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In the philosophy of mind, multiple realizability is the thesis that the same mental property, state, or event can be implemented by different physical properties, states, or events. Philosophers of mind have used multiple realizability to argue that mental states are not the same as — and cannot be reduced to — physical states.
The Moviegoer-An existential novel outlining Søren Kierkegaard's philosophy. Burgess, Anthony: 1917-1993 A Clockwork Orange-A discussion of the role of free will in the context of the application of behaviorism's techniques. Murdoch, Iris: 1919-1999 Lispector, Clarice: 1920-1977 The Hour of the Star; Dürrenmatt, Friedrich: 1921-1990 Lem ...
Linguistic Realities: An Autonomist Metatheory for the Generative Enterprise is a book on philosophy of linguistics by Philip Carr in which the author tries to answer the question: 'Can we reasonably speak of linguistic realities?'
Michael Devitt and Kim Sterelny, Language and Reality: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Language, 1987/1999; David Kaplan, "Demonstratives", 1989; Cora Diamond, The Realistic Spirit: Wittgenstein, Philosophy, and the Mind, 1991; Robert Brandom, Making it Explicit: Reasoning, Representing, and Discursive Commitment, 1994
Metaphysical pluralism in philosophy is the multiplicity of metaphysical models of the structure and content of reality, both as it appears and as logic dictates that it might be, [3] as is exhibited by the four related models in Plato's Republic [4] and as developed in the contrast between phenomenalism and physicalism.
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Joe L. Kincheloe has published numerous social and educational books on critical constructivism (2001, 2005, 2008), a version of constructivist epistemology that places emphasis on the exaggerated influence of political and cultural power in the construction of knowledge, consciousness, and views of reality. In the contemporary mediated ...
In philosophy, four-dimensionalism (also known as the doctrine of temporal parts) is the ontological position that an object's persistence through time is like its extension through space. Thus, an object that exists in time has temporal parts in the various subregions of the total region of time it occupies, just like an object that exists in ...