Results for 'S. Armon-Lotem'

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  1. Lauren B. Adamson: Communication Development During Infancy.S. Armon-Lotem - 2001 - Pragmatics and Cognition 9 (1):155-161.
  2.  16
    Independent and Combined Effects of Socioeconomic Status and Bilingualism on Children’s Vocabulary and Verbal Short-Term Memory.Natalia Meir & Sharon Armon-Lotem - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  3.  13
    Vocabulary, Metalinguistic Awareness and Language Dominance Among Bilingual Preschool Children.Carmit Altman, Tamara Goldstein & Sharon Armon-Lotem - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  4.  44
    Review of Adamson (1996): Communication Development During Infancy. [REVIEW]Sharon Lotem-Armon - 2001 - Pragmatics and Cognition 9 (1):155-162.
  5.  33
    Beyond Darwinism’s Eclipse: Functional Evolution, Biochemical Recapitulation and Spencerian Emergence in the 1920s and 1930s.Rony Armon - 2010 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 41 (1):173-194.
    During the 1920s and 1930s, many biologists questioned the viability of Darwin’s theory as a mechanism of evolutionary change. In the early 1940s, and only after a number of alternatives were suggested, Darwinists succeeded to establish natural selection and gene mutation as the main evolutionary mechanisms. While that move, today known as the neo-Darwinian synthesis, is taken as signalling a triumph of evolutionary theory, certain critical problems in evolution—in particular the evolution of animal function—could not be addressed with this approach. (...)
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  6.  28
    Between Biochemists and Embryologists - The Biochemical Study of Embryonic Induction in the 1930s.Rony Armon - 2012 - Journal of the History of Biology 45 (1):65 - 108.
    The discovery by Hans Spemann of the “organizer” tissue and its ability to induce the formation of the amphibian embryo's neural tube inspired leading embryologists to attempt to elucidate embryonic inductions’ underlying mechanism. Joseph Needham, who during the 1930s conducted research in biochemical embryology, proposed that embryonic induction is mediated by a specific chemical entity embedded in the inducing tissue, surmising that chemical to be a hormone of sterol-like structure. Along with embryologist Conrad H. Waddington, they conducted research aimed at (...)
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  7.  24
    Between Biochemists and Embryologists – The Biochemical Study of Embryonic Induction in the 1930s.Rony Armon - 2012 - Journal of the History of Biology 45 (1):65-108.
    The discovery by Hans Spemann of the “organizer” tissue and its ability to induce the formation of the amphibian embryo’s neural tube inspired leading embryologists to attempt to elucidate embryonic inductions’ underlying mechanism. Joseph Needham, who during the 1930s conducted research in biochemical embryology, proposed that embryonic induction is mediated by a specific chemical entity embedded in the inducing tissue, surmising that chemical to be a hormone of sterol-like structure. Along with embryologist Conrad H. Waddington, they conducted research aimed at (...)
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  8. Learning a Generative Probabilistic Grammar of Experience: A Process‐Level Model of Language Acquisition.Oren Kolodny, Arnon Lotem & Shimon Edelman - 2014 - Cognitive Science 38 (4):227-267.
    We introduce a set of biologically and computationally motivated design choices for modeling the learning of language, or of other types of sequential, hierarchically structured experience and behavior, and describe an implemented system that conforms to these choices and is capable of unsupervised learning from raw natural-language corpora. Given a stream of linguistic input, our model incrementally learns a grammar that captures its statistical patterns, which can then be used to parse or generate new data. The grammar constructed in this (...)
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  9.  6
    Leo Strauss Between Weimar and America.Adi Armon - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    This is the first book-length examination of the impact Leo Strauss’ immigration to the United States had on this thinking. Adi Armon weaves together a close reading of unpublished seminars Strauss taught at the University of Chicago in the 1950s and 1960s with an interpretation of his later works, all of which were of course written against the backdrop of the Cold War. First, the book describes the intellectual environment that shaped the young Strauss’ worldview in the Weimar Republic, (...)
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  10.  6
    Expert positions and scientific contexts: Storying research in the news media.Rony Armon - 2016 - Discourse and Communication 10 (1):3-21.
    The news media form major sources of information to the general public in matters of science and health. And yet journalists and experts differ in what they consider as newsworthy and relevant. This article analyses in detail a current affair interview with a health expert reporting on a new research on attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Applying Bamberg’s three-level model for positioning analysis, the interview is searched for the stories that speakers introduce, attend to their embedding in the design of questions (...)
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  11.  26
    The “Origins of The Origins”: Antisemitism, Hannah Arendt, and the Influence of Bernard Lazare.Adi Armon - 2019 - Arendt Studies 3:49-68.
    Unlike “Imperialism” and “Totalitarianism,” the last two chapters in Hannah Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarianism, written in the United States in the 1940s, the completion of the first chapter, “Antisemitism”, was preceded by more than two decades of writing in Europe and in the United States, during which Arendt found it increasingly necessary to address issues related to the Jews’ political and social situation. The chapter may be only one part of the book, but it is in fact the “origin (...)
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  12.  12
    Learning a Generative Probabilistic Grammar of Experience: A Process-Level Model of Language Acquisition.Oren Kolodny, Arnon Lotem & Shimon Edelman - 2015 - Cognitive Science 39 (2):227-267.
    We introduce a set of biologically and computationally motivated design choices for modeling the learning of language, or of other types of sequential, hierarchically structured experience and behavior, and describe an implemented system that conforms to these choices and is capable of unsupervised learning from raw natural-language corpora. Given a stream of linguistic input, our model incrementally learns a grammar that captures its statistical patterns, which can then be used to parse or generate new data. The grammar constructed in this (...)
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  13.  47
    Beyond Darwinism’s Eclipse: Functional Evolution, Biochemical Recapitulation and Spencerian Emergence in the 1920s and 1930s. [REVIEW]Rony Armon - 2010 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 41 (1):173 - 194.
    During the 1920s and 1930s, many biologists questioned the viability of Darwin’s theory as a mechanism of evolutionary change. In the early 1940s, and only after a number of alternatives were suggested, Darwinists succeeded to establish natural selection and gene mutation as the main evolutionary mechanisms. While that move, today known as the neo-Darwinian synthesis, is taken as signalling a triumph of evolutionary theory, certain critical problems in evolution—in particular the evolution of animal function—could not be addressed with this approach. (...)
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  14.  18
    Contesting Religious Authoriality: The Immanuel “Beis-Yaakov” School Segregation Case. [REVIEW]Shulamit Almog & Lotem Perry-Hazan - 2013 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 26 (1):211-225.
    This paper will focus on two textual articulations that emerged in the Immanuel “Beis-Yaakov” school segregation case. The first is a declaration of the Admor from Slonim that was published when the ultra-Orthodox fathers who refused to send their daughters to an integrated school were imprisoned. The second is a letter to the Supreme Court that was written by an Ashkenazi mother whose daughter attended the “Beis Yaakov” school. A semiotic reading of the articulations reveals several opposing characteristics. The Admor’s (...)
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  15. What do we do with the past (and who does it)? : a gendered reading of Lea Goldberg's play Ba'alat ha'Armon (1954).Talila Kosh - 2007 - In Vera Apfelthaler & Julia Köhne (eds.), Gendered Memories: Transgressions in German and Israeli Film and Theatre. Turia + Kant.
     
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  16.  17
    Varieties of affect.Claire Armon-Jones - 1991 - Buffalo: University of Toronto Press.
    In this new and original book, Claire Armon-Jones examines the concept of affect and various philosophical positions which attempt to define and characterize it: the standard view, the neo-cognitivist view, and the objectual thesis. She contends that these views radically distort our understanding of affect by disregarding modes of affect which fail to conform to the accounts they each employ. Against the standard and neo-cognitivist views she argues that the notions they use to characterize affect are neither necessary nor (...)
  17.  12
    The bottleneck may be the solution, not the problem.Arnon Lotem, Oren Kolodny, Joseph Y. Halpern, Luca Onnis & Shimon Edelman - 2016 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39.
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  18.  39
    Can reinforcement learning explain variation in early infant crying?Arnon Lotem & David W. Winkler - 2004 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (4):468-468.
    We welcome Soltis' use of evolutionary signaling theory, but question his interpretations of colic as a signal of vigor and his explanation of abnormal high-pitched crying as a signal of poor infant quality. Instead, we suggest that these phenomena may be suboptimal by-products of a generally adaptive learning process by which infants adjust their crying levels in relation to parental responsiveness.
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  19.  25
    Reconciling genetic evolution and the associative learning account of mirror neurons through data-acquisition mechanisms.Arnon Lotem & Oren Kolodny - 2014 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (2):210-211.
  20. Integrating computation into the mechanistic hierarchy in the cognitive and neural sciences.Lotem Elber-Dorozko & Oron Shagrir - 2019 - Synthese 199 (Suppl 1):43-66.
    It is generally accepted that, in the cognitive and neural sciences, there are both computational and mechanistic explanations. We ask how computational explanations can integrate into the mechanistic hierarchy. The problem stems from the fact that implementation and mechanistic relations have different forms. The implementation relation, from the states of an abstract computational system to the physical, implementing states is a homomorphism mapping relation. The mechanistic relation, however, is that of part/whole; the explaining features in a mechanistic explanation are the (...)
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  21. Prescription, explication and the social construction of emotion.Claire Armon-Jones - 1985 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 15 (1):1–22.
  22.  10
    Scientists Invent New Hypotheses, Do Brains?Nir Fresco & Lotem Elber-Dorozko - 2024 - Cognitive Science 48 (1):e13400.
    How are new Bayesian hypotheses generated within the framework of predictive processing? This explanatory framework purports to provide a unified, systematic explanation of cognition by appealing to Bayes rule and hierarchical Bayesian machinery alone. Given that the generation of new hypotheses is fundamental to Bayesian inference, the predictive processing framework faces an important challenge in this regard. By examining several cognitive‐level and neurobiological architecture‐inspired models of hypothesis generation, we argue that there is an essential difference between the two types of (...)
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  23.  77
    Affect, objects and rationality.Claire Armon-Jones - 1992 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 22 (2):129–143.
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  24.  3
    Between the End of History and the Last Man: World History and the Dialogue between Leo Strauss and Alexandre Kojève.Adi Armon - 2019 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2019 (186):8-24.
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  25.  45
    Final Discussion: Issues and Challenges for the Future.Rony Armon, Ulrich Charpa, Eric Davidson, Ute Deichmann, Raphael Falk, John Glass, Shimon Glick, Manfred Laubichler, Michel Morange & Isaac Yanni Nevo - 2012 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 55 (4):608-611.
  26.  46
    Final Discussion: Issues and Challenges for the Future.Rony Armon, Ulrich Charpa, Eric Davidson, Ute Deichmann, Raphael Falk, John Glass, Shimon Glick, Manfred Laubichler, Michel Morange, Isaac, Addy Pross, Siegfried Roth & Varda Shoshan-Barmatz - 2012 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 55 (4):608-611.
  27.  20
    JME Referees in 1997.Cheryl Armon, Sheryle Bergman Drewe, Judith Boss, George Dei, Patrick Dillon, David Gooderham, Han Gur Ze'ev, Ann Higgins D'Alessandro, Kay Johnston & Yong Lin Moon - 1998 - Journal of Moral Education 27 (2):263.
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  28.  26
    Soil bacteria and bacteriophages.Robert Armon - 2011 - In Witzany (ed.), Biocommunication in Soil Microorganisms. Springer. pp. 67--112.
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  29.  27
    Writing biographies and autobiographies of science.Rony Armon - 2007 - Minerva 45 (3):295-304.
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  30.  41
    Manipulation is key: on why non-mechanistic explanations in the cognitive sciences also describe relations of manipulation and control.Lotem Elber-Dorozko - 2018 - Synthese 195 (12):5319-5337.
    A popular view presents explanations in the cognitive sciences as causal or mechanistic and argues that an important feature of such explanations is that they allow us to manipulate and control the explanandum phenomena. Nonetheless, whether there can be explanations in the cognitive sciences that are neither causal nor mechanistic is still under debate. Another prominent view suggests that both causal and non-causal relations of counterfactual dependence can be explanatory, but this view is open to the criticism that it is (...)
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  31.  19
    Do Retinal Neurons Also Represent Somatosensory Inputs? On Why Neuronal Responses Are Not Sufficient to Determine What Neurons Do.Lotem Elber-Dorozko & Yonatan Loewenstein - 2023 - Cognitive Science 47 (4):e13265.
    How does neuronal activity give rise to cognitive capacities? To address this question, neuroscientists hypothesize about what neurons “represent,” “encode,” or “compute,” and test these hypotheses empirically. This process is similar to the assessment of hypotheses in other fields of science and as such is subject to the same limitations and difficulties that have been discussed at length by philosophers of science. In this paper, we highlight an additional difficulty in the process of empirical assessment of hypotheses that is unique (...)
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  32.  6
    Why should it be my concern? How teachers in low- and high-ses primary schools mobilise their pupils’ online rights.Shiran German Ben-Hayun & Lotem Perry-Hazan - 2021 - British Journal of Educational Studies 69 (3):327-346.
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  33.  11
    Differential application of cultural practices at the family and individual levels may alter heritability estimates.Oren Kolodny, Marcus W. Feldman, Arnon Lotem & Yoav Ram - 2022 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 45:e167.
    Uchiyama et al. emphasize that culture evolves directionally and differentially as a function of selective pressures in different populations. Extending these principles to the level of families, lineages, and individuals exposes additional challenges to estimating heritability. Cultural traits expressed differentially as a function of the genetics whose influence they mask or unmask render inseparable the influences of culture and genetics.
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  34.  17
    Beyond uncertainty: A broader scope for “incentive hope” mechanisms and its implications.Omer Linkovski, Noam Weinbach, Shimon Edelman, Marcus W. Feldman, Arnon Lotem & Oren Kolodny - 2019 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42.
    We propose that food-related uncertainty is but one of multiple cues that predicts harsh conditions and may activate “incentive hope.” An evolutionarily adaptive response to these would have been to shift to a behavioral-metabolic phenotype geared toward facing hardship. In modernity, this phenotype may lead to pathologies such as obesity and hoarding. Our perspective suggests a novel therapeutic approach.
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  35. Poetics: With the Tractatus Coislinianus, Reconstruction of Poetics Ii, and the Fragments of the on Poets.S. H. Aristotle & Butcher - 1932 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    Richard Janko's acclaimed translation of Aristotle's _Poetics_ is accompanied by the most comprehensive commentary available in English that does not presume knowledge of the original Greek. Two other unique features are Janko's translations with notes of both the _Tractatus Coislinianus_, which is argued to be a summary of the lost second book of the Poetics, and fragments of Aristotle’s dialogue On Poets, including recently discovered texts about catharsis, which appear in English for the first time.
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  36.  5
    Act and Crime: The Philosophy of Action and its Implications for Criminal Law.Michael S. Moore - 2010 - Oxford University Press UK.
    In print for the first time in over ten years, Act and Crime provides a unified account of the theory of action presupposed by both Anglo-American criminal law and the morality that underlies it. The book defends the view that human actions are always volitionally caused bodily movements and nothing else. The theory is used to illuminate three major problems in the drafting and the interpretation of criminal codes: 1) what the voluntary act requirement both does and should require; 2) (...)
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  37.  5
    On logic and the theory of science.Jean Cavaillès - 2021 - New York, NY: Sequence Press. Edited by Knox Peden & Robin Mackay.
    In this short, dense essay, Jean Cavaillès evaluates philosophical efforts to determine the origin - logical or ontological - of scientific thought, arguing that, rather than seeking to found science in original intentional acts, a priori meanings, or foundational logical relations, any adequate theory must involve a history of the concept. Cavaillès insists on a historical epistemology that is conceptual rather than phenomenological, and a logic that is dialectical rather than transcendental. His famous call (cited by Foucault) to abandon "a (...)
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  38. "Tretiĭ Zavet" ott︠s︡a Sergii︠a︡ Bulgakova.N. K. Bonet︠s︡kai︠a︡ - 2023 - Sankt-Peterburg: Aleteĭi︠a︡.
    Tri filosofskikh "opravdanii︠a︡" (teodit︠s︡ei︠a︡, antropodit︠s︡ei︠a︡, kosmodit︠s︡ei︠a︡ Serebri︠a︡nogo veka) -- Russkai︠a︡ sofiologii︠a︡ i kabbala -- S. Bulgakov : nauka sofiologii︠a︡ (ili konet︠s︡ religii) -- Tretiĭ Zavet o. Sergii︠a︡ Bulgakova -- Tretʹezavetnai︠a︡ misterii︠a︡ ("malai︠a︡" trilogii︠a︡ Bulgakova).
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  39. Babaji's songs of the 18 Yoga Siddhas, kriya =.S. A. A. Ramaiah - 1968 - [Madras: Ramaiah]. Edited by Babaji.
    v. 1. pt. 1. Babaji's glimpses of the Tamil 18 Siddhas. pt. 2. [non-Roman data].
     
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  40. T︠S︡ennostʹ i chelovek: print︠s︡ip sokhranenii︠a︡ t︠s︡ennosti.P. Boranet︠s︡kiĭ - 1948 - Parizh,:
     
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  41. T́S̀elostnost' i biologii︠a︠.Rostislav Vsevolodovich Chagovet︠s︡ (ed.) - 1968
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  42. Søren Kierkegaard for hver Dag.Søren Kierkegaard - 1967 - København,: Nyt Nordisk Forlag. Edited by Junghans, Gunhild, [From Old Catalog], Ingeborg & Søren Kierkegaard.
     
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  43. Søren Kierkegaard's pilgrimage to Jutland.Søren Kierkegaard - 1948 - [Copenhagen]: Danish Tourist Association. Edited by Arthur Dahl.
     
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  44.  1
    Søren Kierkegaards røst.Søren Kierkegaard - 1938 - København,: G. E. C. Gad. Edited by Villads Christensen.
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  45. Print︠s︡ip sootvetstvii︠a︡ v sovremennoĭ fizike i ego filosofskoe znachenie.Ivan Vasilʹevich Kuznet︠s︡ov - 1948
     
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  46. Frant︠s︡uzskie materialisty XVIII veka.M. D. T︠S︡ebenko - 1950
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  47.  7
    Alfonso de Cartagena's Memoriale virtutum (1422): Aristotle for Lay Princes in Medieval Spain.María Morrás, Jeremy Lawrance & Alonso de Cartagena (eds.) - 2022 - Boston: Brill.
    In Alfonso de Cartagena's 'Memoriale virtutum' (1422) María Morrás and Jeremy Lawrance offer a new edition from the manuscripts of a compilation of Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics addressed by the major Castilian intellectual of the day, bishop Alfonso de Cartagena, to the heir to the throne of Portugal, crown prince Duarte. The work was a speculum principis, an education for the future king in the virtues suitable to a statesman; Cartagena's choice of Aristotle was thus a significant index of the advent (...)
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  48.  4
    Kto má v rukách náš čas: úvahy o fenoméne času v prieniku fyziky a biblického zjavenia.Štefan Markuš - 2016 - [Bratislava]: Porta libri.
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  49. A filozófia keresztje: a megbocsátás problémája Vladimir Jankélévitch morálfilozófiájában.S. Béla Visky - 2016 - Kolozsvár: Exit Kiadó.
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  50. Philosophical listening in Plato's Lysis.S. Montgomery Ewegen - 2022 - In Jill Gordon (ed.), Hearing, sound, and the auditory in ancient Greece. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.
     
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