Results for 'Loebe, Frank'

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  1.  19
    Abstract vs. social roles–Towards a general theoretical account of roles.Frank Loebe - 2007 - Applied Ontology 2 (2):127-158.
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  2.  30
    GFO: The General Formal Ontology.Frank Loebe, Patryk Burek & Heinrich Herre - 2022 - Applied ontology 17 (1):71-106.
    The General Formal Ontology is a top-level ontology that is being developed at the University of Leipzig since 1999. Besides introducing some of the basic principles of the ontology, we expound axiomatic fragments of its formalization and present ontological models of several use cases. GFO is a top-level ontology that integrates objects and processes into a unified framework, in a way that differs significantly from other ontologies. Another unique selling feature of GFO is its meta-ontological architecture, which includes set theory (...)
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  3.  30
    GFO-Bio: A biological core ontology.Robert Hoehndorf, Frank Loebe, Roberto Poli, Heinrich Herre & Janet Kelso - 2008 - Applied ontology 3 (4):219-227.
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  4.  41
    FueL: Representing function structure and function dependencies with a UML profile for function modeling.Patryk Burek, Frank Loebe & Heinrich Herre - 2016 - Applied ontology 11 (2):155-203.
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  5.  21
    The Text of the Loeb Vitruvius: A Reply.Frank Granger - 1932 - The Classical Review 46 (02):58-61.
  6.  40
    Nietzsche’s meta-philosophy: the nature, method and aims of philosophy: edited by Paul S. Loeb and Matthew Meyer, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2019, pp. xiv+284, £75.00 (hb), ISBN: 978-1-108-42225-3. [REVIEW]Frank Chouraqui - 2021 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 29 (3):573-577.
    Nietzsche thought of himself as heralding an era of ‘new philosophers’, philosophers who would produce new philosophical insights and practice a new kind of philosophy. This is one of the many sign...
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  7.  53
    The Loeb Vitruvius Vitruvius on Architecture. Edited … and translated into English by Frank Granger, D.Lit., A.R.I.B.A., Professor in University College, Nottingham. In two volumes. I (Books I-V). Pp. xxxvi + 317; 8 plates. (Loeb Classical Library.) London Heinemann, 1931. Cloth, 10s. net; leather, 12s. 6d. net. [REVIEW]D. S. Robertson - 1932 - The Classical Review 46 (1):29-31.
  8.  36
    The Loeb Vitruvius Vitruvius on Architecture. Edited and translated into English by Frank Granger, D.Lit., A.R.I.B.A. In two volumes. II (Books vi-x). Pp. xlviii + 384; 12 plates. (Loeb Classical Library.) London: Heinemann, 1934. Cloth, 10s. (leather, 12s. 6d.). [REVIEW]D. S. Robertson - 1934 - The Classical Review 48 (6):228-229.
  9.  30
    Séneca's Tragedies. Translated by Frank Justus Miller. Loeb Classical Series., Two vols. Heinemann.D. G. A. - 1917 - The Classical Review 31 (08):201-.
  10.  38
    Livy. With an English translation by Frank Gardner Moore. In fourteen volumes. Vol. VIII: Books XXVIII–XXX. (Loeb Classical Library.) Pp. xii + 562; 9 maps. London: Heinemann, 1949. Cloth, 15 s. net. [REVIEW]G. Clement Whittick - 1951 - The Classical Review 1 (2):117.
  11.  29
    Ovid: Metamorphoses. With an English Translation by Frank Justus Miller, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor in the University of Chicago. Two vols. London: William Heinemann. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1916 (Loeb Classical Library). [REVIEW]E. H. Alton - 1916 - The Classical Review 30 (08):237-238.
  12.  20
    Séneca's Tragedies. Translated by Frank Justus Miller. Loeb Classical Series., Two vols. Heinemann. [REVIEW]D. G. A. - 1917 - The Classical Review 31 (8):201-201.
  13.  3
    Kritik der Lebenswelt: eine soziologische Auseinandersetzung mit Edmund Husserl und Alfred Schütz.Frank Welz - 1996 - Opladen: Westdeutscher Verlag.
    Die {raquo}Revolution der Denkart{laquo} hat nicht nur den Anlauf genommen, welchem sie ihren Namen verdankt.! Gezahlt werden noch weitere Umstellungen der Theorie bildung als bloG die kopernikanische Kants. Hier interessieren gleich zwei. Die eine liefert den Gegenstand, die entsprechende, RevolutionPhanomenologie.
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  14.  34
    Stability and Justification in Hume's Treatise.Louis E. Loeb - 2002 - New York, US: Oup Usa.
    The distinguished philosopher Louis Loeb examines the epistemological framework of Scottish philosopher David Hume, as employed in his celebrated work A Treatise of Human Nature. Loeb's project is to advance an integrated interpretation of Hume's accounts of belief and justification. His thesis is that Hume, in his Treatise, has a "stability-based" theory of justification which posits that his belief is justified if it is the result of a belief producing mechanism that engenders stable beliefs. But Loeb argues that the striking (...)
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  15.  6
    A beautiful question: finding nature's deep design.Frank Wilczek - 2015 - New York: Penguin Press.
    Does the universe embody beautiful ideas? Artists as well as scientists throughout human history have pondered this "beautiful question." With Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek as your guide, embark on a voyage of related discoveries, from Plato and Pythagoras up to the present. Wilczek's groundbreaking work in quantum physics was inspired by his intuition to look for a deeper order of beauty in nature. In fact, every major advance in his career came from this intuition: to assume that the universe (...)
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  16.  8
    Fundamentals: ten keys to reality.Frank Wilczek - 2021 - New York: Penguin Press.
    One of our great contemporary scientists presents ten insights that illuminate what every thinking person needs to know about what the world is and how it works. Nobel Prize winner Frank Wilczek's Fundamentals is built around a simple but profound idea: the models of the world we construct as children are practical and adequate for everyday life, but they do not bring in the surprising and mind-expanding revelations of modern science. To do that, we must look at the world (...)
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  17.  5
    The blind spot: why science cannot ignore human experience.Adam Frank - 2024 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press. Edited by Marcelo Gleiser & Evan Thompson.
    An argument for the inclusion of the human perspective within science and how it makes science possible.
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  18. From Descartes to Hume: Continental Metaphysics and the Development of Modern Philosophy.Louis E. Loeb - 1984 - Mind 93 (370):301-303.
  19.  82
    Reflection and the stability of belief: essays on Descartes, Hume, and Reid.Louis E. Loeb - 2010 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This volume will thus appeal to advanced students and scholars not just in the history of early modern philosophy but in epistemology and other core areas of ...
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  20.  8
    Liberals and Communism: The Red Decade Revisted.Frank A. Warren - 1993 - Columbia University Press.
    **** Reprint of the Indiana U. Press edition of 1966--which is cited in BCL3. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
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  21.  2
    The Death of God as Source of the Creativity of Humans.Franke William - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (3):55.
    Although declarations of the death of God seem to be provocations announcing the end of the era of theology, this announcement is actually central to the Christian revelation in its most classic forms, as well as to its reworkings in contemporary religious thought. Indeed provocative new possibilities for thinking theologically open up precisely in the wake of the death of God. Already Hegel envisaged a revolutionary new realization of divinity emerging in and with the secular world through its establishment of (...)
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  22.  3
    Bewusstheit und Handlung: zur Grundlegung der Handlungsphilosophie.Frank Witzleben (ed.) - 1997 - Atlanta, GA: Rodopi.
    Der Übergang vom Verhältnisbewußtsein zum Selbstbewußtsein kann unmöglich nur vom Verhältnisbewußtsein aus gedacht werden, weil wir uns eine Welt, in der das Bewubtsein unserer selbst verteilt ist auf die Dimensionen der Handlung vor deren Zentrierung in uns, gar nicht vorstellen können. Jedes Tableau der Handlungsmöglichkeiten, so abstrakt es auch abgefaßt sein mag, ist gebunden an Vorstellungen möglicher Handlungssubjekte, denen wir Handlungsmöglichkeiten zuschreiben. Handlungstheorie ist daher notwendig Reflexion unserer Praxis, in der wir uns selbst als Selbstbewußtsein erfahren, das seinem Verhältnisbewubtsein enthoben (...)
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  23.  6
    Philosophy of science.Philipp Frank - 1974 - Westport, Conn.,: Greenwood Press.
  24.  73
    Logical Nihilism. [REVIEW]Curtis Franks - 2015 - In Åsa Hirvonen, Juha Kontinen, Roman Kossak & Andrés Villaveces (eds.), Logic Without Borders: Essays on Set Theory, Model Theory, Philosophical Logic and Philosophy of Mathematics. Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 147-166.
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  25.  31
    Moral Explanations of Moral Beliefs.Don Loeb - 2007 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 70 (1):193-208.
    Gilbert Harman and Judith Thomson have argued that moral facts cannot explain our moral beliefs, claiming that such facts could not play a causal role in the formation of those beliefs. This paper shows these arguments to be misguided, for they would require that we abandon any number of intuitively plausible explanations in non‐moral contexts as well. But abandoning the causal strand in the argument over moral explanations does not spell immediate victory for the moral realist, since it must still (...)
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  26. Experimental moral philosophy.Mark Alfano, Don Loeb & Alex Plakias - 2018 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy:1-32.
    Experimental moral philosophy emerged as a methodology in the last decade of the twentieth century, as a branch of the larger experimental philosophy (X-Phi) approach. Experimental moral philosophy is the empirical study of moral intuitions, judgments, and behaviors. Like other forms of experimental philosophy, it involves gathering data using experimental methods and using these data to substantiate, undermine, or revise philosophical theories. In this case, the theories in question concern the nature of moral reasoning and judgment; the extent and sources (...)
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  27. Gastronomic Realism - A Cautionary Tale.Don Loeb - 2003 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 23 (1):30-49.
    Moral realism, the view that there are moral facts that are independent of our beliefs about them, has many defenders. But much less has been said about realism concerning other sorts of value. One of these, gastronomic realism is likely to seem implausible on its face. This paper argues, however, that much of the reasoning used to defend moral realism is about as well suited for defending gastronomic realism. Although these considerations do not directly undermine moral realism, they do suggest (...)
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  28. The Naturalisms of Hume and Reid.Louis E. Loeb - 2007 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 81 (2):65-92.
  29.  14
    Stability and Justification in Hume's Treatise.Louis E. Loeb - 2002 - New York, US: Oxford University Press USA.
    In his Treatise, Hume confronted the tensions between his project of uncovering the causal operations of the human mind and the extreme skeptical tendencies of his system. Louis Loeb argues that Hume overreaches, and he advances a controversial interpretation of Hume's epistemological framework that shows how Hume could have avoided the more destructive positions in his work.
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  30. The Foundations of Mathematics and Other Logical Essays.Frank Plumpton Ramsey - 1925 - London, England: Routledge & Kegan Paul. Edited by R. B. Braithwaite.
  31. Truth and probability.Frank Ramsey - 2010 - In Antony Eagle (ed.), Philosophy of Probability: Contemporary Readings. New York: Routledge. pp. 52-94.
     
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  32.  26
    Suicide, Meaning, and Redemption.Paul S. Loeb - 2008 - In Manuel Dries (ed.), Nietzsche on Time and History. Walter de Gruyter.
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  33. Between Facts and Norms: Contributions to a Discourse Theory of Law and Democracy.Frank I. Michelman & Jurgen Habermas - 1996 - Journal of Philosophy 93 (6):307.
  34. Psychology, epistemology, and skepticism in Hume’s argument about induction.Louis E. Loeb - 2006 - Synthese 152 (3):321 - 338.
    Since the mid-1970s, scholars have recognized that the skeptical interpretation of Hume’s central argument about induction is problematic. The science of human nature presupposes that inductive inference is justified and there are endorsements of induction throughout Treatise Book I. The recent suggestion that I.iii.6 is confined to the psychology of inductive inference cannot account for the epistemic flavor of its claims that neither a genuine demonstration nor a non-question-begging inductive argument can establish the uniformity principle. For Hume, that inductive inference (...)
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  35. Einleitung in die vergleichende Gehirnsphysiologie und vergleichende physiologie mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der wirbellosen Thiere.Jacques Loëb - 1899 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 48:531-534.
     
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  36.  48
    Psychology, epistemology, and skepticism in Hume’s argument about induction.Louis E. Loeb - 2006 - Synthese 152 (3):321-338.
    Since the mid-1970s, scholars have recognized that the skeptical interpretation of Hume's central argument about induction is problematic. The science of human nature presupposes that inductive inference is justified and there are endorsements of induction throughout "Treatise" Book I. The recent suggestion that I.iii.6 is confined to the psychology of inductive inference cannot account for the epistemic flavor of its claims that neither a genuine demonstration nor a non-question-begging inductive argument can establish the uniformity principle. For Hume, that inductive inference (...)
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  37.  67
    The Thought-Drama of Eternal Recurrence.Paul S. Loeb - 2007 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 34 (1):79-95.
  38. Constancy and Coherence in I.iv.2.Louis E. Loeb - 2002 - In Stability and justification in Hume's Treatise. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Insofar as the vulgar belief in body arises from the ”constancy” of perceptions, it is due to the propensity to attribute identity to related objects; insofar as it arises from ”coherence,” it is produced by custom and the galley, mechanisms allied with causal inference. Since constancy is a special case of coherence, Hume could have avoided this bipartite account, subsuming constancy under custom‐and‐galley. Convinced, however, by double vision and perceptual relativity that the vulgar belief is false, Hume sought to consign (...)
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  39. Contexts for Hume's Epistemological Projects.Louis E. Loeb - 2002 - In Stability and justification in Hume's Treatise. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Hume assigns a pivotal role to stability in understanding normativity in a variety of theoretical contexts, including the passions, justice, and moral judgment; in epistemology, he seeks to sustain his pretheoretical epistemic intuitions in terms of a stability‐based theory of justification. A distinctive feature of Hume's naturalism is that he tends to ground epistemic obligation in the desire to relieve the discomfort or felt uneasiness in unsettled states. Since he rejects the Pyrrhonian claim that ataraxia or quietude results from an (...)
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  40. Causal Inference, Associationism, and the Understanding.Louis E. Loeb - 2002 - In Stability and justification in Hume's Treatise. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Locke confines ”sensitive knowledge” to objects we presently perceive or that we remember perceiving. Hume's causal theory of assurance, the claim that the relation of causation extends assurance beyond memory and present perception, is a constructive attempt to remedy this severe limitation in the scope of Locke's third degree of knowledge. Throughout Part iii and well into Part iv of Book I, Hume endorses causal inference and also distinctions among degrees of probabilistic evidence. As even Beattie recognized, Hume is not (...)
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  41. Difficulties—Contrived and Suppressed.Louis E. Loeb - 2002 - In Stability and justification in Hume's Treatise. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Hume's claim in ”Of the modern philosophy” that causal inference is implicated in an ineliminable, ”manifest contradiction” draws on a highly artificial version of an argument from perceptual relativity. Hume's statement of a ”very dangerous dilemma” draws on a mistaken argument in ”Of scepticism with regard to reason” for the conclusion that all probability, including evidence based on causal inference, reduces to zero. Contrary to Hume's own assessment, his stability‐based theory of justification has little to fear from these episodes. At (...)
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  42. Integrating Hume's Accounts of Belief and Justification.Louis E. Loeb - 2002 - In Stability and justification in Hume's Treatise. New York: Oxford University Press.
    In Treatise I.iii.5–10, Hume's claim that association by the relation of cause and effect produces belief is often intertwined – though without his remarking on this fact – with the claim that belief based on causal inference is justified. To explain this, I offer the hypothesis that, in Hume's view, stability plays a double role: whether belief is justified depends upon considerations of stability, and fixity, a species of stability is also essential to belief itself. Hume identifies belief with steadiness, (...)
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  43. The Propensity to Ascribe Identity to Related Objects.Louis E. Loeb - 2002 - In Stability and justification in Hume's Treatise. New York: Oxford University Press.
    In Treatise I.4, Hume appeals to a propensity to ascribe identity to related objects to explain the belief in the continued existence of perceptions, in material substances or substrata, in souls, and in the double existence of perceptions and objects. The propensity contributes to contradictions, and hence uneasiness that we seek to relieve, resulting in conflicted and unstable doxastic states. For this reason, beliefs produced by the propensity are unjustified, due merely to the ”imagination.” Further, although the metaphysical beliefs do (...)
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  44. Unphilosophical Probability and Judgments Arising from Sympathy.Louis E. Loeb - 2002 - In Stability and justification in Hume's Treatise. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Attributing the stability‐based theory to Hume explains his equation of degree of belief with degree of evidence in his treatment of philosophical probability. In his discussion of the fourth kind of unphilosophical probability, Hume uncovers contradictions that arise from accidental or rash generalizations; his response, that stability can be restored by appeal to higher‐order generalizations or general rules, facilitates his analysis of causation. Hume's first three kinds of unphilosophical probability involve variation in degrees of confidence that parallels variation in moral (...)
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  45.  23
    Philosophical papers.Frank Plumpton Ramsey - 1925 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by D. H. Mellor.
    Frank Ramsey was the greatest of the remarkable generation of Cambridge philosophers and logicians which included G. E. Moore, Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Maynard Keynes. Before his tragically early death in 1930 at the age of twenty-six, he had done seminal work in mathematics and economics as well as in logic and philosophy. This volume, with a new and extensive introduction by D. H. Mellor, contains all Ramsey's previously published writings on philosophy and the foundations of mathematics. The (...)
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  46. Can there be a Bayesian explanationism? On the prospects of a productive partnership.Frank Cabrera - 2017 - Synthese 194 (4):1245–1272.
    In this paper, I consider the relationship between Inference to the Best Explanation and Bayesianism, both of which are well-known accounts of the nature of scientific inference. In Sect. 2, I give a brief overview of Bayesianism and IBE. In Sect. 3, I argue that IBE in its most prominently defended forms is difficult to reconcile with Bayesianism because not all of the items that feature on popular lists of “explanatory virtues”—by means of which IBE ranks competing explanations—have confirmational import. (...)
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  47. String Theory, Non-Empirical Theory Assessment, and the Context of Pursuit.Frank Cabrera - 2021 - Synthese 198:3671–3699.
    In this paper, I offer an analysis of the radical disagreement over the adequacy of string theory. The prominence of string theory despite its notorious lack of empirical support is sometimes explained as a troubling case of science gone awry, driven largely by sociological mechanisms such as groupthink (e.g. Smolin 2006). Others, such as Dawid (2013), explain the controversy by positing a methodological revolution of sorts, according to which string theorists have quietly turned to nonempirical methods of theory assessment given (...)
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  48.  28
    From Descartes to Hume: Continental Metaphysics and the Development of Modern Philosophy.Louis Loeb - 1981 - Cornell University Press, C1981.
  49. Self-locating Priors and Cosmological Measures.Frank Arntzenius & Cian Dorr - 2017 - In Khalil Chamcham, John Barrow, Simon Saunders & Joe Silk (eds.), The Philosophy of Cosmology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 396-428.
    We develop a Bayesian framework for thinking about the way evidence about the here and now can bear on hypotheses about the qualitative character of the world as a whole, including hypotheses according to which the total population of the world is infinite. We show how this framework makes sense of the practice cosmologists have recently adopted in their reasoning about such hypotheses.
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  50. Integrating Hume’s Accounts of Belief and Justification.Louis E. Loeb - 2001 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 63 (2):279-303.
    Hume’s claim that a state is a belief is often intertwined---though without his remarking on this fact---with epistemic approval of the state. This requires explanation. Beliefs, in Hume’s view, are steady dispositions , nature’s provision for a steady influence on the will and action. Hume’s epistemic distinctions call attention to circumstances in which the presence of conflicting beliefs undermine a belief’s influence and thereby its natural function. On one version of this interpretation, to say that a belief is justified, ceteris (...)
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