Results for ' knowing'

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  1. by Philip Clayton.What One Needs To Know - 1997 - Zygon 32 (1):95.
  2.  17
    Current periodical articles 523.Actually Knowing - 1998 - Emergence: Complexity and Organization 48 (193).
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  3. Timothy F. Murphy.A. Patient'S. Right To Know - 1994 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 19 (4-6):553-569.
     
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  4.  25
    The Analysis of Knowing: A Decade of Research.Robert K. Shope - 2017 - Princeton University Press.
    This book is the first complete survey and critical appraisal of the large body of research that has appeared during approximately the last decade concerning the analysis of knowing. Robert K. Shope pays special attention to the social aspects of knowing and proposes a new formulation of the fundamental structure of the Gettier problem. Originally published in 1983. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of (...)
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  5.  16
    Confessions of a Scatterbrain.Care To Know & Bible Trivia Part - forthcoming - Political Theory.
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  6. Will geographic self-reflection make you blind?Inwyouge Know, M. E. Sicantge & Y. O. U. Know - 1985 - In Ronald John Johnston (ed.), The Future of geography. New York: Methuen. pp. 276.
     
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  7. Andrew O. fort.Knowing Brahman While Embodied - 1991 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 19:369-389.
     
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  8. Knowing Right From Wrong.Kieran Setiya - 2012 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Can we have objective knowledge of right and wrong, of how we should live and what there is reason to do? Can it be anything but luck when our moral beliefs are true? Kieran Setiya confronts these questions in their most compelling and articulate forms, and argues that if there is objective ethical knowledge, human nature is its source.
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  9. Knowing (How).Jason Stanley - 2011 - Noûs 45 (2):207-238.
  10.  79
    Case study evidence for an irreducible form of knowing how to: An argument against a reductive epistemology.Garry Young - 2009 - Philosophia 37 (2):341-360.
    Over recent years, there has been a resurgence of interest in arguments favouring intellectualism—the view that Ryle’s epistemic distinction is invalid because knowing how is in fact nothing but a species of knowing that. The aim of this paper is to challenge intellectualism by introducing empirical evidence supporting a form of knowing how that resists such a reduction. In presenting a form of visuomotor pathology known as visual agnosia, I argue that certain actions performed by patient DF (...)
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  11.  72
    Knowing Otherwise: Race, Gender, and Implicit Understanding.Alexis Shotwell - 2011 - Penn State.
    "Draws on philosophers, political theorists, activists, and poets to explain how unspoken and unspeakable knowledge is important to racial and gender formation; offers a usable conception of implicit understanding"--Provided by publishers.
  12.  24
    Knowing, being, and wisdom: A comparative study.Yang Guorong - 2005 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 5 (1):57-72.
  13.  19
    Knowing One’s Way Around: The Challenge of Identifying and Overseeing Innovations in Patient Care.George J. Agich - 2019 - American Journal of Bioethics 19 (6):1-3.
    Volume 19, Issue 6, June 2019, Page 1-3.
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  14. Metacognition: Knowing About Knowing.John F. Metcalfe & P. Shimamura - 1994 - MIT Press.
  15. Is knowing a state of mind?Timothy Williamson - 1995 - Mind 104 (415):533--65.
  16.  85
    Narrative Knowing and the Human Sciences.Donald Polkinghorne - 1988 - State University of New York Press.
    This book expands the concept of the nature of science and provides a practical research alternative for those who work with people and organizations.
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  17.  40
    Self-Knowing Agents * By LUCY O'BRIEN.Lucy O’Brien - 2009 - Analysis 69 (1):187-188.
    How is it that we think and refer in the first-person way? For most philosophers in the analytic tradition, the problem is essentially this: how two apparently conflicting kinds of properties can be reconciled and united as properties of the same entity. What is special about the first person has to be reconciled with what is ordinary about it. The range of responses reduces to four basic options. The orthodox view is optimistic: there really is a way of reconciling these (...)
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  18. On Knowing the ”Why': Particularism and Moral Theory.Margaret Olivia Little - 2001 - Hastings Center Report 31 (4):32--40.
    If particularism is right, the broad moral claims we make are usually riddled with exceptions. But such generalizations can still be a useful, even necessary part of moral life. They help us show what we should do, and they are essential for understanding why we should do it.
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  19.  23
    On Knowing: Essays for the Left Hand.H. E. O. James & Jerome S. Bruner - 1963 - British Journal of Educational Studies 11 (2):207.
  20.  5
    On Knowing Who One Is.Sydney Shoemaker - 1966 - Common Factor 4:49-56.
  21.  14
    Self‐Knowing Agents – Lucy O'Brien.Sydney Shoemaker - 2009 - Philosophical Quarterly 59 (237):752-754.
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  22. Knowing failably.Stephen Hetherington - 1999 - Journal of Philosophy 96 (11):565-587.
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  23. Knowing full well: the normativity of beliefs as performances.Ernest Sosa - 2009 - Philosophical Studies 142 (1):5-15.
    Belief is considered a kind of performance, which attains one level of success if it is true (or accurate), a second level if competent (or adroit), and a third if true because competent (or apt). Knowledge on one level (the animal level) is apt belief. The epistemic normativity constitutive of such knowledge is thus a kind of performance normativity. A problem is posed for this account by the fact that suspension of belief seems to fall under the same sort of (...)
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  24.  36
    ON SORT OF KNOWING The Daoist Unhewn.Brook Ziporyn - 2013 - Common Knowledge 19 (1):111-130.
    The article, a contribution to the Common Knowledge symposium “Fuzzy Studies: On the Consequence of Blur,” analyzes the metaphysical assumptions behind the valorization of “clear and distinct ideas,” apodictic knowledge, and definitiveness, and it suggests alternatives derived from Daoist sources, where a different model of knowing prevails. That model undermines the idea of purposive willing in the service of goals known in advance, and undermines as well the bases for any human or divine activity designed to achieve definite ends. (...)
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  25. Knowing How and Knowing That, What.D. G. Brown - 1970 - In Oscar P. Wood & George Pitcher (eds.), Ryle. London,: Macmillan.
     
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  26. Knowing How and Knowing That: The Presidential Address.Gilbert Ryle - 1946 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 46:1 - 16.
  27. On knowing one's own actions.Lucy F. O'Brien - 2003 - In Johannes Roessler & Naomi Eilan (eds.), Agency and Self-Awareness: Issues in Philosophy and Psychology. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Book description: * Seventeen brand-new essays by leading philosophers and psychologists * Genuinely interdisciplinary work, at the forefront of both fields * Includes a valuable introduction, uniting common threads Leading philosophers and psychologists join forces to investigate a set of problems to do with agency and self-awareness, in seventeen specially written essays. In recent years there has been much psychological and neurological work purporting to show that consciousness and self-awareness play no role in causing actions, and indeed to demonstrate that (...)
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  28. Actually knowing.Stephen Hetherington - 1998 - Philosophical Quarterly 48 (193):453-469.
  29.  28
    Moral Knowing in a Hindu Sacred City: An Exploration of Mind, Emotion, and Self.Steven M. Parish - 1994 - Columbia University Press.
    Explores the interrelationship of mind, self, emotion and the development of moral consciousness in the Nepalese city of Bhaktapur. The author investigates how the citizens have developed moral awareness in the context of cultural life.
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  30. Knowing How and Epistemic Injustice.Katherine Hawley - 2011 - In John Bengson & Marc A. Moffett (eds.), Knowing How: Essays on Knowledge, Mind, and Action. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press USA. pp. 283-99.
    In this chapter I explore how epistemic injustice (as discussed by Miranda Fricker) can arise in connection with knowledge how. I attempt to bypass the question of whether knowledge how is a type of propositional knowledge, and instead focus on some distinctive ways in which knowledge how is sometimes sought, identified or ignored.
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  31.  9
    Knowing One's Own Mind.Donald Davidson - 1986 - [American Philosophical Association.
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  32. Knowing what we can do: actions, intentions, and the construction of phenomenal experience.Dave Ward, Tom Roberts & Andy Clark - 2011 - Synthese 181 (3):375-394.
    How do questions concerning consciousness and phenomenal experience relate to, or interface with, questions concerning plans, knowledge and intentions? At least in the case of visual experience the relation, we shall argue, is tight. Visual perceptual experience, we shall argue, is fixed by an agent’s direct unmediated knowledge concerning her poise (or apparent poise) over a currently enabled action space. An action space, in this specific sense, is to be understood not as a fine-grained matrix of possibilities for bodily movement, (...)
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  33.  57
    I-Knowing How and Knowing That: A Distinction Reconsidered.Paul Snowdon - 2004 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 104 (1):1-29.
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  34. On knowing what we would say.Jerry A. Fodor - 1964 - Philosophical Review 73 (2):198-212.
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  35.  16
    Philosophy, Solipsism and Thought, HO MOUNCE.Knowing-Attributions as Endorsements - 1997 - Philosophy 47 (186).
  36. Is knowing a state of mind? The case against.Elizabeth Fricker - 2009 - In Duncan Pritchard & Patrick Greenough (eds.), Williamson on Knowledge. Oxford, GB: Oxford: Oxford University Press.
     
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  37. Testimony: Knowing through being told.Elizabeth Fricker - 2004 - In Ilkka Niiniluoto, Matti Sintonen & Jan Woleński (eds.), Handbook of Epistemology. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic. pp. 109--130.
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  38.  30
    Knowing Our Own Minds.Michael McKinsey - 2002 - Philosophical Quarterly 52 (206):107-116.
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  39. Distributed cognition without distributed knowing.Ronald N. Giere - 2007 - Social Epistemology 21 (3):313-320.
    In earlier works, I have argued that it is useful to think of much scientific activity, particularly in experimental sciences, as involving the operation of distributed cognitive systems, as these are understood in the contemporary cognitive sciences. Introducing a notion of distributed cognition, however, invites consideration of whether, or in what way, related cognitive activities, such as knowing, might also be distributed. In this paper I will argue that one can usefully introduce a notion of distributed cognition without attributing (...)
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  40. 14. “Knowing” as the “Realizing of Happiness” Here, on the Bridge, over the River Hao.Roger T. Ames - 2015 - In Roger T. Ames & Takahiro Nakajima (eds.), Zhuangzi and the Happy Fish. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. pp. 261-290.
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  41. The Analysis of Knowing.Robert K. Shope - 1984 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 89 (1):131-132.
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  42. Tommy J. Curry.If U. Don’T. Know—Now & U. Know - 2008 - In Benjamin Hale (ed.), Philosophy Looks at Chess. Open Court Press. pp. 137.
     
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  43. Ryle on knowing how and the possibility of vocational education.Christopher Winch - 2009 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 26 (1):88-101.
    abstract Ryle's claim that knowing how is distinct from knowing that is defended from critics like Stanley and Williamson and Snowdon. However, the way in which Ryle himself deploys this distinction is problematic. By effectively dismissing the idea that systematic propositional knowledge has a significant bearing on knowledge how, Ryle implicitly supports a view of vocational education that favours narrow notions of skill and associated training over knowledge informed occupational practice of the kind found in most Northern European (...)
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  44.  67
    'Knowing that one knows' reviewed.Jaakko Hintikka - 1970 - Synthese 21 (2):141 - 162.
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  45.  35
    Knowing What It Is Like.Michael Tye - 2011 - In John Bengson & Marc A. Moffett (eds.), Knowing How: Essays on Knowledge, Mind, and Action. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press USA. pp. 300.
  46.  8
    Knowing the Difference: Feminist Perspectives in Epistemology.Kathleen Lennon & Margaret Whitford - 1994 - Philosophy 70 (271):127-129.
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  47. Martine Nida-Rumelin.What Mary Couldn'T. Know - 1995 - In Thomas Metzinger (ed.), Conscious Experience. Paderborn: Ferdinand Schoningh.
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  48. Knowing Our Own Minds.Crispin Wright, Barry Smith & Cynthia Macdonald - 2001 - Mind 110 (438):586-588.
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  49. Knowing the Answer to a Loaded Question.Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen - 2015 - Theoria 81 (2):97-125.
    Many epistemologists have been attracted to the view that knowledge-wh can be reduced to knowledge-that. An important challenge to this, presented by Jonathan Schaffer, is the problem of “convergent knowledge”: reductive accounts imply that any two knowledge-wh ascriptions with identical true answers to the questions embedded in their wh-clauses are materially equivalent, but according to Schaffer, there are counterexamples to this equivalence. Parallel to this, Schaffer has presented a very similar argument against binary accounts of knowledge, and thereby in favour (...)
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  50.  72
    Knowing through the body.Mark Johnson - 1991 - Philosophical Psychology 4 (1):3-18.
    Abstract Recent empirical studies of categorization, concept development, semantic structure, and reasoning reveal the inadequacies of all theories that regard knowledge as static, propositional, and sentential. These studies show that conceptual structure and reason are grounded in patterns of bodily experience. Structures of our spatial/temporal orientations, perceptual interactions, and motor programs provide an imaginative basis for our knowledge of, and reasoning about, more abstract domains. Such a view transcends both foundationalism and extreme relativism or scepticism.
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