Results for 'Bernard Edelman'

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  1.  3
    Sade, le désir et le droit.Bernard Edelman - 2014 - [Paris]: L'Herne.
    L'homme des droits de l'homme eut une belle vie, pleine de bruit et de fureur, mais aujourd'hui, il n'est plus. En lieu et place a surgi un nouvel homme, égoïste, hédoniste, à la recherche de son seul plaisir ; sa préoccupation première, essentielle, c'est l'amour de soi, l'émerveillement de soi, la satisfaction de soi, et l'Etat est sommé d'y satisfaire. Car l'Etat n'est plus ce tyran féroce, avide de pouvoir, ce despote aux aguets qui attend l'occasion pour soumettre ces sujets (...)
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  2.  4
    Essai sur la vie assassinée: petite histoire de l'immortalité.Bernard Edelman - 2016 - Paris: Hermann.
    L'utopie des posthumains est a notre porte. A nous, qui ne croyons plus aux lendemains qui chantent, elle promet que demain nous entrerons dans une nouvelle ere. Nous aurons dit adieu a notre miserable condition humaine: nous vivrons dans un monde a la mesure de notre demesure, habite par des surhommes technologiques, a la fois humains et machines, oscillant entre une realite reelle et virtuelle, immortels dans l'ignorance du temps, vivants dans l'ignorance de la vie. Depasser la condition humaine - (...)
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  3. Criteria for consciousness in humans and other mammals.Anil K. Seth, Bernard J. Baars & David B. Edelman - 2005 - Consciousness and Cognition 14 (1):119-39.
    The standard behavioral index for human consciousness is the ability to report events with accuracy. While this method is routinely used for scientific and medical applications in humans, it is not easy to generalize to other species. Brain evidence may lend itself more easily to comparative testing. Human consciousness involves widespread, relatively fast low-amplitude interactions in the thalamocortical core of the brain, driven by current tasks and conditions. These features have also been found in other mammals, which suggests that consciousness (...)
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  4. Identifying hallmarks of consciousness in non-mammalian species.David B. Edelman, Bernard J. Baars & Anil K. Seth - 2005 - Consciousness and Cognition 14 (1):169-87.
    Most early studies of consciousness have focused on human subjects. This is understandable, given that humans are capable of reporting accurately the events they experience through language or by way of other kinds of voluntary response. As researchers turn their attention to other animals, “accurate report” methodologies become increasingly difficult to apply. Alternative strategies for amassing evidence for consciousness in non-human species include searching for evolutionary homologies in anatomical substrates and measurement of physiological correlates of conscious states. In addition, creative (...)
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  5.  49
    Let's not forget about sensory consciousness.Anil K. Seth, David B. Edelman & Bernard J. Baars - 2004 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (4):601-602.
    The metacognitive stance of Smith et al. risks ignoring sensory consciousness. Although Smith et al. rightly caution against the tendency to preserve the uniqueness of the human mind at all costs, their reasoned stance is undermined by a selective association of consciousness with high-level cognitive operations. Neurobiological evidence may offer a more general, and hence more inclusive, basis for the systematic study of animal consciousness.
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  6.  4
    La maison de Kant: conte moral.Bernard Edelman - 1984 - Paris: Payot.
    La quatrième de couverture indique : " "J'ai aimé Kant, non point pour la grandeur austère de sa pensée, mais pour le désespoir qui l'anime de n'être pas aimé. Le deuil du bonheur est peut-être le plus effroyable qui soit, mais aussi le plus moral, car en apprenant à ne pas nous aimer nous devenons, à tout le moins, compatissants...Assurés de notre enfer et revenus de notre paradis, nous sommes dans le monde intermédiaire de la souffrance déçue." C'est ainsi que (...)
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  7.  5
    Nietzsche, un continent perdu.Bernard Edelman - 1999 - Paris: Presses universitaires de France.
    Nietzsche a découvert un continent, celui de la Volonté de Puissance - et nous l'avons perdu. Délibérément, consciencieusement perdu, avec un acharnement à la mesure de l'effroi qu'il nous inspire. Car nous n'aimons pas savoir qui nous sommes, nous n'aimons pas marcher à visage découvert, la poitrine nue, vêtus de notre seul courage ; en bons pharisiens, en bons démocrates, en bons hypocrites, nous nous glissons le long des murs, furtivement, le dogme dans la ceinture, pour assassiner à coups de (...)
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  8.  1
    The house that Kant built: a moral tale.Bernard Edelman - 1987 - Toronto: Published by Canadian Philosophical Monographs for the Canadian Association for Publishing in Philosophy.
  9.  2
    Human Memory as a Self‐organized Natural System.Bernard Ancori - 2019 - In The Carousel of Time. Hoboken, NJ, USA: Wiley. pp. 41–62.
    The emphasis placed by H. Atlan, like G. Bateson, on the reception of messages during communication between subsystems leads to a conception of learning, and more generally of human memory, surprisingly close to that proposed by I. Rosenfield on the basis of the work of G. M. Edelman. The authors stressed the close and reciprocal link between the theory of functional localization and the conception of memory, which they have just seen, radically refuted by Rosenfield. The theory of functional (...)
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  10. Neuronal mechanisms of consciousness: A relational global workspace approach.Bernard J. Baars, J. B. Newman & John G. Taylor - 1998 - In Stuart R. Hameroff, Alfred W. Kaszniak & A.C. Scott (eds.), Toward a Science of Consciousness II. MIT Press. pp. 269-278.
    This paper explores a remarkable convergence of ideas and evidence, previously presented in separate places by its authors. That convergence has now become so persuasive that we believe we are working within substantially the same broad framework. Taylor's mathematical papers on neuronal systems involved in consciousness dovetail well with work by Newman and Baars on the thalamocortical system, suggesting a brain mechanism much like the global workspace architecture developed by Baars (see references below). This architecture is relational, in the sense (...)
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  11.  23
    Plasticité neuronale et libre arbitre.Bernard Feltz - 2013 - Revue Philosophique De Louvain 111 (1):27-52.
    Les recherches récentes sur la plasticité neuronale ouvrent à une nouvelle compréhension des liens entre structures nerveuses et comportement humain. Selon les perspectives développées par Kandel et Edelman, le concept de libre arbitre a toute sa pertinence. Une confrontation avec les expériences de Libet et l’interprétation qu’en propose Wegner conduisent tout d’abord à l’analyse du problème du déterminisme en lien avec les traditions scientifiques et philosophiques. Les relations au langage sont ensuite étudiées en référence aux travaux de Habermas et (...)
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  12.  59
    How could brain imaging not tell us about consciousness?Bernard J. Baars - 2001 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 8 (3):24-29.
    Revonsuo argues that current brain imaging methods do not allow us to ‘discover’ consciousness. While all observational methods in science have limitations, consciousness is such a massive and pervasive phenomenon that we cannot fail to observe its effects at every level of brain organization: molecular, cellular, electrical, anatomical, metabolic, and even the ‘higher levels of electrophysiological organization that are crucial for the empirical discovery and theoretical explanation of consciousness’ . Indeed, the first major discovery in that respect was Hans Berger's (...)
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  13.  18
    Bernard Edelman, Quand les juristes inventent le réel. La fabulation juridique: Hermman, collection Le Bel Aujourd’hui, Paris, 2007, 287 pp, ISBN 978 2 7056 6661 3.Maria Francisca Carneiro - 2008 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 21 (2):189-195.
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  14. Bernard Edelman, The House that Kant Built: A Moral Tale Reviewed by.Francis Sparshott - 1987 - Philosophy in Review 7 (12):481-482.
     
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  15. Bernard Edelman, The House that Kant Built: A Moral Tale. [REVIEW]Francis Sparshott - 1987 - Philosophy in Review 7:481-482.
     
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  16. A Universe of Consciousness: How Matter Becomes Imagination.Gerald Edelman & Giulio Tononi - 2000 - Basic Books.
    A Nobel Prize-winning scientist and a leading brain researcher show how the brain creates conscious experience.
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  17. A Woman with an Attitude" : Male and Female Gothic in Siouxsie and the Banshees.Diana Edelman - 2022 - In James Rovira (ed.), Women in rock, women in romanticism. New York: Routledge.
     
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  18.  92
    The metaphysics of embodiment.Shimon Edelman - 2011 - International Journal of Machine Consciousness 3 (02):321-.
    Shanahan’s eloquently argued version of the global workspace theory fits well into the emerging understanding of consciousness as a computational phenomenon. His disinclination toward metaphysics notwithstanding, Shanahan’s book can also be seen as supportive of a particular metaphysical stance on consciousness — the computational identity theory.
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  19. Representation is representation of similarities.Shimon Edelman - 1998 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (4):449-467.
    Intelligent systems are faced with the problem of securing a principled (ideally, veridical) relationship between the world and its internal representation. I propose a unified approach to visual representation, addressing both the needs of superordinate and basic-level categorization and of identification of specific instances of familiar categories. According to the proposed theory, a shape is represented by its similarity to a number of reference shapes, measured in a high-dimensional space of elementary features. This amounts to embedding the stimulus in a (...)
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  20. Morality: an introduction to ethics.Bernard Williams - 1972 - New York,: Harper & Row.
    In Morality Bernard Williams confronts the problems of writing moral philosophy, and offers a stimulating alternative to more systematic accounts which seem nevertheless to have left all the important issues somewhere off the page.
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  21.  1
    Chapter 6. D. Z. Phillips: Contemplation, understanding, and the particularity of meaning.John Edelman - 2009 - In John T. Edelman (ed.), Sense and reality: essays out of Swansea. Frankfurt: Ontos Verlag. pp. 125-158.
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  22.  11
    Sense and reality: essays out of Swansea.John T. Edelman (ed.) - 2009 - Frankfurt: Ontos Verlag.
    The idea for this collection of essays arose out of conversations I had with D. Z. Phillips in Claremont in 2000: a set of philosophical essays recognizing and arising out of something I took to be both interesting and good going on at University College, Swansea, roughly from the 1950s into the 1990s. I envisioned eight essays, each in some way taking up the work of one of eight individuals - Rush Rhees, Peter Winch, R. F. Holland, J. R. Jones, (...)
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  23.  94
    Descartes: the project of pure enquiry.Bernard Williams (ed.) - 1978 - Hassocks: Harvester Press.
    Descartes has often been called the 'father of modern philosophy'. His attempts to find foundations for knowledge, and to reconcile the existence of the soul with the emerging science of his time, are among the most influential and widely studied in the history of philosophy. This is a classic and challenging introduction to Descartes by one of the most distinguished modern philosophers. Bernard Williams not only analyzes Descartes' project of founding knowledge on certainty, but uncovers the philosophical motives for (...)
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  24.  45
    Synthetic Neural Modeling and Brain-Based Devices.Gerald M. Edelman - 2006 - Biological Theory 1 (1):8-9.
  25.  15
    Descartes: The Project of Pure Enquiry.Bernard Williams (ed.) - 1978 - Hassocks [Eng.]: Routledge.
    Descartes has often been called the 'father of modern philosophy'. His attempts to find foundations for knowledge, and to reconcile the existence of the soul with the emerging science of his time, are among the most influential and widely studied in the history of philosophy. This is a classic and challenging introduction to Descartes by one of the most distinguished modern philosophers. Bernard Williams not only analyzes Descartes' project of founding knowledge on certainty, but uncovers the philosophical motives for (...)
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  26.  12
    Bad education: why queer theory teaches us nothing.Lee Edelman - 2022 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    Long awaited after No Future, and making queer theory controversial again, Lee Edelman's Bad Education proposes a queerness without positive identity-a queerness understood as a figural name for the void, itself unnamable, around which the social order takes shape. Like Blackness, woman, incest, and sex, queerness, as Edelman explains it, designates the antagonism, the structuring negativity, preventing that order from achieving coherence. But when certain types of persons get read as literalizing queerness, the negation of their negativity can (...)
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  27. Equitable damages.The Honourable Justice Edelman - 2023 - In Ben McFarlane & Steven Elliot (eds.), Equity today: 150 years after the judicature reforms. New York: Hart.
     
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  28.  6
    Life, death, and other inconvenient truths: a realist's view of the human condition.Shimon Edelman - 2020 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    Short essays that touch many topics-anxiety, consciousness, death, happiness, morality, stupidity, & truth-that make the case for realism & help set expectations with regard to the human condition.
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  29.  26
    Survival in a world of probable objects: A fundamental reason for Bayesian enlightenment.Shimon Edelman & Reza Shahbazi - 2011 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 34 (4):197-198.
    The only viable formulation of perception, thinking, and action under uncertainty is statistical inference, and the normative way of statistical inference is Bayesian. No wonder, then, that even seemingly non-Bayesian computational frameworks in cognitive science ultimately draw their justification from Bayesian considerations, as enlightened theorists know fully well.
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  30.  16
    A Century of Moral Philosophy, By W. D. Hudson.John T. Edelman - 1982 - Philosophical Investigations 5 (4):306-310.
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  31.  8
    Kyoto school philosophy in comparative perspective: ideology, ontology, modernity.Bernard Stevens - 2023 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    This book presents the thought of the Kyoto School in comparison with continental philosophers better known in the West and addresses the affiliation of some of its members with the militarism of the 1930s and 1940s.
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  32.  64
    Acting out.Bernard Stiegler - 2009 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. Edited by David Barison, Daniel Ross, Patrick Crogan & Bernard Stiegler.
    How I became a philosopher -- To love, to love me, to love us.
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  33. Plato.Bernard Williams - 1997 - New York: Routledge.
     
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  34. Death and mortality in contemporary philosophy.Bernard N. Schumacher - 2011 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book contributes to current bioethical debates by providing a critical analysis of the philosophy of human death. Bernard N. Schumacher discusses contemporary philosophical perspectives on death, creating a dialogue between phenomenology, existentialism, and analytic philosophy. He also examines the ancient philosophies that have shaped our current ideas about death. His analysis focuses on three fundamental problems: (1) the definition of human death, (2) the knowledge of mortality and of human death as such, and (3) the question of whether (...)
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  35.  54
    Schelling's Dialogical Freedom Essay: Provocative Philosophy Then and Now.Bernard Freydberg - 2008 - State University of New York Press.
    _Explores Schelling’s Essay on Human Freedom, focusing on the themes of freedom, evil, and love, and the relationship between his ideas and those of Plato and Kant._.
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  36. The Remembered Present: A Biological Theory of Consciousness.Gerald M. Edelman - 1989 - Basic Books.
    Having laid the groundwork in his critically acclaimed books Neural Darwinism (Basic Books, 1987) and Topobiology (Basic Books, 1988), Nobel laureate Gerald M. Edelman now proposes a comprehensive theory of consciousness in The Remembered ...
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  37.  61
    Bright Air, Brilliant Fire: On the Matter of the Mind.Gerald M. Edelman - 1992 - Penguin Books.
    The author takes the reader on a tour that covers such topics as computers, evolution, Descartes, Schrodinger, and the nature of perception, language, and invididuality. He argues that biology provides the key to understanding the brain. Underlying his argument is the evolutionary view that the mind arose at a definite time in history. This book ponders connections between psychology and physics, medicine, philosophy, and more. Frequently contentious, Edelman attacks cognitive and behavioral approaches, which leave biology out of the picture, (...)
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  38.  38
    Whither Epistemic Decolonization.Bernard Matolino - 2020 - Philosophical Papers 49 (2):213-231.
    Epistemic decolonization, in its various conceptual formulations and presentations, could be taken to hold promise for either the completion of the anti-colonial struggle or the self-re-discovery of the formerly colonized and oppressed. In Africa this project has had a long history as both a counter to hegemonic histories of claimed Western epistemological superiority as well as theories of racism and racist practices against black people of African descent. What is not entirely clear are the precise achievements of decolonial thought and (...)
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  39.  32
    The evolution of Principia mathematica: Bertrand Russell's manuscripts and notes for the second edition.Bernard Linsky - 2011 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Originally published in 1910, Principia Mathematica led to the development of mathematical logic and computers and thus to information sciences. It became a model for modern analytic philosophy and remains an important work. In the late 1960s the Bertrand Russell Archives at McMaster University in Canada obtained Russell's papers, letters and library. These archives contained the manuscripts for the new Introduction and three Appendices that Russell added to the second edition in 1925. Also included was another manuscript, 'The Hierarchy of (...)
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  40. Complexity and coherency: integrating information in the brain.Giulio Tononi, Gerald M. Edelman & Olaf Sporns - 1998 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 2 (12):474-484.
    The brains of higher mammals are extraordinary integrative devices. Signals from large numbers of functionally specialized groups of neurons distributed over many brain regions are integrated to generate a coherent, multimodal scene. Signals from the environment are integrated with ongoing, patterned neural activity that provides them with a meaningful context. We review recent advances in neurophysiology and neuroimaging that are beginning to reveal the neural mechanisms of integration. In addition, we discuss concepts and measures derived from information theory that lend (...)
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  41. A mistrustful animal.Bernard Williams - 2009 - In Alex Voorhoeve (ed.), Conversations on ethics. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  42.  15
    From neurons to self-consciousness: how the brain generates the mind.Bernard Korzeniewski - 2010 - Amherst, N.Y.: Humanity Books.
    The main idea -- The functioning of a neuron -- Brain structure and function -- The general structure of the neural network -- Instincts, emotions, free will -- The nature of mental objects -- The rise and essence of (self-)consciousness -- Artificial intelligence -- Cognitive limitations of man.
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  43.  10
    The thought of John Sallis: phenomenology, Plato, imagination.Bernard Freydberg - 2012 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
    Part I. Phenomenology -- Phenomenology and the return to beginnings -- Delimitations: phenomenology and the end of metaphysics -- Part II. Sallis's Plato interpretation -- Being and logos: reading the Platonic dialogues -- Chorology: on beginning in Plato's Timaeus -- Platonic legacies -- Part III. Art/Sallis -- Stone -- Shades-of painting at the limit -- Topographies -- Part IV. Sallis and other thinkers -- The gathering of reason -- Spacings-of reason and imagination in texts of Kant, Fichte, Hegel -- Echoes: (...)
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  44.  4
    Pharmacologie du Front national.Bernard Stiegler - 2013 - [Paris]: Flammarion. Edited by Victor Petit.
    Peu de philosophes contemporains choisissent de faire vivre leurs outils critiques grâce au terreau d'une association, d'un collectif. C'est le cas de Bernard Stiegler, qui a fondé Ars Industrialis en 2005. Le manifeste de l'association, Réenchanter le monde (Flammarion, 2005 ; 7400 ventes en Champs), devait connaître un grand retentissement. Depuis, les travaux et contributions fleurissent (de l'économiste André Gréau au comédien Robin Renucci, en passant par les spécialistes des digital studies), et Ars Industrialis franchit un cap en s'associant (...)
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  45.  16
    Economie de l'hypermatériel et psychopouvoir.Bernard Stiegler - 2008 - Paris: Mille et une nuits. Edited by Philippe Petit & Vincent Bontems.
    Aujourd'hui nous vivons un nouveau stade de la longue histoire de l'évolution technique de l'humanité : le stade du capitalisme hyperindustriel. Depuis le XXe siècle, l'homme n'a cessé de vivre les bouleversements des conditions de la temporalité, c'est-à-dire aussi bien de son individuation. Ce nouveau stade induit déjà une profonde transformation de nos existences. Loin de disparaître, l'industrialisation se poursuit et se renforce, elle investit de nouveaux champs, invisibles, qui vont des nanostructures jusqu'aux fondements neurologiques de l'insconscient, en passant par (...)
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  46.  70
    Perspectivism, criticism and freedom of spirit.Bernard Reginster - 2000 - European Journal of Philosophy 8 (1):40–62.
    The paper examines the view that Nietzsche's perspectivism about practical judgments, understood as a form of internalism about practical reasons, implies that any legitimate criticism of judgments emanating from a foreign perspective must be in terms that are internal to this perspective. Insofar as it is thought to be motivated by certain general theoretical strictures of perspectivism, this view is incoherent. The paper argues that, on the contrary Nietzsche's recourse to a strategy of internal criticism is motivated by his own (...)
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  47.  5
    Global spencerism: the communication and appropriation of a British evolutionist.Bernard V. Lightman (ed.) - 2016 - Boston: Brill.
    In "Global Spencerism" the authors analyse the communication and appropriation of Herbert Spencer s ideas around the globe. In the last quarter of the nineteenth century Spencer s distinctive theory of evolution, based on Lamarckianism, was almost as influential as Darwin s.".
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  48. A mistrustful animal.Bernard Williams - 2009 - In Alex Voorhoeve (ed.), Conversations on ethics. New York: Oxford University Press.
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  49.  19
    Amitiés de Bernard Stiegler: douze contributions.Bernard Stiegler & Jean-Luc Nancy (eds.) - 2021 - Paris: Éditions Galilée.
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  50.  20
    One‐year‐old infants use teleological representations of actions productively.Michael Ramscar, Daniel Yarlett, Shimon Edelman, Nathan Intrator, Gergely Csibra, Szilvia Bıró, Orsolya Koós, György Gergely, Holk Cruse & Michael D. Lee - 2003 - Cognitive Science 27 (1):111-133.
    Two experiments investigated whether infants represent goal‐directed actions of others in a way that allows them to draw inferences to unobserved states of affairs (such as unseen goal states or occluded obstacles). We measured looking times to assess violation of infants' expectations upon perceiving either a change in the actions of computer‐animated figures or in the context of such actions. The first experiment tested whether infants would attribute a goal to an action that they had not seen completed. The second (...)
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