)
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  42.  26
    Confucius and the Hen-Pheasant: The Enigma at the Center of the Analects.Benoît Vermander - 2023 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 22 (3):351-377.
    The last sentence of Chapter 10 of the Analects describes a brief encounter between Confucius and a hen-pheasant, and it does so in puzzling terms, ridden with lexical difficulties. At the same time, intertextual references insert this fragment into the context of Confucius’ life mission as well as of Chinese mythological narratives. This contribution assesses the fragment’s meaning and significance: Confucius’ reaction to the hen-pheasant unveils his evolving understanding of the Heavenly Mandate bestowed upon him. The fragment thus forcefully concludes (...)
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  43.  25
    The weakness of the pigeonhole principle under hyperarithmetical reductions.Benoit Monin & Ludovic Patey - 2020 - Journal of Mathematical Logic 21 (3):2150013.
    The infinite pigeonhole principle for 2-partitions asserts the existence, for every set A, of an infinite subset of A or of its complement. In this paper, we study the infinite pigeonhole pr...
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  44.  84
    Punitive emotions and Norm violations.Benoît Dubreuil - 2010 - Philosophical Explorations 13 (1):35 – 50.
    The recent literature on social norms has stressed the centrality of emotions in explaining punishment and norm enforcement. This article discusses four negative emotions (righteous anger, indignation, contempt, and disgust) and examines their relationship to punitive behavior. I argue that righteous anger and indignation are both punitive emotions strictly speaking, but induce punishments of different intensity and have distinct elicitors. Contempt and disgust, for their part, cannot be straightforwardly considered punitive emotions, although they often blend with a colder form of (...)
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  45. Paleolithic public goods games: Why human culture and cooperation did not evolve in one step.Benoît Dubreuil - 2010 - Biology and Philosophy 25 (1):53-73.
    It is widely agreed that humans have specific abilities for cooperation and culture that evolved since their split with their last common ancestor with chimpanzees. Many uncertainties remain, however, about the exact moment in the human lineage when these abilities evolved. This article argues that cooperation and culture did not evolve in one step in the human lineage and that the capacity to stick to long-term and risky cooperative arrangements evolved before properly modern culture. I present evidence that Homo heidelbergensis (...)
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  46.  18
    Partition Genericity and Pigeonhole Basis Theorems.Benoit Monin & Ludovic Patey - 2024 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 89 (2):829-857.
    There exist two main notions of typicality in computability theory, namely, Cohen genericity and randomness. In this article, we introduce a new notion of genericity, called partition genericity, which is at the intersection of these two notions of typicality, and show that many basis theorems apply to partition genericity. More precisely, we prove that every co-hyperimmune set and every Kurtz random is partition generic, and that every partition generic set admits weak infinite subsets, for various notions of weakness. In particular, (...)
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  47. The effort to be neutral.Benoit Gaultier - 2024 - Southern Journal of Philosophy.
    My aim in this article is to elucidate the nature of a form of intellectual and practical neutrality that is not covered by existing accounts of suspension of judgment. After rejecting some inadequate characterizations of this attitude of neutrality, I provide a positive characterization of it: it is a successful effort to resist certain tendencies that are part of the dispositional profile of the doxastic state one is in on a given issue. I conclude by saying a few words about (...)
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  48.  24
    Edit by Number: Looking at the Composition of the Huainanzi, and Beyond.Benoît Vermander - 2021 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 20 (3):459-498.
    The progressive dominance of historical-critical methods in the reading of ancient Chinese classics has led scholars to privilege micro levels of textual analysis. Consequently, the question as to whether laws of composition could be identified in this corpus has often been ignored, or considered irrelevant. Working on Chinese number symbolism as well as on rules governing “ring composition” in other cultural contexts, this article aims at fashioning anew the question of the possibility of an ancient Chinese “structural rhetoric” and at (...)
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  49.  9
    Gott-Vater und die Elternbilder.Godin S. J. André - 1967 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 9 (1):87-92.
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  50.  81
    The dynamic moral self: A social psychological perspective.Benoît Monin & Alexander H. Jordan - 2009 - In Darcia Narvaez & Daniel Lapsley (eds.), Personality, Identity, and Character. Cambridge University Press. pp. 341--354.
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