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Intuition and Science

Philosophy East and West 12 (1):73-75 (1962)

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  1. On the transdisciplinary nature of the epistemology of discovery.Morris L. Shames - 1991 - Zygon 26 (3):343-357.
    Despite the by now historical tendency to demarcate scientific epistemology sharply from virtually all others, especially theological “epistemology,” it has recently been recognized that both enterprises share a great deal in common, at least as far as the epistemology of discovery is implicated. Such a claim is founded upon a psychological analysis of figuration, where, it is argued, metaphor plays a crucial role in the mediation of discovery, in the domains of science and religion alike. Thus, although the conventionally conceived (...)
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  • Mario Bunge, Systematic Philosophy and Science Education: An Introduction.Michael R. Matthews - 2012 - Science & Education 21 (10):1393-1403.
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  • An analysis of “balance in nature” as an ecological concept.A. J. Jansen - 1972 - Acta Biotheoretica 21 (1-2):86-114.
    In the literature the term “natural balance” occurs frequently and is used for highly divergent collections of facts and for results arrived at by different methods. In this paper it is attempted to give a review of the many possible meanings of “balance in nature”, and to evaluate the application of the term in the scientific literature.To achieve this twofold objective it seemed useful to start by giving as objective as possible a description of the “balance situation” in natural communities, (...)
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  • Information theory, quantum mechanics and‘linguistic duality’.C. T. K. Chari - 1966 - Dialectica 20 (1):67-88.
    – The paper explores first the postulational basis and significance of‘measures of information’in current information theory and their possible relations to physical entropy and Brillouin's‘negentropy’regarded as the negative of entropy. For some purposes, the same pattern or formal structure may be abstracted from both‘entropy’and‘information’. The paper analyzes, in the second place, the mathematical analogies which have been traced between information theory and quantum mechanics and argues that the analogies have but a limited value when we come to grips with the (...)
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