Results for 'Horowitz, Asher'

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  1. Ḳitsure Ḥovat ha-levavot: u-vo arbaʻah sefarim niftaḥim mi-gedole ʻolam.D. Steinberg, Asher ben Shelomyah, Menaḥem ben Aaron ibn Zeraḥ, Isaiah Horowitz & Jacob Zahalon (eds.) - 2010 - Monroe, NY: Daniyel Daṿid Shṭainberg.
    Ḳitsur Ḥovat ha-levavot me-Rabenu Asher mi-Lunil -- Ḳitsur Ḥovat ha-levavot mi-sefer Tsedah la-derekh -- Ḳitsur Ḥovat ha-levavot ʻAśarah hilulim -- Ḳitsur Ḥovat ha-levavot Margaliyot ṭovot.
     
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  2.  18
    Horowitz, Asher, and Maley, Terry, eds. The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. [REVIEW]Mark Wegierski - 1997 - Review of Metaphysics 50 (3):666-668.
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  3.  8
    Asher Horowitz., Rousseau, Nature, and History.Harvey Chisick - 1994 - International Studies in Philosophy 26 (4):138-139.
  4.  2
    Rousseau, Nature, and History by Asher Horowitz. [REVIEW]Dena Goodman - 1987 - Isis 78:490-491.
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  5.  26
    Ethics at a Standstill. By Asher Horowitz. pp. 388, Pittsburg, Duquesne University Press, 2008, $58.00/$24.95. [REVIEW]T. Remington Harkness - 2012 - Heythrop Journal 53 (1):173-174.
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  6.  39
    Book Reviews : Wolfgang Schluchter, Paradoxes of Modernity: Culture and Conduct in the Theory of Max Weber. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA. Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, eds., The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. University of Toronto. [REVIEW]Andrew M. Koch - 1997 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 27 (4):551-557.
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  7.  27
    Rousseau's fulfillment of the natural public law tradition and his contribution to its demise.Leonard R. Sorenson - 2005 - The European Legacy 10 (5):439-454.
    The recent research of Helena Rosenblatt, Hilail Gildin, Arthur Meltzer, and John Scott calls for a reconsideration of Rousseau's stance towards and effect on the natural public law tradition. This reconsideration is especially called for given the persuasive evidence and arguments that these scholars marshal to demonstrate the positive contribution of Rousseau to that tradition and to suggest that his pre-Kantian rational law teaching in the Social Contract is rooted in his post-Hobbesian stance towards natural law, especially in the Second (...)
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  8. Imre Asher: ḳovets mikhtavim.Asher Fraind - 2007 - Yerushalayim: [Publisher Not Identified].
     
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  9. Maʻadane Asher.Asher Rossenbaum - 1956 - [Tel-Aviv,:
     
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  10.  48
    The Case for Welfare Biology.Asher A. Soryl, Mike R. King, Andrew J. Moore & Philip J. Seddon - 2021 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 34 (2):1-25.
    Animal welfare science and ecology are both generally concerned with the lives of animals, however they differ in their objectives and scope; the former studies the welfare of animals considered ‘domestic’ and under the domain of humans, while the latter studies wild animals with respect to ecological processes. Each of these approaches addresses certain aspects of the lives of animals living in the world though neither, we argue, tells us important information about the welfare of wild animals. This paper argues (...)
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  11.  21
    Elementary formal systems as a framework for relative recursion theory.Bruce M. Horowitz - 1982 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 23 (1):39-52.
  12. Truth conditional discourse semantics for parentheticals.Asher Nicholas - 2000 - Journal of Semantics 17 (1).
     
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  13.  82
    Indirect Speech Acts.Nicholas Asher & Alex Lascarides - 2001 - Synthese 128 (1-2):183-228.
    In this paper, we address several puzzles concerning speech acts,particularly indirect speech acts. We show how a formal semantictheory of discourse interpretation can be used to define speech actsand to avoid murky issues concerning the metaphysics of action. Weprovide a formally precise definition of indirect speech acts, includingthe subclass of so-called conventionalized indirect speech acts. Thisanalysis draws heavily on parallels between phenomena at the speechact level and the lexical level. First, we argue that, just as co-predicationshows that some words can (...)
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  14.  7
    Sustaining Loss: Art and Mournful Life.Gregg Horowitz - 2001 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    _Sustaining Loss_ explores the uncanny, traumatic weaving together of the living and the dead in art, and the morbid fascination it holds for modern philosophical aesthetics. Beginning with Kant, the author traces how aesthetic theory has been drawn back repeatedly to the moving power of the undead body of the work of art. He locates the most potent expressions of this philosophical compulsion in Hegel's thesis that art is a thing of the past, and in Freud's view that the work (...)
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  15.  18
    Dormio: A targeted dream incubation device.Adam Haar Horowitz, Pattie Maes & Robert Stickgold - 2020 - Consciousness and Cognition 83:102938.
  16.  3
    NFL’s dangerous strategies of marketing football to youth: shades of big tobacco.Asher Clissold & Kathleen Bachynski - forthcoming - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy:1-18.
    Comparisons have been made between the tobacco industry’s historic tactics in defending their products with the responses of some key actors in the sports world to head injuries. Both, it is said, have deployed deceptive marketing and advertising techniques to entice youth to engage with a subjective pleasure-producing product that has undeniable short- and long-term health detriments. Unlike what is called euphemistically, ‘Big Tobacco’, however, the National Football League (NFL) has evaded legal restrictions on the promotion of an inherently dangerous (...)
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  17.  22
    Externalism and the Resolution of Self-knowledge.Amir Horowitz & Hilla Jacobson - 2010 - Acta Philosophica 19 (2):339-348.
    This paper suggests a new way for defending semantic externalism from what we take to be the most serious attack against it in the context of the discussion of the a priori nature of self-knowledge. We shall argue that the resolution of our a priori knowledge of our beliefs on the assumption that their contents are externally determined is identical to the resolution that it makes sense to attribute to our knowledge of our beliefs independently of any assumption about content-determination. (...)
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  18.  35
    How do we know that we know? The accessibility model of the feeling of knowing.Asher Koriat - 1993 - Psychological Review 100 (4):609-639.
  19.  26
    Poetic Imitation:_ The Argument of _Republic 10.Sarale Ben-Asher - 2024 - Apeiron 57 (1):55-81.
    The paper offers a new reading of the argument against poetry in Plato’s Republic 10. I argue that Socrates’ corruption charges rely on the tripartite theory of the soul, and that metaphysical doctrines play a role only in the first charge, which demonstrates that the poets are not qualified to teach by reducing tragic poetry to mimetic skill. This accusation clears the way for two corruption charges: the strengthening of appetite, and the softening of spirit (i.e., ‘the greatest charge’). The (...)
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  20.  9
    Philosophy lab: an experiential approach to conceptual analysis.Asher Walden (ed.) - 2017 - [San Diego, CA]: Cognella Academic Publishing.
    Philosophy Lab: An Experiential Approach to Conceptual Analysis gives students the skills and strategies needed to do philosophical work in the Analytic tradition. They are presented with a step-by-step method for performing a preliminary conceptual analysis and practice examples to apply the method to standard philosophical problems. Students are introduced to the work of great thinkers including Descartes, Hobbes, Locke, Wittgenstein, and Ryle. These works are complemented by contemporary empirical findings concerning perception, desire, emotion, moral intuition, and other basic elements (...)
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  21.  37
    Karl Popper and the Copenhagen interpretation.Asher Peres - 2002 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 33 (1):23-34.
  22. Roundtable discussion.Nicholas Asher, Lee R. Brooks, Fred Dretske, Jerry Fodor, David Israel, John Perry, Zenon Pylyshyn & Brian Cantwell Smith - 1990 - In Philip P. Hanson (ed.), Information, Language and Cognition. University of British Columbia Press. pp. 198--216.
     
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  23.  16
    Constructively nonpartial recursive functions.Bruce M. Horowitz - 1980 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 21 (2):273-276.
  24.  16
    Emile Durkheim, 1858-1917: A Collection of Essays, with Translations and a Bibliography.Irving Louis Horowitz - 1962 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 22 (3):419-421.
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  25.  13
    Marxism and the Open Mind.Irving Louis Horowitz - 1958 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 19 (2):262-262.
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  26.  6
    Conscious representation.M. Horowitz - 1992 - Consciousness and Cognition 1 (1):12-15.
  27.  83
    Reference to Abstract Objects in Discourse.Nicholas Asher - 1993 - Dordrecht, Boston, and London: Kluwer.
    This volume is about abstract objects and the ways we refer to them in natural language. Asher develops a semantical and metaphysical analysis of these entities in two stages. The first reflects the rich ontology of abstract objects necessitated by the forms of language in which we think and speak. A second level of analysis maps the ontology of natural language metaphysics onto a sparser domain--a more systematic realm of abstract objects that are fully analyzed. This second level reflects (...)
  28.  53
    Games, Rules, and Practices.Yuval Eylon & Amir Horowitz - 2018 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 12 (3):241-254.
    We present and defend a view labeled “practiceism” which provides a solution to the incompatibility problems. The classic incompatibility problem is inconsistency of:1. Someone who intentionally violates the rules of a game is not playing the game.2. In many cases, players intentionally violate the rules as part of playing the game.The problem has a normative counterpart:1’. In normal cases, it is wrong for a player to intentionally violate the rules of the game.2’. In many normal cases, it is not wrong (...)
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  29. Respecting all the evidence.Paulina Sliwa & Sophie Horowitz - 2015 - Philosophical Studies 172 (11):2835-2858.
    Plausibly, you should believe what your total evidence supports. But cases of misleading higher-order evidence—evidence about what your evidence supports—present a challenge to this thought. In such cases, taking both first-order and higher-order evidence at face value leads to a seemingly irrational incoherence between one’s first-order and higher-order attitudes: you will believe P, but also believe that your evidence doesn’t support P. To avoid sanctioning tension between epistemic levels, some authors have abandoned the thought that both first-order and higher-order evidence (...)
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  30.  11
    The Material Ghost: Films and Their Medium.Gregg Horowitz - 1999 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 57 (3):381-383.
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  31. Logics of Conversation.Nicholas Asher, Nicholas Michael Asher & Alex Lascarides - 2003 - Cambridge University Press.
  32.  98
    Karl Popper and the copenhagen interpretation.Asher Peres - 2002 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 33 (1):23-34.
    Popper conceived an experiment whose analysis led to a result that he deemed absurd. Popper wrote that his reasoning was based on the Copenhagen interpretation and therefore invalidated it. Many authors who have examined Popper's analysis have found in it various technical flaws which are briefly summarized here. However, the aim of the present article is not technical. My concern is to redress logical flaws in Popper's argument: the terminology he uses is ambiguous, his analysis involves counterfactual hypotheses, and it (...)
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  33. The principle of induction.Asher Moore - 1952 - Journal of Philosophy 49 (24):741-747.
  34.  23
    Nationalismus als Umkehr: Etwas zur jüdischen Meta-Politik der Moderne.Asher D. Biemann - 2022 - Naharaim 16 (1):3-27.
    “Metapolitics” is an ambiguous term. Recent philosophers have claimed the concept for neo-conservative, even right-wing agendas, while others have employed it to signal radical discontent with politics altogether. Beginning with Peter Viereck’s characterization of Nazi ideology as “Meta-Politics,” this essay works its way back from an “irrational,” “volkish,” and supposedly “conservative” concept to another use of “Metapolitics” as found in Martin Buber and Hermann Cohen that was rooted in a liberal tradition of the Enlightenment—especially in August Schlözer and Saul Ascher. (...)
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  35. Sefer torat imi: tokho ratsuf arbaʻah ḳunṭresim... Asher natan... Ohel Raḥel... Asher lavash... Asher naṭaʻ..Asher Ḥadad - 2002 - Netivot: Asher Ḥadad.
     
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  36. The feeling of knowing: Some metatheoretical implications for consciousness and control.Asher Koriat - 2000 - Consciousness and Cognition 9 (2):149-171.
    The study of the feeling of knowing may have implications for some of the metatheoretical issues concerning consciousness and control. Assuming a distinction between information-based and experience-based metacognitive judgments, it is argued that the sheer phenomenological experience of knowing (''noetic feeling'') occupies a unique role in mediating between implicit-automatic processes, on the one hand, and explicit-controlled processes, on the other. Rather than reflecting direct access to memory traces, noetic feelings are based on inferential heuristics that operate implicitly and unintentionally. Once (...)
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  37.  19
    The “And” of History: Thinking Side by Side in Rosenzweig’s Imagination of Eternity.Asher D. Biemann - 2019 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 27 (1):60-85.
    Franz Rosenzweig’s Star of Redemption culminates in an aesthetic configuration of simultaneous presences: world, man, God, creation, revelation, and redemption are viewed in a metahistorical side-by-side, connected by the “factualizing power of the And.” But the idea of simultaneity, which is central to Rosenzweig’s configurative thinking, belongs to the historical imagination as much as it belongs to the theological “breaking through the shackles of time.” Rosenzweig’s “and” belongs to both a tradition of cosmic-aesthetic historicism and the philosophical reconstitution of time (...)
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  38.  15
    The Principle of Induction.Asher Moore - 1952 - Journal of Philosophy 49 (24):741-747.
  39.  51
    The principle of induction (II): A rejoinder to miss Brodbeck.Asher Moore - 1952 - Journal of Philosophy 49 (24):750-758.
  40.  13
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences: A Reader.Irving Louis Horowitz - 1964 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 25 (2):289-290.
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  41.  5
    Philosophy In Revolution.Irving Louis Horowitz - 1958 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 19 (2):260-262.
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  42.  11
    The Metaphysics of Kindness: Comparative Studies in Religious Meta-Ethics.Asher Walden - 2015 - Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books.
    This book explores the problem of moral metaphysics through investigations of four pivotal philosophers. It uses the contemporary idea of moral sentimentalism as a comparative category to explore the problems and challenges inherent in the project of moral metaphysics.
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  43.  25
    Zhu Xi, the Four-Seven Debate, and Wittgenstein’s Dilemma.Asher Walden - 2015 - Philosophy East and West 65 (2):567-581.
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  44.  15
    Book publishing in Israel: Bigger than the sum of its parts.Asher Weill - 1996 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 7 (2):192-198.
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  45.  22
    Between Prophecy and Apocalypse: Buber, Benjamin, and Socialist Eschatology.Asher Wycoff - 2021 - Political Theory 49 (3):354-379.
    Martin Buber’s political thought has enjoyed renewed attention lately, particularly his concept of “theopolitics,” a type of political practice that recognizes God as the ultimate political authority. In Buber’s biblical exegesis, theopolitics is a condition of everyday life in premonarchical Israel, but following the installation of the monarchy, it becomes a specialized activity of prophets, consisting chiefly in divinely commanded intercession against state actions. Buber suggests that a version of this prophetic activity is manifest in present-day socialist cooperatives, especially the (...)
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  46.  48
    The Geometrical Meaning of Time.Asher Yahalom - 2008 - Foundations of Physics 38 (6):489-497.
    It is stated in many text books that the any metric appearing in general relativity should be locally Lorentzian i.e. of the type η μ ν =diag (1,−1,−1,−1) this is usually presented as an independent axiom of the theory, which can not be deduced from other assumptions. The meaning of this assertion is that a specific coordinate (the temporal coordinate) is given a unique significance with respect to the other spatial coordinates. In this work it is shown that the above (...)
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  47. Lexical meaning in context: a web of words.Nicholas Asher - 2011 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This is a book about the meanings of words and how they can combine to form larger meaningful units, as well as how they can fail to combine when the ...
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  48.  22
    Monitoring and control processes in the strategic regulation of memory accuracy.Asher Koriat & Morris Goldsmith - 1996 - Psychological Review 103 (3):490-517.
  49. The physicist's role in physical laws.Asher Peres - 1980 - Foundations of Physics 10 (7-8):631-634.
    The physicist not only observes phenomena, but he also has an active role in the formulation of some laws. For instance, laws involving irreversibility refer explicitly to what can or cannot be done by physicists. As the abilities of the latter may vary, we obtain sequences of laws, the convergence of which is discussed.
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  50. Dilating and contracting arbitrarily.David Builes, Sophie Horowitz & Miriam Schoenfield - 2020 - Noûs 56 (1):3-20.
    Standard accuracy-based approaches to imprecise credences have the consequence that it is rational to move between precise and imprecise credences arbitrarily, without gaining any new evidence. Building on the Educated Guessing Framework of Horowitz (2019), we develop an alternative accuracy-based approach to imprecise credences that does not have this shortcoming. We argue that it is always irrational to move from a precise state to an imprecise state arbitrarily, however it can be rational to move from an imprecise state to a (...)
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