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  1. Argument, Inference and Dialectic: Collected Papers on Informal Logic.Robert Pinto - 2001 - Dordrecht, Netherland: Springer.
    This volume contains 12 papers addressed to researchers and advanced students in informal logic and related fields, such as argumentation, formal logic, and communications. Among the issues discussed are attempts to rethink the nature of argument and of inference, the role of dialectical context, and the standards for evaluating inferences, and to shed light on the interfaces between informal logic and argumentation theory, rhetoric, formal logic and cognitive psychology.
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  • Science, Perception and Reality.Wilfrid Sellars (ed.) - 1963 - New York,: Humanities Press.
    A collection of some of Sellars' lectures and articles from 1951 to 1962.
  • Relativism Refuted: A Critique of Contemporary Epistemological Relativism.Harvey Siegel - 1987 - Springer Verlag.
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  • The Uses of Argument.Frederick L. Will & Stephen Toulmin - 1960 - Philosophical Review 69 (3):399.
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  • Towards a Research Agenda for Informal Logic and Critical Thinking.Mark Weinstein - 1990 - Informal Logic 12 (3).
    Towards a Research Agenda for Informal Logic and Critical Thinking.
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  • Relativism Refuted.Harvey Siegel - 1982 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 14 (2):47-50.
  • Science, Perception, and Reality. [REVIEW]Keith Lehrer - 1966 - Journal of Philosophy 63 (10):266-277.
  • Does the Traditional Treatment of Enthymemes Rest on a Mistake?David Hitchcock - 1998 - Argumentation 12 (1):15-37.
    In many actual arguments, the conclusion seems intuitively to follow from the premisses, even though we cannot show that it follows logically. The traditional approach to evaluating such arguments is to suppose that they have an unstated premiss whose explicit addition will produce an argument where the conclusion does follow logically. But there are good reasons for doubting that people so frequently leave the premisses of their arguments unstated. The inclination to suppose that they do stems from the belief that (...)
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  • Replacing one theory by another under preservation of a given feature.Rolf A. Eberle - 1971 - Philosophy of Science 38 (4):486-501.
    The conditions are examined under which one theory is said to be replaceable by another, while preserving those features of the original theory which made it serviceable for a given purpose. Among such replacements, special attention is given to ones which qualify as so-called reductions of a theory, and some theorems are proved concerning the notion of a reduction.
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  • A Structuralist Theory of Logic.Zlatan Damnjanovic - 1994 - Philosophical Review 103 (4):709.
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  • How the laws of physics lie.Nancy Cartwright - 1983 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    In this sequence of philosophical essays about natural science, the author argues that fundamental explanatory laws, the deepest and most admired successes of modern physics, do not in fact describe regularities that exist in nature. Cartwright draws from many real-life examples to propound a novel distinction: that theoretical entities, and the complex and localized laws that describe them, can be interpreted realistically, but the simple unifying laws of basic theory cannot.
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  • A Structuralist Theory of Logic.Arnold Koslow - 1992 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In this 1992 book, Professor Koslow advances an account of the basic concepts of logic. A central feature of the theory is that it does not require the elements of logic to be based on a formal language. Rather, it uses a general notion of implication as a way of organizing the formal results of various systems of logic in a simple, but insightful way. The study has four parts. In the first two parts the various sources of the general (...)
  • Against Method.P. Feyerabend - 1975 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 26 (4):331-342.
     
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  • Reference and Truth.Hilary Putnam - 1983 - In Realism and Reason: Philosophical Papers Vol. 3. pp. 69--86.
     
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  • Reasons, Warrants and Premisses.Robert C. Pinto - unknown
  • The Uses of Argument.Stephen E. Toulmin - 1958 - Philosophy 34 (130):244-245.
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  • Relativism Refuted.Harvey Siegel - 1990 - Philosophy of Science 57 (3):537-539.
     
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  • A Structuralist Theory of Logic.Arnold Koslow - 1995 - Studia Logica 54 (2):256-258.
     
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