Switch to: References

Add citations

You must login to add citations.
  1. Evidence for mental-model-based reasoning: A comparison of reasoning with time and space concepts.Andre Vandierendonck - 1996 - Thinking and Reasoning 2 (4):249 – 272.
    Johnson -Laird has argued that spatial reasoning is based on the construction and manipulation of mental models in memory. The present article addresses the question of whether reasoning about time relations is constrained by the same factors as reasoning about spatial relations. An experiment is reported that explored the similarities and the differences in the performance of subjects in comparable spatial and temporal reasoning tasks. The results indicated that, in both the temporal and the spatial content domains, the data were (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   9 citations  
  • Hedonistic morality and the art of life: Jean-Marie Guyau revisited.Lev Kreft - 2014 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 8 (2):137-146.
    The aim of this paper is to defend the position that aesthetics and ethics in sport are not two separate domains or aspects. In sport, the aesthetic and the ethical both arise from sport’s attractiveness or from the pleasure sport offers to its activists and consumers. To think about sport philosophically, we should find a link and a principle beyond this division as a source of both the aesthetic and the ethical in sport. The philosophy and philosophical sociology of Jean-Marie (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Psychopathologies of time: Defining mental illness in early 20th-century psychiatry.Allegra R. P. Fryxell - 2019 - History of the Human Sciences 32 (2):3-31.
    This article examines the role of time as a methodological tool and pathological focus of clinical psychiatry and psychology in the first half of the 20th century. Contextualizing ‘psychopathologies of time’ developed by practitioners in Europe and North America with reference to the temporal theories implicit in Freudian psychoanalysis and Henri Bergson’s philosophy of durée, it illuminates how depression, schizophrenia, and other mental disorders such as obsessive-compulsive behaviours and aphasia were understood to be symptomatic of an altered or disturbed ‘time-sense’. (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Implicit and explicit representations of time.John A. Michon - 1990 - In Richard A. Block (ed.), Cognitive Models of Psychological Time. Lawrence Erlbaum. pp. 37--58.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation