Results for 'Marvis Hetherington'

315 found
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  1.  22
    The effects of differential visual stimulation after induction of visual aftereffects.Herbert L. Pick, Marvis Hetherington & Roland Belknapp - 1962 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 64 (5):425.
  2.  8
    Stephen Hetherington on epistemology: knowing, more or less.Stephen Hetherington - 2024 - London: Bloomsbury Academic. Edited by Jeremiah Joven Joaquin & Mark Anthony Dacela.
    Stephen Hetherington's prominent career within epistemology has been a series of distinctive, bold, varied and provocative arguments and ideas. Bringing together Hetherington's unique body of writing for the first time, this collection features previously published as well as new material that link his approaches to key issues including knowledge, justification, fallibility, scepticism and the Gettier Problem. Advancing our understanding of the systemic nature of Hetherington's thinking, Stephen Hetherington on Epistemology presents his distinctive perspective on some of (...)
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  3.  6
    Problems of the Self.H. J. W. Hetherington - 1919 - International Journal of Ethics 29 (3):377-379.
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  4.  39
    Plato and Eudoxus: Instrumentalists, realists, or prisoners of themata?Norriss S. Hetherington - 1996 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 27 (2):271-289.
  5.  28
    The sceptic is absolutely mistaken (as is dretske).Stephen Cade Hetherington - 1998 - Philosophical Papers 27 (1):29-43.
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  6. Fallibilism.Stephen Hetherington - 2005 - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Fallibilism is the epistemological thesis that no belief (theory, view, thesis, and so on) can ever be rationally supported or justified in a conclusive way. Always, there remains a possible doubt as to the truth of the belief. Fallibilism applies that assessment even to science’s best-entrenched claims and to people’s best-loved commonsense views. Some epistemologists have taken fallibilism to imply skepticism, according to which none of those claims or views are ever well justified or knowledge. In fact, though, it is (...)
     
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  7.  13
    Knowledge that works: A tale of two conceptual models.Stephen Hetherington - 2006 - In Stephen Cade Hetherington (ed.), Aspects of Knowing: Epistemological Essays. Elsevier Science. pp. 219--240.
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  8. Knowing-that, knowing-how, and knowing philosophically.Stephen Hetherington - 2008 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 77 (1):307-324.
    This paper outlines how we may understand knowing-that as a kind of knowing-how-to, and thereby as an ability. (Contrast this form of analysis with the more commonly attempted reduction, of knowing-how-to to knowing-that.) The sort of ability in question has much potential complexity. In general, questioning can, but need not, be part of this complexity. However, questioning is always an element in the complexity that is philosophical knowing. The paper comments on the nature of this particular form of knowing.
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  9.  19
    Effect of sex of subject, sex of experimenter, and reinforcement condition on serial verbal learning.Mavis Hetherington & Leonard E. Ross - 1963 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 65 (6):572.
  10.  26
    Living Skepticism. Essays in Epistemology and Beyond.Stephen Hetherington & David Macarthur (eds.) - 2022 - Boston: BRILL.
    _Living Skepticism_ challenges the philosophical orthodoxy that dismisses skepticism as an intellectual embarrassment or overreaction. In this original collection of adventurous and engaging papers, skepticism is demonstrated to be true or insightful enough to form the core of an enlightened philosophy.
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  11. Epistemology futures.Stephen Cade Hetherington (ed.) - 2006 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    How might epistemology build upon its past and present, so as to be better in the future? Epistemology Futures takes bold steps towards answering that question. What methods will best serve epistemology? Which phenomena and concepts deserve more attention from it? Are there approaches and assumptions that have impeded its progress until now? This volume contains provocative essays by prominent epistemologists, presenting many new ideas for possible improvements in how to do epistemology. Contributors: Paul M. Churchland, Catherine Z. Elgin, Richard (...)
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  12.  6
    Guest editorial.Stephen Hetherington & Claudio de Almeida - 2012 - Synthese 188 (2):143-143.
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  13. Where is the Harm in Dying Prematurely? An Epicurean Answer.Stephen Hetherington - 2013 - The Journal of Ethics 17 (1-2):79-97.
    Philosophers have said less than is needed about the nature of premature death, and about the badness or otherwise of that death for the one who dies. In this paper, premature death’s nature is clarified in Epicurean terms. And an accompanying argument denies that we need to think of such a death as bad in itself for the one who dies. Premature death’s nature is conceived of as a death that arrives before ataraxia does. (Ataraxia’s nature is also clarified. It (...)
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  14.  43
    Epistemology's psychological turn.Stephen Cade Hetherington - 1992 - Metaphilosophy 23 (1-2):47-56.
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  15.  12
    Nozick and sceptical realism.Stephen Cade Hetherington - 1992 - Philosophical Papers 21 (1):33-44.
  16. Good knowledge, bad knowledge: on two dogmas of epistemology.Stephen Cade Hetherington - 2001 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    What is knowledge? How hard is it for a person to have knowledge? Good Knowledge, Bad Knowledge confronts contemporary philosophical attempts to answer those classic questions, offering a theory of knowledge that is unique in conceiving of knowledge in a non-absolutist way.
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  17.  30
    The Cartesian Dreaming Argument for External‐World Skepticism.Stephen Hetherington - 2011-09-16 - In Michael Bruce & Steven Barbone (eds.), Just the Arguments. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 137–141.
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  18.  26
    Deathly Harm.Stephen Hetherington - 2001 - American Philosophical Quarterly 38 (4):349 - 362.
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  19.  61
    How to Know: A Practicalist Conception of Knowledge.Stephen Hetherington (ed.) - 2011 - Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
    Some key aspects of contemporary epistemology deserve to be challenged, and _How to Know_ does just that. This book argues that several long-standing presumptions at the heart of the standard analytic conception of knowledge are false, and defends an alternative, a practicalist conception of knowledge. Presents a philosophically original conception of knowledge, at odds with some central tenets of analytic epistemology Offers a dissolution of epistemology’s infamous Gettier problem — explaining why the supposed problem was never really a problem in (...)
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  20.  3
    A Practicalist Conception of Knowledge.Stephen Hetherington - 2011 - In How to Know: A Practicalist Conception of Knowledge. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 219–240.
    This chapter contains sections titled: This Book's Theory: A Summary and a Name Core Problems Evaded Further Practicalist Reconceptions A Predictive Practicalism? J. L. Austin on ‘Trouser‐words’ Wittgensteinian Certainty — Generalised.
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  21. Kripke and McGinn on Wittgensteinian rule-following.Stephen Cade Hetherington - 1991 - Philosophia 21 (1-2):89-100.
  22.  39
    Stove's new irrationalism.Stephen Cade Hetherington - 1998 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 76 (2):244 – 249.
  23.  25
    Scepticism on scepticism.Stephen Cade Hetherington - 1997 - Philosophia 25 (1-4):323-330.
  24.  22
    The first measurements of stellar parallax.Norriss S. Hetherington - 1972 - Annals of Science 28 (4):319-325.
  25. Conceivability and modal knowledge.Stephen Cade Hetherington - 1991 - In Tamara Horowitz & Gerald J. Massey (eds.), Thought Experiments in Science and Philosophy. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    I argue for an analysis of conceivability as a form of modal knowledge: to conceive of p's being true is to know that "Possibly, p" is true.
     
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  26.  32
    Joseph L. Camp Jr., Confusion: A Study in the Theory of Knowledge. [REVIEW]Stephen Hetherington - 2007 - Philosophical Review 116 (4):647-650.
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  27.  45
    The Gettier Problem.Stephen Hetherington (ed.) - 2018 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    When philosophers try to understand the nature of knowledge, they have to confront the Gettier problem. This problem, set out in Edmund Gettier's famous paper of 1963, has yet to be solved, and has challenged our best attempts to define what knowledge is. This volume offers an organised sequence of accessible and distinctive chapters explaining the history of debate surrounding Gettier's challenge, and where that debate should take us next. The chapters describe and evaluate a wide range of ideas about (...)
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  28.  50
    Ginet on A Priori Knowledge: Skills and Grades.Stephen Hetherington - 2009 - Veritas – Revista de Filosofia da Pucrs 54 (2):32-40.
    2. Ginet envisages a person’s fully understanding ‘what the sentence p says’ – which is the person’s fully understanding ‘what is said by one who utters p in normal circumstances in order to assert that p’ (p. 3). The understanding involved is direcError: Illegal entry in bfchar block in ToUnicode CMapted at meaning. It is one’s ‘understanding the parts and the structure of the sentence’ (ibid.). In the next section, I say more about the details of such understanding. First, though, (...)
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  29.  18
    John Stuart Mackenzie. Edited by his Wife. (London: Williams and Norgate, Ltd.1936. Pp. 176. Price 5s.).H. J. W. Hetherington - 1937 - Philosophy 12 (47):377-.
  30.  56
    Knowing Failably.Stephen Hetherington - 1999 - Journal of Philosophy 96 (11):565.
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  31. How to Know (That Knowledge-That is Knowledge-How).Stephen Hetherington (ed.) - 2006 - Oxford University Press.
     
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  32.  41
    Knowledge and the Gettier Problem.Stephen Cade Hetherington - 2016 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Edmund Gettier's 1963 verdict about what knowledge is not has become an item of philosophical orthodoxy, accepted by philosophers as a genuine epistemological result. It assures us that - contrary to what Plato and later philosophers have thought - knowledge is not merely a true belief well supported by epistemic justification. But that orthodoxy has generated the Gettier problem - epistemology's continuing struggle to understand how to accommodate Gettier's apparent result within an improved conception of knowledge. In this book, Stephen (...)
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  33. Tooley's Theory of Laws of Nature.Stephen C. Hetherington - 1983 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 13 (1):101 - 106.
    This paper contains a discussion of a theory of laws of nature formulated recently by Michael Tooley. He sees the truth-makers for laws of nature as consisting of particular sorts of contingent relations between universals. He is not alone in this idea; it has also been advanced by Fred Dretske and D.M. Armstrong. However, its most thorough and detailed presentation is by Tooley. Being a challenging and stimulating idea, it merits investigation.
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  34.  93
    Libraries and fallible knowledge.Stephen Hetherington - 2012 - Think 11 (31):65-72.
  35. The Cartesian dreaming argument for external-world skepticism.Stephen Hetherington - 2011 - In Michael Bruce & Steven Barbone (eds.), Just the Arguments: 100 of the Most Important Arguments in Western Philosophy. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
     
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  36. Knowledge Can Be Lucky.Stephen Hetherington - 2013 - In Matthias Steup & John Turri (eds.), Contemporary Debates in Epistemology. Chichester, West Sussex, UK: Blackwell. pp. 164.
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  37.  11
    Photosinthesis: How deceptive images imperil knowledge: Hetherington Photosinthesis.Stephen Hetherington - 2005 - Think 4 (10):99-107.
    An epistemological investigation into photography.
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  38. The extended knower.Stephen Hetherington - 2012 - Philosophical Explorations 15 (2):207 - 218.
    Might there be extended cognition and thereby extended minds? Rightly, that possibility is being investigated at present by philosophers of mind. Should epistemologists share that spirit, by inquiring into the possibility of extended knowing and thereby of extended knowers? Indeed so, I argue. The key to this shift of emphasis will be an epistemologically improved understanding of the implications of epistemic externalism.
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  39. Introduction: epistemological progress.Stephen Hetherington - 2006 - In Stephen Cade Hetherington (ed.), Epistemology futures. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  40.  11
    The Standard Analytic Conception of Knowledge.Stephen Hetherington - 2011 - In How to Know: A Practicalist Conception of Knowledge. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 1–25.
    This chapter contains sections titled: ‘Knowing is a Belief State (or Something Similar)’ ‘Knowledge is Well Supported’ ‘Knowledge is Absolute’ ‘Knowing Includes not being Gettiered’ ‘Knowledge‐that is Fundamentally Theoretical, not Knowledge‐how’ The Standard Analytic Conception of Knowledge Prima Facie Core Problems.
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  41.  15
    Anagram solving as a function of word imagery.Kathleen Dewing & Paul Hetherington - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 102 (5):764.
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  42. The Gettier-illusion: Gettier-partialism and infallibilism.Stephen Hetherington - 2012 - Synthese 188 (2):217-230.
    Could the standard interpretation of Gettier cases reflect a fundamental confusion? Indeed so. How well can epistemologists argue for the truth of that standard interpretation? Not so well. A methodological mistake is allowing them not to notice how they are simply (and inappropriately) being infallibilists when regarding Gettiered beliefs as failing to be knowledge. There is no Gettier problem that we have not merely created for ourselves by unwittingly being infallibilists about knowledge.
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  43. Gettier problems.Stephen Hetherington - 2005 - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Gettier problems or cases are named in honor of the American philosopher Edmund Gettier, who discovered them in 1963. They function as challenges to the philosophical tradition of defining knowledge of a proposition as justified true belief in that proposition. The problems are actual or possible situations in which someone has a belief that is both true and well supported by evidence, yet which — according to almost all epistemologists — fails to be knowledge. Gettier’s original article had a dramatic (...)
     
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  44.  60
    Understanding Fallible Warrant and Fallible Knowledge: Three Proposals.Stephen Hetherington - 2015 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 97 (2):270-282.
    One of contemporary epistemology's more important conceptual challenges is that of understanding the nature of fallibility. Part of why this matters is that it would contribute to our understanding the natures of fallible warrant and fallible knowledge. This article evaluates two candidates – and describes a shared form of failing. Each is concealedly infallibilist. This failing is all-too-representative of the difficulty of doing justice to the notion of fallibility within the notions of fallible warrant and fallible knowledge. The article ends (...)
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  45. Knowing How and Knowing To.Karyn L. Lai & Stephen Hetherington - 2015 - In Brian Bruya (ed.), The Philosophical Challenge from China. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. pp. 279 - 302.
    Since the 1940s, Western epistemology has discussed Gilbert Ryle’s distinction between knowledge-that and knowledge-how. Ryle argued that intelligent actions – manifestations of knowledge-how – are not constituted as intelligent by the guiding intervention of knowledge-that: knowledge-how is not a kind of knowledge-that; we must understand knowledge-how in independent terms. Yet which independent terms are needed? In this chapter, we consider whether an understanding of intelligent action must include talk of knowledge-to. This is the knowledge to do this or that now, (...)
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  46.  78
    Some fallibilist knowledge: Questioning knowledge-attributions and open knowledge.Stephen Hetherington - 2019 - Synthese 198 (3):2083-2099.
    We may usefully distinguish between one’s having fallible knowledge and having a fallibilist stance on some of one’s knowledge. A fallibilist stance could include a concessive knowledge-attribution. But it might also include a questioning knowledge-attribution. Attending to the idea of a QKA leads to a distinction between what we may call closed knowledge that p and open knowledge that p. All of this moves us beyond Elgin’s classic tale of the epistemic capacities of Holmes and of Watson, and towards a (...)
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  47.  77
    Knowledge puzzles: an introduction to epistemology.Stephen Cade Hetherington - 1996 - Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press.
    Despite the problems students often have with the theory of knowledge, it remains, necessarily, at the core of the philosophical enterprise. As experienced teachers know, teaching epistemology requires a text that is not only clear and accessible, but also capable of successfully motivating the abstract problems that arise.In Knowledge Puzzles, Stephen Hetherington presents an informal survey of epistemology based on the use of puzzles to illuminate problems of knowledge. Each topic is introduced through a puzzle, and readers are invited (...)
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  48.  26
    The Status of the Object.Dick Pels, Kevin Hetherington & FrÈdÈric Vandenberghe - 2002 - Theory, Culture and Society 19 (5-6):1-21.
    In their substantive introduction, the editors first revisit two classical sites of controversy which have offered frameworks for theorizing the interplay between materiality and sociality: reification and fetishism. Obviously, these critical vocabularies emerge as crucial sites of perplexity as soon as the ontological boundary between subjects and objects is rendered equally problematic and fluid as the epistemological boundary between the imaginary and the real. A thumbnail sketch of the history of the two discursive traditions provides an elaborate systematic framework for (...)
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  49.  61
    Epistemic Responsibility.Stephen Hetherington - 2002 - The Monist 85 (3):398-414.
    Might epistemic justification be, to some substantive extent, a function of epistemic responsibility—a belief's being formed, or its being maintained, in an epistemically responsible way? I will call any analysis of epistemic justification endorsing that kind of idea epistemic responsibilism—or, for short, responsibilism. Many epistemic internalists are responsibilists, because they think that what makes a belief justified is its being appropriately related to one's good evidence for it, and because many of them regard this appropriate relation as somehow involving one's (...)
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  50.  21
    Isaac Newton's Influence on Adam Smith's Natural Laws in Economics.Norriss S. Hetherington - 1983 - Journal of the History of Ideas 44 (3):497.
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