enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Peaking Lights - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peaking_Lights

    Website. peakinglights.com. Peaking Lights are a husband-and-wife [ 1 ] music duo who met in San Francisco in 2006 and moved to Spring Green, Wisconsin in December 2007 where they lived until 2009. The couple then moved to Madison, Wisconsin, where they stayed until their return to the West Coast in 2011 to live in Los Angeles.

  3. Jürgen Habermas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jürgen_Habermas

    Jürgen Habermas (UK: / ˈhɑːbərmæs /, US: /- mɑːs /; [ 3 ]German: [ˈjʏʁɡn̩ ˈhaːbɐmaːs] ⓘ; [ 4 ][ 5 ] born 18 June 1929) is a German philosopher and social theorist in the tradition of critical theory and pragmatism. His work addresses communicative rationality and the public sphere.

  4. First-order logic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-order_logic

    First-order logic —also called predicate logic, predicate calculus, quantificational logic —is a collection of formal systems used in mathematics, philosophy, linguistics, and computer science. First-order logic uses quantified variables over non-logical objects, and allows the use of sentences that contain variables.

  5. Noliwe Rooks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noliwe_Rooks

    Noliwe Rooks (born 1963) is an American academic and author. She is the L. Herbert Ballou University Professor and chair of Africana Studies at Brown University and is the founding director of the Segrenomics Lab at Brown. [1]

  6. Jean Nicod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Nicod

    Jean George Pierre Nicod (1 June 1893, in France – 16 February 1924, in Geneva, Switzerland) was a French philosopher and logician, best known for his work on propositional logic and induction. Biography

  7. George M. Stratton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_M._Stratton

    Stratton also taught at Berkeley's extension school, lecturing on "Psychology and health" in San Francisco to people from the medical profession in 1918–19, and in Oakland in 1919–20. [48] By this time the introductory course on psychology was so in demand among the students, it was split into two, with Stratton and Warner Brown teaching it ...

  8. Propositional calculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propositional_calculus

    It is also called (first-order) propositional logic, [2] statement logic, [1] sentential calculus, [3] sentential logic, [1] or sometimes zeroth-order logic. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] It deals with propositions [ 1 ] (which can be true or false ) [ 6 ] and relations between propositions, [ 7 ] including the construction of arguments based on them. [ 8 ]

  9. Laws of Form - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laws_of_Form

    Laws of Form(hereinafter LoF) is a book by G. Spencer-Brown, published in 1969, that straddles the boundary between mathematicsand philosophy. LoFdescribes three distinct logical systems: The "primary arithmetic" (described in Chapter 4 of LoF), whose models include Boolean arithmetic;