Results for 'personal knowledge'

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  1.  30
    Selves and Personal Existence in the Existentialist Tradition.Second-Hand Moral Knowledge - 1999 - Journal of Philosophy 96 (2):751-752.
  2. Cyberselfish: A Critical Romp through the Terribly Libertarian Culture of High-Tech.R. Person - 2000 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 13 (2):121-122.
     
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  3. High Tech Heretic: Why Computers Don't Belong in the Classroom and Other Reflections by a Computer Contrarian.R. Person - 2000 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 13 (2):113-114.
     
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  4.  62
    Knowledge, Glory and ‘On Human Dignity'.Henri Atlan, Glory Knowledge & On Human Dignity - 2007 - Diogenes 54 (3):11-17.
    The idea of dignity seems indissociable from that of humanity, whether in its universal dimension of ‘human dignity’, or in the individual ‘dignity of the person’. This paper provides an outlook on the ethics governing the sciences and technology, in particular the biological sciences and biotechnology, and recalls the notion of ‘glory’, both human and divine, as it infuses a great part of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance cultures, just before the scientific revolution in Europe.
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  5.  8
    Book notes. [REVIEW]Barry Fagin, Roland Person, Ron Thomas & Robert Lane - 2000 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 13 (2):109-122.
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  6. Personal knowledge.Michael Polanyi - 1958 - Chicago,: University of Chicago Press.
    In this work the distinguished physical chemist and philosopher, Michael Polanyi, demonstrates that the scientist's personal participation in his knowledge, in ...
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  7. Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy.Michael Polanyi - 1958 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Mary Jo Nye.
    In this work the distinguished physical chemist and philosopher, Michael Polanyi, demonstrates that the scientist's personal participation in his knowledge, in both its discovery and its validation, is an indispensable part of science itself. Even in the exact sciences, "knowing" is an art, of which the skill of the knower, guided by his personal commitment and his passionate sense of increasing contact with reality, is a logically necessary part. In the biological and social sciences this becomes even (...)
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  8.  8
    Personal Knowledge.Michael Polanyi - 1958 - Chicago,: Routledge.
    First published in 2012. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  9. Third‐person knowledge ascriptions: A crucial experiment for contextualism.Jumbly Grindrod, James Andow & Nat Hansen - 2018 - Mind and Language (2):1-25.
    In the past few years there has been a turn towards evaluating the empirical foundation of epistemic contextualism using formal (rather than armchair) experimental methods. By-and-large, the results of these experiments have not supported the original motivation for epistemic contextualism. That is partly because experiments have only uncovered effects of changing context on knowledge ascriptions in limited experimental circumstances (when contrast is present, for example), and partly because existing experiments have not been designed to distinguish between contextualism and one (...)
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  10.  41
    Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy.Louis Arnaud Reid - 1959 - British Journal of Educational Studies 8 (1):66.
  11.  34
    Personal Knowledge” in Medicine and the Epistemic Shortcomings of Scientism.Hugh Marshall McHugh & Simon Thomas Walker - 2015 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 12 (4):577-585.
    In this paper, we outline a framework for understanding the different kinds of knowledge required for medical practice and use this framework to show how scientism undermines aspects of this knowledge. The framework is based on Michael Polanyi’s claim that knowledge is primarily the product of the contemplations and convictions of persons and yet at the same time carries a sense of universality because it grasps at reality. Building on Polanyi’s ideas, we propose that knowledge can (...)
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  12. First-person knowledge in phenomenology.Amie L. Thomasson - 2005 - In David Woodruff Smith & Amie L. Thomasson (eds.), Phenomenology and Philosophy of Mind. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 115-138.
    An account of the source of first-person knowledge is essential not just for phenomenology, but for anyone who takes seriously the apparent evidence that we each have a distinctive access to knowing what we experience. One standard way to account for the source of first-person knowledge is by appeal to a kind of inner observation of the passing contents of one’s own mind, and phenomenology is often thought to rely on introspection. I argue, however, that Husserl’s method of (...)
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  13.  53
    Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy.Edward C. Moore - 1959 - Philosophy of Science 26 (3):270-272.
  14.  20
    Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy.Richard Robin - 1959 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 20 (3):429-429.
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  15.  24
    Personal Knowledge.Manley Thompson - 1960 - Philosophical Review 69 (1):111.
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  16.  14
    Personal Knowledge.Alan R. White - 1960 - Philosophical Quarterly 10 (41):377-378.
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  17.  7
    Guide to personal knowledge: the philosophy of Michael Polanyi: tacit knowledge, emergence and the fiduciary program.Dániel Paksi - 2022 - Wilmington, Delaware: Vernon Press. Edited by Mihály Héder.
    This book will help readers understand the most important book of Michael Polanyi, 'Personal Knowledge', and help them grasp the essence of his philosophical thinking. In this volume, Polanyi's goals are first reconstructed, and then his main philosophical arguments are introduced. The discussion is limited to the most crucial ideas that are indispensable for the arc of his book: tacit knowledge, emergence and the fiduciary program. The thirteen chapters of this volume explain the essence of the thirteen (...)
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  18.  50
    Personal Knowledge At Fifty” Conference Program.Richard Gelwick - 2007 - Tradition and Discovery 34 (3):18-30.
    This address to The Polanyi Society’s June 13-15, 2008 conference at Loyola University in Chicago commemorates the fiftieth anniversary of Michael Polanyi’s publication of Personal Knowledge and considers the generative influence of Polanyi’s post-critical theory of knowledge that led to The Polany; Society, its journal Tradition & Discovery and more than 2000 books and papers on Polanyi’s philosophy.
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  19. First-person knowledge and authority.Kirk A. Ludwig - 1994 - In Gerhard Preyer (ed.), Language Mind and Epistemology: On Donald Davidson's Philosophy. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    Let us call a thought or belief whose content would be expressed by a sentence of subject-predicate form (by the thinker or someone attributing the thought to the thinker) an ‘ascription’. Thus, the thought that Madonna is middle-aged is an ascription of the property of being middle-aged to Madonna. To call a thought of this form an ascription is to emphasize the predicate in the sentence that gives its content. Let us call an ‘x-ascription’ an ascription whose subject is x, (...)
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  20.  22
    Personal knowledge and study participation.Rebecca Dresser - 2014 - Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (7):471-474.
    Scientists in earlier times considered personal research participation an essential component of their work. Exposing themselves to untested interventions was seen as the most ethical way to gauge the human response to those interventions. The practice was also educational, for it generated useful information that helped researchers plan subsequent human studies. Self-experimentation was eventually replaced by more comprehensive ethical codes governing human research. But it is time to bring back the practice of self-experimentation, albeit in modified form. Through serving (...)
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  21. First-Person Knowledge: Wittgenstein, Cavell, and "Therapy".Thomas Meyer - unknown
    The recent publication of The New Wittgenstein signals the arrival of a distinctive "therapeutic" reading of Ludwig Wittgenstein"s philosophical enterprise. As announced in its Preface, this collection presents the "nonsense" of philosophy as the subject of Wittgenstein"s therapeutic work. The simple, plain nonsense of many philosophical remarks is revealed under the scrutiny of Wittgenstein"s investigations, according to this interpretation, leading us to see that such remarks "fail to make any claim at all" (Crary 6). This view of Wittgenstein"s use of (...)
     
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  22.  5
    Personal Knowledge, Art, and the Humanities.Cyril Burt - 1969 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 3 (2):29.
  23.  59
    Personal Knowledge and Sex Education.Drusilla Scott - 1985 - Tradition and Discovery 13 (2):24-28.
  24. Personal Knowledge In Perspective.Stephen R. Palmquist - 1988 - Tradition and Discovery 16 (2):22-27.
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  25.  6
    The Personal knowledge of M. Polanyi and Virtue Epistemology.Oh Seung Hoon - 2007 - 동서철학연구(Dong Seo Cheol Hak Yeon Gu; Studies in Philosophy East-West) 45:223-245.
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  26.  5
    Person knowledge shapes face identity perception.DongWon Oh, Mirella Walker & Jonathan B. Freeman - 2021 - Cognition 217 (C):104889.
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  27. Personal Knowledge and Human Creativity.Percy Hammond - 2003 - Tradition and Discovery 30 (2):24-34.
  28. 7. Personal Knowledge: The Lifeblood of Learning.W. David Shaw - 2004 - In Babel and the Ivory Tower: The Scholar in the Age of Science. University of Toronto Press. pp. 124-148.
     
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  29.  14
    Reflections on Guide to Personal Knowledge.David W. Agler - 2023 - Tradition and Discovery (2):11-17.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is the first paragraph: Paksi and Héder’s Guide to Personal Knowledge (hereafter GPK and Guide) is, as the title suggests, a guide of the most important and original ideas of Michael Polanyi’s book Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy (1958, hereafter PK). Is a guide to Personal Knowledge needed? I think the answer is a resounding “yes” for many new readers. To see why, let’s briefly review two common (...)
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  30. Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy. [REVIEW]F. T. R. - 1958 - Review of Metaphysics 12 (2):327-328.
    Its wisdom and sensitivity make Personal Knowledge required reading for epistemologists. By stressing the active components in scientific knowing--appraisal and commitment--Polanyi shows that knowledge is less "objective," more complex, and more widely distributed in nature than is tacitly supposed by most epistemologies. Knowing implies a foundation in skills, a confidence in one's ability to judge beyond the range of well-formulated rules, and a commitment to the existence of an answer to one's questions before the answer is in (...)
     
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  31.  8
    Scientific Research as a Personal Knowledge: Michael Polanyi’s Epistemological Heritage.Matěj Pudil - forthcoming - Teorie Vědy / Theory of Science.
    Continuously from the 1940s, Michael Polanyi comments on topics that have resonated later since the 1960s in the works of his fellow theorists of science, philosophers of natural sciences, and epistemologists. First part of this article provides a brief reconstruction of Polanyi’s concept of „personal knowledge“ which focuses mainly on the interconnection of the individual level of scientific research with its social dimension. My aim is to evaluate the potential of this concept for the interpretation of research fields (...)
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  32. A 3rd person Knowledge Level analysis of cognitive architectures: problems, challenges, and future directions.Antonio Lieto - 2021 - Unipa Invited Seminars.
    A 3rd person Knowledge Level analysis of cognitive architectures -/- Abstract I provide a knowledge level analysis of the main representational and reasoning problems affecting the cognitive architectures for what concerns this issue. In providing this analysis I will show, by considering some of the main cognitive architectures currently available (e.g. SOAR, ACT-R, CLARION), how one of the main problems of such architectures is represented by the fact that their knowledge representation and processing mechanisms are not sufficiently (...)
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  33.  41
    The Emergence of Mind: Personal Knowledge and Connectionism.Jean Bocharova - 2014 - Tradition and Discovery 41 (3):20-31.
    At the end of Personal Knowledge, Polanyi discusses human development, arguing for a view of the human person as emerging out of but not constituted by its material substrate. As part of this view, he argues that the human person can never be likened to a computer, an inference machine, or a neural model because all are based in formalized processes of automation, processes that cannot account for the contribution of unformalizable, tacit knowing. This paper revisits Polanyi’s discussion (...)
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  34. The Hidden God, Second-Person Knowledge, and the Incarnation.Marek Dobrzeniecki - 2021 - Religions 12 (8).
    The paper considers premises of the hiddenness argument with an emphasis on its usage of the concept of a personal God. The paper’s assumption is that a recent literature on second-person experiences could be useful for theists in their efforts to defend their position against Schellenberg’s argument. Stump’s analyses of a second-person knowledge indicate that what is required in order to establish an interpersonal relationship is a personal presence of the persons in question, and therefore they falsify (...)
     
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  35.  14
    The Logic of Personal Knowledge: Essays Presented to M. Polanyi on His Seventieth Birthday, 11th March, 1961.Polanyi Festschrift Committee (ed.) - 1961 - Routledge.
    Originally published in 1961. Michael Polanyi was a polymath who influenced economics and the sciences as well as philosophy. His wide-ranging research in physical science is as well-known as his work on freedom and knowledge and his arguments against positivism and reductionism. This collection of essays written for him touches on all aspects of his influence but rotates around his published lectures Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy. The contributors address four areas – The Scientist as Knower, (...)
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  36.  6
    The Logic of Personal Knowledge: Essays Presented to M. Polanyi on His Seventieth Birthday, 11th March, 1961.Polanyi Festschrift Committee (ed.) - 1961 - Routledge.
    Originally published in 1961. Michael Polanyi was a polymath who influenced economics and the sciences as well as philosophy. His wide-ranging research in physical science is as well-known as his work on freedom and knowledge and his arguments against positivism and reductionism. This collection of essays written for him touches on all aspects of his influence but rotates around his published lectures _Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy._ The contributors address four areas – The Scientist as Knower, Historical (...)
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  37. Marjorie Grene and Personal Knowledge.Phil Mullins - 2010 - Tradition and Discovery 37 (2):20-44.
    This essay pulls together from myriad sources the record of Marjorie Grene’s early collaboration with Michael Polanyi as well as her interesting, changing commentary on Polanyi’s philosophical perspective and particularly that articulated in Personal Knowledge. It provides an account of the conflicting perspectives of Grene and Harry Prosch, who collaborated in publishing Polanyi’s last work, Meaning.
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  38. The Ethical Dimension of Personal Knowledge.David O. Jenkins - 1982 - Dissertation, Loyola University of Chicago
    My purpose in this dissertation is to show that a wide-ranging investigation of Michael Polanyi's epistemology and ontology taken together with his social-political writings reveals the possibility of explicating an ethical language which can be seen, in Polanyi's terms, to be tacit within these works. The work naturally divides into two parts: the first deals with Polanyi's epistemology and ontology; the second deals with the social and political writings. ;The first part consists in two major arguments: the epistemological and the (...)
     
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  39.  10
    Guide to Personal Knowledge: The Philosophy of Michael Polanyi: Tacit Knowledge, Emergence and the Fiduciary Program by Dániel Paksi and Mihály Héder.Alessio Tartaro - 2022 - Review of Metaphysics 76 (2):358-361.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Guide to Personal Knowledge: The Philosophy of Michael Polanyi: Tacit Knowledge, Emergence and the Fiduciary Program by Dániel Paksi and Mihály HéderAlessio TartaroPAKSI, Dániel and Mihály Héder. Guide to Personal Knowledge: The Philosophy of Michael Polanyi: Tacit Knowledge, Emergence and the Fiduciary Program. Wilmington, Del.: Vernon Press, 2022. xxiii + 209 pp. Cloth, $65.00Famous for the concept of "tacit knowledge," Polanyi (...)
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  40.  19
    Eliminativism, First-Person Knowledge and Phenomenal Intentionality A Reply to Levine.Charles Siewert - 2003 - PSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 9.
    Levine suggests the following criticisms of my book. First, the absence of a positive account of first-person knowledge in it makes it vulnerable to eliminativist refutation. Second, it is a relative strength of the higher order representation accounts of consciousness I reject that they offer explanations of the subjectivity of conscious states and their special availability to first-person knowledge. Further, the close connection I draw between the phenomenal character of experience and intentionality is unwarranted in the case of (...)
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  41.  23
    Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy. [REVIEW]Jude P. Dougherty - 2016 - Review of Metaphysics 70 (1):148-149.
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  42.  39
    The fallibility of first-person knowledge of intentionality.Peter Ludlow & Norah Martin - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (1):60-60.
  43.  27
    Personal Knowledge[REVIEW]Frederick J. Crosson - 1961 - New Scholasticism 35 (2):258-260.
  44.  5
    Personal Knowledge[REVIEW]Frederick J. Crosson - 1961 - New Scholasticism 35 (2):258-260.
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  45. POLANYI, Personal Knowledge[REVIEW]C. A. Coulson - 1958 - Hibbert Journal 57:310.
     
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  46.  35
    Personal Knowledge[REVIEW]Edward MacKinnon - 1959 - Modern Schoolman 36 (4):294-296.
  47.  6
    Personal Knowledge[REVIEW]Edward MacKinnon - 1959 - Modern Schoolman 36 (4):294-296.
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  48.  10
    Personal Knowledge[REVIEW]Edward MacKinnon - 1959 - Modern Schoolman 36 (4):294-296.
  49.  27
    Personal Knowledge[REVIEW]R. F. T. - 1958 - Review of Metaphysics 12 (2):327-328.
  50. Emergence, Supervenience, and Personal Knowledge.Philip Clayton - 2002 - Tradition and Discovery 29 (3):8-19.
    Michael Polanyi was perhaps the most important emergence theorist of the middle of the 20th century. As the key link between the British Emergentists of the 1920s and the explosion of emergence theory in the 1990s, he played a crucial role in resisting reductionist interpretations of science and keeping the concept of emergence alive. Polanyi’s position on emergence is described and its major strengths and weaknesses are analyzed. Using Polanyi as the foundation, the article surveys the major contemporary options in (...)
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