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  1. Computers Aren’t Syntax All the Way Down or Content All the Way Up.Cem Bozşahin - 2018 - Minds and Machines 28 (3):543-567.
    This paper argues that the idea of a computer is unique. Calculators and analog computers are not different ideas about computers, and nature does not compute by itself. Computers, once clearly defined in all their terms and mechanisms, rather than enumerated by behavioral examples, can be more than instrumental tools in science, and more than source of analogies and taxonomies in philosophy. They can help us understand semantic content and its relation to form. This can be achieved because they have (...)
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  • Problems with Piagetian constructivism.P. S. C. Matthews - 1997 - Science & Education 6 (1-2):105-119.
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  • Encoding and retrieval of orientation: A new slant on an old problem.Jean M. Mandler & Nancy L. Stein - 1977 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 10 (1):9-12.
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  • Number‐based Strategies of Sharing in Young Children.Anne Desforges & Charles Desforges - 1980 - Educational Studies 6 (2):97-109.
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  • Habermas's Evolutions.Robert X. Ware - 1982 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 12 (3):591 - 620.
    Jürger Habermas has been attempting to develop a critical theory of society with a practical intent, on the basis of communication and a theory of the evolution of practical and moral social competence. He thinks that the studies of language rules and language learning from Piaget, Searle, Chomsky and others have and continue to provide models elsewhere - from productive activity to moral activity. Moreover, the models are said to extend to social learning, which will be exhibited in the development (...)
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  • Preschoolers sometimes know less than we think: The use of quantifiers to solve addition and subtraction tasks.Belinda Blevins-Knabe, Robert G. Cooper, Prentice Starkey, Patty Goth Mace & Ed Leitner - 1987 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 25 (1):31-34.
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