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Revisiting Protagoras’ Fr. DK B 1

Elenchos 38 (1-2):23-43 (2017)

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  1. I Presocratici.[author unknown] - 1969 - Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 25 (1):92-93.
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  • Histoire de la psychologie des Grecs. Chaignet - 1888 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 26:60-64.
     
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  • Sensation et perception dans la philosophie d’époque hellénistique et impériale.Jean-Paul Dumont - 1987 - In Wolfgang Haase (ed.), Philosophie, Wissenschaften, Technik. Philosophie. De Gruyter. pp. 4718-4764.
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  • Protagoras' Man-Measure Fragment.Laszlo Versenyi - 1962 - American Journal of Philology 83 (2):178.
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  • Is Perception a Propositional Attitude?Tim Crane - 2009 - Philosophical Quarterly 59 (236):452-469.
    It is widely agreed that perceptual experience is a form of intentionality, i.e., that it has representational content. Many philosophers take this to mean that like belief, experience has propositional content, that it can be true or false. I accept that perceptual experience has intentionality; but I dispute the claim that it has propositional content. This claim does not follow from the fact that experience is intentional, nor does it follow from the fact that experiences are accurate or inaccurate. I (...)
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  • The Sophists and Relativism.Richard Bett - 1989 - Phronesis 34 (1):139-169.
  • Subjective Facts.Tim Crane - 2003 - In Hallvard Lillehammer & Gonzalo Rodriguez Pereyra (eds.), Real Metaphysics. London: Routledge. pp. 68-83.
    An important theme running through D.H. Mellor’s work is his realism, or as I shall call it, his objectivism: the idea that reality as such is how it is, regardless of the way we represent it, and that philosophical error often arises from confusing aspects of our subjective representation of the world with aspects of the world itself. Thus central to Mellor’s work on time has been the claim that the temporal A-series (previously called ‘tense’) is unreal while the B-series (...)
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