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  1. Change and creativity in early modern indian medical thought.Dominik Wujastyk - 2005 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 33 (1):95-118.
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  • Counteracting Epistemic Oppression Through Social Myths: The Last Indigenous Peoples of Europe.Xabier Renteria-Uriarte - 2023 - Social Epistemology 37 (6):864-878.
    ABSTRACT Epistemic social oppressions such as ‘epistemic partiality’, ‘epistemic injustice’, ‘epistemic harms and wrongs’, ‘epistemic oppression’, ‘epistemic exploitation’, ‘epistemic violence’, or ‘epistemicide’ are terms with increasing theoretical importance and empirical applications. However, less literature is devoted to social strategies to overcome such oppressions. Here the Sorelian and Gramscian concept of social myth is considered in that sense. The empirical case is the myth of ‘The last Indigenous peoples of Europe’ present in the Basque Country, divided between France and Spain and (...)
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  • The rise and (surprisingly rapid) fall of psycholinguistics.Arthur S. Reber - 1987 - Synthese 72 (September):325-339.
    Psycholinguistics re-emerged in an almost explosive fashion during the 1950s and 1960s. It then underwent an equally abrupt decline as an independent sub-discipline. This paper charts this fall and identifies five general factors which, it is argued, were responsible for its demise. These are: (a) an uncompromisingly strong version of nativism; (b) a growing isolation of psycholinguistics from the body psychology; (c) a preference for formal theory over empirical data; (d) several abrupt modifications in the Standard Theory in linguistics; and (...)
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  • On a Supposed Dogma of Speech Perception Research: A Response to Appelbaum (1999).Fernando Orphão de Carvalho - 2009 - Principia: An International Journal of Epistemology 13 (1):93-103.
    In this paper we purport to qualify the claim, advanced by Appelbaum (1999) that speech perception research, in the last 70 years or so, has endorsed a view on the nature of speech for which no evidence can be adduced and which has resisted falsification through active ad hoc “theoretical repair” carried by speech scientists. We show that the author’s qualms on the putative dogmatic status of speech research are utterly unwarranted, if not misconstrued as a whole. On more general (...)
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  • The emergence of psycholinguistics.Arthur L. Blumenthal - 1987 - Synthese 72 (September):313-323.
  • Pour une histoire des idées linguistiques.Sylvain Auroux - 1988 - Revue de Synthèse 109 (3-4):429-441.
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  • Cognition, communication, and readiness for language.Jens Allwood - 2012 - Pragmatics and Cognition 20 (2):334-355.
    This review article discusses some problems and needs for clarification that are connected with the use of the concepts culture, language, tool, and communication in Daniel Everett's recently published book, Language: The Cultural Tool . It also discusses whether the idea of biological readiness and preparedness for language (rather than grammar) can really be disposed of as a result of Everett's very convincing arguments against a specific genetic predisposition for the syntactic component of a grammar. Finally, it calls into question (...)
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  • Thomas of erfurt.Jack Zupko - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.