Results for 'S. L. Crawford'

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  1.  91
    Political Diversity Will Improve Social Psychological Science.José L. Duarte, Jarret T. Crawford, Charlotta Stern, Jonathan Haidt, Lee Jussim & Philip E. Tetlock - 2015 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 38:1-54.
    Psychologists have demonstrated the value of diversity – particularly diversity of viewpoints – for enhancing creativity, discovery, and problem solving. But one key type of viewpoint diversity is lacking in academic psychology in general and social psychology in particular: political diversity. This article reviews the available evidence and finds support for four claims: Academic psychology once had considerable political diversity, but has lost nearly all of it in the last 50 years. This lack of political diversity can undermine the validity (...)
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  2.  18
    Dissociable Effects of Monetary, Liquid, and Social Incentives on Motivation and Cognitive Control.Jennifer L. Crawford, Debbie M. Yee, Haijing W. Hallenbeck, Ashton Naumann, Katherine Shapiro, Renee J. Thompson & Todd S. Braver - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  3. Conventionalism and realism‐imitating counterfactuals.Crawford L. Elder - 2006 - Philosophical Quarterly 56 (222):1-15.
    Historically, opponents of realism have managed to slip beneath a key objection which realists raise against them. The opponents say that some element of the world is constructed by our cognitive practices; realists retort that the element would have existed unaltered, had our practices differed; the opponents sometimes agree, contending that we construct in just such a way as to render the counterfactual true. The contemporary instalment of this debate starts with conventionalism about modality, which holds that the borders of (...)
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  4.  74
    Conventionalism and realism-imitating counterfactuals.Crawford L. Elder - 2006 - Philosophical Quarterly 56 (222):1–15.
    Historically, opponents of realism have argued that the world’s objects are constructed by our cognitive activities—or, less colorfully, that they exist and are as they are only relative to our ways of thinking and speaking. To this realists have stoutly replied that even if we had thought or spoken in ways different from our actual ones, the world would still have been populated by the same objects as it actually is, or at least by most of them. (Our thinking differently (...)
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  5. Mental causation versus physical causation: No contest.Crawford L. Elder - 2001 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 62 (1):110-127.
    James decides that the best price today on pork chops is at Supermarket S, then James makes driving motions for twenty minutes, then James’ car enters the parking lot at Supermarket S. Common sense supposes that the stages in this sequence may be causally connected, and that the pattern is commonplace: James’ belief (together with his desire for pork chops) causes bodily behavior, and the behavior causes a change in James’ whereabouts. Anyone committed to the idea that beliefs and desires (...)
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  6.  32
    Essential Properties and Coinciding Objects.Crawford L. Elder - 1998 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 58 (2):317-331.
    How can a parcel of matter, or collection of particles, simultaneously compose three different objects, characterized by different modal properties? If the statue is gouged it still exists, but not exactly that piece of gold which originally occupied the statue’s borders, and the (mass of) gold within that piece can survive dispersal, while the piece cannot. The solution to this “problem of coinciding objects”, this paper argues, is that there is, in that space, only the statue. The properties which the (...)
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  7. Essential properties and coinciding objects.Crawford L. Elder - 1998 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 58 (2):317-331.
    Common sense believes in objects which, if real, routinely lose component parts or particles. Statues get chipped, people undergo haircuts and amputations, and ships have planks replaced. Sometimes philosophers argue that in addition to these objects, there are others which could not possibly lose any of their parts or particles, nor have new ones added to them--objects which could not possibly have been bigger or smaller, at any time, than how they actually were.1 (Sometimes the restriction on size is argued (...)
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  8.  76
    What versus how in naturally selected representations.Crawford L. Elder - 1998 - Mind 107 (426):349-363.
    Empty judgements appear to be about something, and inaccurate judgements to report something. Naturalism tries to explain these appearances without positing non-real objects or states of affairs. Biological naturalism explains that the false and the empty are tokens which fail to perform the function proper to their biological type. But if truth is a biological 'supposed to', we should expect designs that achieve it only often enough. The sensory stimuli which trigger the frog's gulp-launching signal may be a poor guide (...)
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  9.  65
    Conventionalism and the world as bare sense-data.Crawford L. Elder - 2007 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 85 (2):261 – 275.
    We are confident of many of the judgements we make as to what sorts of alterations the members of nature's kinds can survive, and what sorts of events mark the ends of their existences. But is our confidence based on empirical observation of nature's kinds and their members? Conventionalists deny that we can learn empirically which properties are essential to the members of nature's kinds. Judgements of sameness in kind between members, and of numerical sameness of a member across time, (...)
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  10.  88
    Ontology and realism about modality.Crawford L. Elder - 1999 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 77 (3):292 – 302.
    To be a realist about modality, need one claim that more exists than just the various objects and properties that populate the world—e.g. worlds other than the actual one, or maximal consistent sets of propositions? Or does the existence of objects and properties by itself involve the obtaining of necessities (and possibilities) in re? The latter position is now unpopular but not unfamiliar. Aristotle held that objects have essences, and hence necessarily have certain properties. Recently it has been argued that (...)
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  11. Alexander's dictum and the reality of familiar objects.Crawford L. Elder - 2003 - Topoi 22 (2):163-171.
  12.  73
    Hegel’s Teleology and the Relation Between Mind and Brain.Crawford L. Elder - 1979 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 17 (1):27-45.
    This paper argues that there can be, For each individual mental state, Some identifiable neural "embodiment" only if the brain operates in accord with a hegelian teleological model. "embodiments" are neural configurations which do, Or would, Produce all the behaviors connected with the mental state. The argument hinges on how these behaviors are described: if under predicates of neurophysics only, Then only under wildly disjunctive predicates, Which cannot be projected for any candidate configuration; if under "teleological" predicates, Then under predicates (...)
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  13.  8
    Hegel's Teleology and the Relation Between Mind and Brain.Crawford L. Elder - 1979 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 17 (1):27-45.
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  14.  29
    Goodman's “new riddle” — a realist's reprise.Crawford L. Elder - 1990 - Philosophical Studies 59 (2):115 - 135.
  15.  29
    Hegel’s Reasons For Using the Concept of an Absolute.Crawford L. Elder - 1983 - Idealistic Studies 13 (1):50-60.
    “Spirit,” Hegel writes in par. 389 of the Encyclopaedia, “is the existent truth of matter—the truth that matter itself has no truth.” The same claim is made in more understandable form in the Zusatz which follows: “the material, which lacks independence in the face of spirit, is freely pervaded by the latter which overarches this its Other,” reducing this Other “to an ideal moment and to something mediated.” Philosophers who have written on Hegel will recognize these passages as ones which (...)
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  16. Real essentialism • by David S. Oderberg.Crawford L. Elder - 2009 - Analysis 69 (2):376-378.
    This book presents vigorous and wide-ranging arguments in defense of an Aristotelian metaphysical scheme along fairly orthodox Thomistic lines. The central claim is that the items that populate the world have real essences – natures that mind-independently define what each such item is. This Aristotelian essentialism, Oderberg begins by telling us, is a different doctrine from what has recently been called ‘essentialism’, and a more powerful one . For recent essentialism has treated a thing's essence as merely all those properties (...)
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  17.  30
    Event valence and spatial metaphors of time.Skye Ochsner Margolies & L. Elizabeth Crawford - 2008 - Cognition and Emotion 22 (7):1401-1414.
    Recent research suggests that people's understanding of the abstract domain of time is dependent on the more concrete domain of space. Boroditsky and Ramscar (2002) found that spatial context influences whether people see themselves as moving through time (ego-moving perspective) or as time moving towards them (time-moving perspective). Based on studies of the embodiment of affective experience, we examined whether affect might also influence which spatial metaphor of time people adopt. The results of Experiments 1 and 2 showed that participants (...)
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  18.  63
    On the Reality and Causal Efficacy of Familiar Objects.Crawford L. Elder - 2013 - Philosophia 41 (3):737-749.
    What caused the event we report by saying “the window shattered”? Was it the baseball, which crashed into the window? Causal exclusionists say: many, many microparticles collectively caused that event—microparticles located where common sense supposes the baseball was. Unitary large objects such as baseballs cause nothing; indeed, by Alexander’s dictum, there are no such objects. This paper argues that the false claim about causal efficacy is instead the one that attributes it to the many microparticles. Causation obtains just where there (...)
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  19.  17
    Hegel and the Explanation of Behavior.Crawford L. Elder - 1980 - Idealistic Studies 10 (2):157-172.
    A certain analogy can be drawn between Hegel’s central views on material objects and Hegel’s views on persons. To an extent, Hegel himself indicates this analogy. Yet to date, surprisingly, no one has commented upon it. Various interpreters have suggested that Hegel is an opponent of Cartesian dualism, and, in this connection, that Hegel’s philosophy might offer useful commentary on problems about mind and body currently under discussion. A study of the analogy mentioned would make it possible to state just (...)
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  20.  10
    Millikan, Realismus und Selbigkeit.Crawford L. Elder - 2010 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 58 (6):955-973.
    Millikan seeks to provide “new foundations for realism”, and I argue that she gets half-way to this goal. For she provides a robustly realist account of nature′s kinds: what holds the members or samples of a kind together are properties that recur together for a common causal reason. But full-strength realism requires realism not just about kind-membership, but about persistence across time. I argue that Millikan does not, but could and should, embrace the traditional idea that the conditions on kind-membership (...)
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  21.  84
    The Alleged Supervenience of Everything on Microphysics.Crawford L. Elder - 2011 - Croatian Journal of Philosophy 11 (1):87-95.
    Here is a view at least much like Lewis’s “Humean supervenience,” and in any case highly influential—in that some endorse it, and many more worry that it is true. All truths about the world are fixed by the pattern of instantiation, by individual points in space-time, of the “perfectly natural properties” posited by end-of-inquiry physics. In part, this view denies independent variability: the world could not have been different from how it actually is, in the ways depicted by common sense (...)
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  22. Undercutting the Idea of Carving Reality.Crawford L. Elder - 2005 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 43 (1):41-59.
    It is widely supposed that, in Hilary Putnam’s phrase, there are no “ready-made objects” (Putnam 1982; cf. Putnam 1981, Ch. 3). Instead the objects we consider real are partly of our own making: we carve them out of the world (or out of experience). The usual reason for supposing this lies in the claim that there are available to us alternative ways of “dividing reality” into objects (to quote the title of Hirsch 1993), ways which would afford us every bit (...)
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  23.  26
    Millikan, Realism, and Sameness.Crawford L. Elder - 2013 - In Dan Ryder, Justine Kingsbury & Kenneth Williford (eds.), Millikan and her critics. Malden, MA: Wiley. pp. 155–175.
    This chapter contains section titles: I II III IV.
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  24.  41
    Modality and Anti-Metaphysics. [REVIEW]Crawford L. Elder - 2003 - Dialogue 42 (1):177-178.
    This book stakes out a position in the area of metaphysics that deals with modality. But is this even a legitimate area of inquiry? Chapter 1 begins by confronting scepticism on this score. Some hold that the logical positivists sharpened “Hume’s fork”— either “relations of ideas” or “matters of fact”—and thereby discredited metaphysics in general. Others hold that Wittgenstein discredited the specific metaphysical position known as essentialism. But both readings of the record are mistaken, McLeod argues. Hume did not himself (...)
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  25.  52
    M. S. Bassignano: Supplementa Italica, Nuova Serie 15, Ateste . Pp. 237, photos. Rome: Edizioni Quasar, 1997. L. 70,000. ISBN: 88-7140-115-. [REVIEW]M. H. Crawford - 2001 - The Classical Review 51 (01):182-.
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  26.  23
    M. S. Bassignano: Supplementa Italica, Nuova Serie 15, Ateste. Pp. 237, photos. Rome: Edizioni Quasar, 1997. L. 70,000. ISBN: 88-7140-115-8. [REVIEW]M. H. Crawford - 2001 - The Classical Review 51 (1):182-182.
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  27.  35
    S. Randazzo: Leges Mancipii. Contributo allo studio dei limiti di rilevanza dell’accordo negli atti formali di alienazione. (Pubblicazioni della Facoltá di Giurisprudenza, Nuova Serie 160.) Pp. ii + 192. Milan: Universitá di Catania, 1998. Paper, L. 24,000. ISBN: 88-14-07466-6. [REVIEW]M. H. Crawford - 2003 - The Classical Review 53 (1):261-261.
  28.  37
    M. Guarducci, S. Panciera : CIL: Supplementa Italica. Pp. 237. Rome: Edizioni Quasar, 1997. L. 70,000. ISBN: 88-7140-115-8. [REVIEW]M. H. Crawford - 2000 - The Classical Review 50 (2):637-637.
  29.  23
    Modeling costs and benefits of adolescent weight control as a mechanism for reproductive suppression.Judith L. Anderson & Charles B. Crawford - 1992 - Human Nature 3 (4):299-334.
    The “reproductive suppression hypothesis” states that the strong desire of adolescent girls in our culture to control their weight may reflect the operation of an adaptive mechanism by which ancestral women controlled the timing of their sexual maturation and hence first reproduction, in response to cues about the probable success of reproduction in the current situation. We develop a model based on this hypothesis and explore its behavior and evolutionary and psychological implications across a range of parameter values. We use (...)
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  30.  31
    Trivers-willard rules for sex allocation.Judith L. Anderson & Charles B. Crawford - 1993 - Human Nature 4 (2):137-174.
    We present a quantitative model of sex allocation to investigate whether the simple “rules of thumb” suggested by Trivers and Willard (1973) would really maximize numbers of grandchildren in human populations. Using demographic data from the !Kung of southern Africa and the basic assumptions of the Trivers-Willard hypothesis, we calculate expected numbers of grandchildren based on age- and sex-specific reproductive value. Patterns of parental investment that would maximize numbers of expected grandchildren often differ from the Trivers-Willard rules. In particular, the (...)
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  31.  6
    Ėkonomika teksta v neklassicheskoĭ filosofii iskusstva: Nit︠s︡she, Batai︠a︡, Fuko, Derrida.S. L. Kropotov - 1999 - Ekaterinburg: Gumanitarnyĭ universitet.
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  32.  53
    Originative thinking in the later philosophy of Heidegger.S. L. Bartky - 1970 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 30 (3):368-381.
  33.  2
    Chelovek i Bog.S. L. Frank - 2001 - Pushkino Moskovskoĭ obl.: Izdatelʹskiĭ dom "Graalʹ". Edited by S. L. Frank.
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  34.  12
    Combined electron microscopy and energy analysis of an internally oxidized Ni + Si alloy.S. L. Cundy & P. J. Grundy - 1966 - Philosophical Magazine 14 (132):1233-1242.
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  35.  4
    Microanalysis of Al + 4 wt. % Cu by combined electron microscopy and energy analysis.S. L. Cundy, A. J. F. Metherell & M. J. Whelan - 1968 - Philosophical Magazine 17 (145):141-147.
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  36.  15
    Preservation of electron microscope image contrast after inelastic scattering.S. L. Cundy, A. Howie & U. Valdrè - 1969 - Philosophical Magazine 20 (163):147-163.
  37.  66
    It all adds up: The dynamic coherence of radical probabilism.S. L. Zabell - 2002 - Proceedings of the Philosophy of Science Association 2002 (3):S98-S103.
  38.  63
    Real Natures and Familiar Objects. [REVIEW]Amie L. Thomasson - 2007 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 74 (2):518-523.
    Crawford Elder’s Real Natures and Familiar Objects promises to give naturalistically inclined metaphysicians reason to accept an ontology that includes many common sense objects, including persons, organisms, and at least many artifacts, behaviors, customs, and so on. This is a brave book, running against the current of trends towards austerity in ontology, tackling centuries old problems about how modal facts may be empirically discovered, and defending a commonsense ontology from a strictly naturalistic approach rather than via traditional appeals to (...)
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  39.  73
    Carnap and the logic of inductive inference.S. L. Zabell - 2004 - In Dov M. Gabbay, John Woods & Akihiro Kanamori (eds.), Handbook of the History of Logic. Elsevier. pp. 10--265.
  40.  45
    It All Adds Up: The Dynamic Coherence of Radical Probabilism.S. L. Zabell - 2002 - Philosophy of Science 69 (S3):S98-S103.
  41.  93
    Heidegger's Philosophy of Art.S. L. Bartky - 1969 - British Journal of Aesthetics 9 (4):353.
  42. Predicting the unpredictable.S. L. Zabell - 1992 - Synthese 90 (2):205-232.
    A major difficulty for currently existing theories of inductive inference involves the question of what to do when novel, unknown, or previously unsuspected phenomena occur. In this paper one particular instance of this difficulty is considered, the so-called sampling of species problem.The classical probabilistic theories of inductive inference due to Laplace, Johnson, de Finetti, and Carnap adopt a model of simple enumerative induction in which there are a prespecified number of types or species which may be observed. But, realistically, this (...)
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  43.  22
    Twierdzenie O pełności dla “teorii rodzaju w”.S. L. Bloom - 1971 - Studia Logica 27 (1):56-56.
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  44.  23
    Justice, Luck, and Knowledge.S. L. Hurley - 2006 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 72 (2):433-438.
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  45.  18
    The Unknowable: An Ontological Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion.S. L. Frank - 2020 - Ohio University Press.
    The Unknowable, arguably the greatest Russian philosophical work of the 20th century, was the culmination of S. L. Frank's intellectual and spiritual development, the boldest and most imaginative of all his writings, containing a synthesis of epistemology, ontology, social philosophy, religious philosophy, and personal spiritual experience.
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  46.  28
    A New Fragment of Aeolic Verse.E. Lobel & D. L. Page - 1952 - Classical Quarterly 2 (1-2):1-.
    The following fragment of a papyrus-roll, written in a hand which may be assigned to the second or third century a.d., was bought by Professor O. Guéraud from the antiquary Nahman on behalf of the Société Fouad de Papyrologie . With singular generosity Professor Guéraud has resigned to us the right to publish the text, which we now present with the help of photographs and a transcript, with notes, made by Professor Guéraud. We gratefully acknowledge an obligation to Mr. D. (...)
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  47.  3
    Brakhman i istorii︠a︡: istoriko-filosofskie kont︠s︡ept︠s︡ii sovremennoĭ vedanty.S. L. Burmistrov - 2007 - Sankt-Peterburg: Izdatelʹstvo S.-Peterburgskogo universiteta.
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  48.  37
    Seinsverlassenheit in the later philosophy of Heidegger.S. L. Bartky - 1967 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 10 (1-4):74 – 88.
    According to Heidegger, we are living in an ever worsening ?worldnight?, whose fundamental nihilism is due to an ?abandonment by Being? (Seinsverlassenheit) or a ?forgetting of Being? (Seinsvergessenheit). In this paper, I attempt to clarify the notion of an ?abandonment by Being? through an examination of two themes prominent in Heidegger's later philosophy: Being as ?event? (Ereignis); and the obscure ?mystery? or ?secret? of Being. ?Seinsvergessenheit? is interpreted as a forgetting of the mystery or secret of Being which is the (...)
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  49. Dynamic self-organization in the brain as observed by transient cortical coherence.S. L. Bressler - 1994 - In Karl H. Pribram (ed.), Origins: Brain and Self-Organization. Lawrence Erlbaum. pp. 536--545.
     
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  50.  26
    Vehicles, Contents, Conceptual Structure, and Externalism.S. L. Hurley - 1998 - Analysis 58 (1):1-6.
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