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  1. Behavioral flexibility and the organization of action.David S. Olton - 1981 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (4):634-635.
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  • Understanding the Scientific Creativity Based on Various Perspectives of Science.Jun-Young Oh - 2022 - Axiomathes 32 (6):907-929.
    The objective of our study is to explore scientific creativity with a focus on intellectual (thinking) skills in the cognitive aspect by analyzing scientific theories, which are basically the creativity of historical great scientists, Galileo, Newton, Einstein While our study laid stress on the cognitive domain, exploration of the creativity of great scientists is also connected with affective characteristics (motives, task commitment, etc.) and their environmental factors (incubation period). Great scientists of the science history were aware of the discrepancy issue (...)
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  • The uncertain reasoner: Bayes, logic, and rationality.Mike Oaksford & Nick Chater - 2009 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (1):105-120.
    Human cognition requires coping with a complex and uncertain world. This suggests that dealing with uncertainty may be the central challenge for human reasoning. In Bayesian Rationality we argue that probability theory, the calculus of uncertainty, is the right framework in which to understand everyday reasoning. We also argue that probability theory explains behavior, even on experimental tasks that have been designed to probe people's logical reasoning abilities. Most commentators agree on the centrality of uncertainty; some suggest that there is (...)
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  • The Government Grant System: Inhibitor of Truth and Innovation?Donald Miller - 2007 - Journal of Information Ethics 16 (1):59-69.
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  • ‘I am of Popper’, ‘I am of Asante’: The Polemics of Scholarship in South Africa.Tawanda Sydesky Nyawasha - 2019 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 39 (4):415-428.
    In this article, I examine the state of knowledge construction within the South African academe. This, I do by looking at how issues of epistemology and ontology are prioritised or negated in the social construction of knowledge. Focusing on what I have called ‘the problem of perspectives’, I show how ‘epistemological narcissism’ has often limited the scope of methodological and theoretical innovativeness. I argue that by relying on a set of certain theories that scholars have known and used over the (...)
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  • Philosophical Underlabouring for Mathematics Education.Iskra Nunez - 2015 - Journal of Critical Realism 14 (2):181-204.
    The field of mathematics education has been fashioned by a diversity of theoretical and philosophical perspectives. The purpose of this study is to add to this field an analysis of the philosophical position of critical realism. To achieve this objective, the study addresses the following questions: what does critical realism have to offer mathematics education? How may critical realism underlabour for this discipline? In addressing these questions, the study provides an overview of the basic theories and the possible weak points (...)
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  • Martin Luther's experiential theology as a model for faith‐science relationships.Klaus Nürnberger - 2010 - Zygon 45 (1):127-148.
    . The approach of experiential realism could indicate where science and faith deal with the same reality, where science questions faith assumptions, and where faith goes beyond the mandate and method of science. Although prescientific, Martin Luther's theology is the classical prototype of an experiential theology. We experience God's creative power in all of reality. We discern its regularities through observation and reason. So faith opens up all the space needed by science. However, experienced reality is highly ambiguous. It obscures (...)
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  • The Fechner-Stevens law is the law of transmission of information.Kenneth H. Norwich - 1989 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 (2):285-285.
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  • Deconstruction, Science, and the Logic of Enquiry.Christopher Norris - 2010 - Derrida Today 3 (2):178-200.
    In this essay I set out to place Derrida's work – especially his earlier books and essays – in the context of related or contrasting developments in analytic philosophy of science over the past half-century. Along the way I challenge the various misconceptions that have grown up around that work, not only amongst its routine detractors in the analytic camp but also amongst some of its less philosophically informed disciples. In particular I focus on the interlinked issues of realism versus (...)
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  • Nature and the Social Sciences: Examples from the Electricity and Waste Sectors.Mikael Klintman - unknown
    The book has two interrelated objectives. One objective is meta-theoretical and concerns the exploration of theoretical debates connected to issues of studying society and environmental problems; another objective is empirical/analytical, referring to the analysis of "green" public participation in the electricity and waste sectors in Sweden, and partly in the Netherlands as well as the UK. The metatheoretical part draws the conclusion that the ontology of critical realism, combined with a problem-subjectivist tenet, is a particularly fruitful basis for the social (...)
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  • Review of Andrew Thompson and Norman Temple, eds., 2001. Ethics, Medical Research, and Medicine: Commercialism versus Environmentalism and Social Justice. [REVIEW]Kathleen Nolan - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):69-70.
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  • Psychology, statistics, and analytical epistemology.Richard E. Nisbett & Paul Thagard - 1983 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (2):257-258.
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  • A Rationale for Mixed Methods (Integrative) Research Programmes in Education.Mansoor Niaz - 2008 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 42 (2):287-305.
    Recent research shows that research programmes (quantitative, qualitative and mixed) in education are not displaced (as suggested by Kuhn) but rather lead to integration. The objective of this study is to present a rationale for mixed methods (integrative) research programs based on contemporary philosophy of science (Lakatos, Giere, Cartwright, Holton, Laudan). This historical reconstruction of episodes from physical science (spanning a period of almost 300 years, 17th to 20th century) does not agree with the positivist image of science. Quantitative data (...)
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  • Some incorrect implications of the fullaccess hypothesis.Frederick J. Newmeyer - 1996 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19 (4):736-737.
    If Epstein et al. are right that adult second language learners have full access to UG, then all of the following should be true: adults should be able to consciously transform their I-Language; adults should be able to transform pidgins into Creoles; adults should be as likely as children to restructure their grammars on the basis of “functional” pressure. All the foregoing are false, however, which seriously calls into question the correctness of their hypothesis.
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  • Sensory analysis and behavior theory.John A. Nevin - 1988 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11 (2):307-307.
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  • Learning theory: Behavioral artifacts or general principles?John A. Nevin - 1981 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (1):152-153.
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  • Deweyan Tools for Inquiry and the Epistemological Context of Critical Pedagogy.Peter Nelsen & Jayson Seaman - 2011 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 47 (6):561-582.
    This article develops the notion of resistance as articulated in the literature of critical pedagogy as being both culturally sponsored and cognitively manifested. To do so, the authors draw upon John Dewey's conception of tools for inquiry. Dewey provides a way to conceptualize student resistance not as a form of willful disputation, but instead as a function of socialization into cultural models of thought that actively truncate inquiry. In other words, resistance can be construed as the cognitive and emotive dimensions (...)
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  • Tracing eidetic imagery.Ulric Neisser - 1979 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2 (4):612-613.
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  • Defining Heritage Science: A Consilience Pathway to Treasuring the Complexity of Inheritable Human Experiences through Historical Method, AI, and ML.Andrea Nanetti - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-13.
    Societies have always used their heritage to remain resilient and to express their cultural identities. Today, all the still-available experiences accrued by human societies over time and across space are, in principle, essential in coping with the twenty-first century grand challenges of humanity. Artificial intelligence and machine learning algorithms can assist the next generation of historians, heritage stakeholders, and decision-makers in decoding unstructured knowledge and wisdom embedded in selected cultural artefacts and social rituals, encoding data in machine-readable systems, aggregating information (...)
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  • Theology and the social sciences-discipline and antidiscipline.Nancy Murphy - 1990 - Zygon 25 (3):309-316.
    In this review of papers by E. O. Wilson, Philip Gorski, and Robert Segal, I apply Wilson's description of the relations between a discipline and its antidiscipline (the science just below it in the hierarchy of sciences) to the relations between theology and the social sciences. I claim (contra Gorski) that a common methodology is applicable to natural science, social science, and theology. However, despite the fact that a discipline cannot ordinarily be reduced to its antidiscipline, I claim (with Segal) (...)
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  • Critical Notice: Conquering Feyerabend’s Conquest of Abundance*Paul Feyerabend, The Conquest of Abundance: A Tale of Abstraction vs. the Richness of Being. Chicago: University of Chicago Press , xviii + 285 pp. ISBN 0–226–24533–0, $27.00. [REVIEW]Gonzalo Munévar - 2002 - Philosophy of Science 69 (3):519-535.
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  • Forum: Intellectual history in and of the federal republic of germany*: A. Dirk Moses.A. Dirk Moses - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (3):625-639.
    What can one say about the state of the art in the Federal Republic? A number of aspects are discernible, not only in the practices and various traditions of intellectual history there, but also in its politics: the stark dichotomy between Marxists and anti-Marxists; the ever-present metahistorical question of which discipline, field, or method would set the political agenda; and the position of Jewish émigrés. These issues raise still more basic ones: how to understand the Nazi experience, which remained living (...)
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  • Detachment and compensation.Lenny Moss - 2014 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 40 (1):91-105.
    There are many in the social sciences and social philosophy who would aspire to overcome the ‘nature/culture binary’, including some who, with at least an implicit nod toward a putatively ‘anti-essentialist’ process ontology, have set out with an orientation toward a paradigm of ‘biosocial becoming’ (Ingold and Palsson, 2013). Such contemporary work, however, in areas such as social and cultural anthropology and sciences studies has often failed to clarify, let alone justify, the warrants of their most basic assumptions and assertions. (...)
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  • Economic growth and progress: a paradigmatic conflation.John Myburgh Morrison - 2017 - African Journal of Business Ethics 11 (2).
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  • Bruner's Use of ‘Model’.Kathryn Pauly Morgan - 1970 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 2 (2):1-14.
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  • The Metabletic Method: An Interdisciplinary Look at Human Experience.Bertha Mook - 2009 - Phenomenology and Practice 3 (1):26-34.
    Metabletics was first introduced by J.H. Van den Berg as a systematic study of the changing nature of human existence. It gives special focus to phenomena within their specific historical and social-cultural contexts, and inside a complex matrix of relationships. Metabletics provide a uniquely interdisciplinary approach through the analysis of simultaneous events to identify patterns in human experience. Most central to the metabletic method is that, while the world of science is constant, the landscape of human existence is continually changing (...)
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  • Countering post-truths through ecopedagogical literacies: Teaching to critically read ‘development’ and ‘sustainable development’.Greg William Misiaszek - 2019 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 52 (7):747-758.
    A key aspect of teaching ‘development’ is understanding the conundrums and tensions between balance and imbalance with constructs of global and...
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  • Of Chimeras, Harmony, and Kintsugi: Towards a Historicist Epistemology of Paleontological Reconstruction, Theory-Change, and Exploring Heuristics.Ali Mirza - 2022 - Perspectives on Science 30 (4):657-695.
    I analyze the epistemic strategies used by paleontologists (between 1830–1930) to reconstruct features of ancient organisms from fossilized bodies and footprints by presenting two heuristics: (1) a “claim of harmony” which posits the harmonious interaction of natural objects in order for complex systems to be simplified and (2) the “kintsugi heuristic” which is used inter-theoretically to explore new claims of harmony. I apply these to three successive historical cases: Georges Cuvier’s laws of correlation, the panpsychist paleontology of Edward Drinker Cope, (...)
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  • The Rationalitätstreit Revisited: A Note on Roth’s “Methodological Pluralism”.Steven I. Miller - 1999 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 29 (3):339-353.
    Roth's analysis of the Rationalitätstreit (i.e., the debate(s) about rationality) stands as one of the major works on how the debate affects a wide range of issues in the philosophy of science and the social sciences. His principal thesis is that the debate may be seen as a series of Quine-type "translation manuals," exhibiting characteristics of paradigms (following Kuhn 1970) that can be treated as testable scientific theories by adequate empirical tests. The author argues that Roth's notion of empirically testing (...)
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  • Complexity and optimality.Dauglas A. Miller & Steven W. Zucker - 1991 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 14 (2):227-228.
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  • A small fly in some beneficial ointment.P. M. Milner - 1981 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (4):632-633.
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  • Critique of (im)pure reason: evidence‐based medicine and common sense.James Michelson - 2004 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 10 (2):157-161.
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  • U r‐ M atthäus.Hugo Meynell - 2012 - Heythrop Journal 53 (2):175-181.
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  • La rencontre du sémiotique et du « numérique »: Le rôle d’une modélisation conceptuelle.Jean-guy Meunier - 2020 - Semiotica 2020 (234):177-198.
    Résumé Dans cet article, nous discuterons de l’intégration du numérique à la sémiotique et proposerons qu’une modélisation conceptuelle puisse offrir un pont de dialogue entre ces deux domaines classiquement cloisonnés. Plus précisément, nous avancerons l’hypothèse que tout projet de recherche qui en appellera à l’informatique soit une démarche scientifique que s’il construit une théorie qui contient, en plus des modèles classiques que sont les modèles formel, computationnel et physique, un modèle conceptuel. Ce lieu, où les chercheur-es conceptualisent les multiples dimensions (...)
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  • Eleven Ways to Critique an Article.Mike Metcalfe - 2003 - Informal Logic 23 (2).
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  • The reciprocal-interaction model of sleep: A look at a vigorous ten-year-old.Wallace B. Mendelson - 1986 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9 (3):412-413.
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  • Conservatism revisited: Base rates, prior probabilities, and averaging strategies.Nancy Paule Melone & Timothy W. McGuire - 1996 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19 (1):36-37.
    Consistent with Koehler's position, we propose a generalization of the base rate fallacy and earlier conservatism literatures. In studies using both traditional tasks and new tasks based on ecologically valid base rates, our subjects typically underweight individuating information at least as much as they underweight base rates. The implications of cue consistency for averaging heuristics are discussed.
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  • The re‐discovery of contemplation through science.Tom McLeish - 2021 - Zygon 56 (3):758-776.
    Some of the early‐modern changes in the social framing of science, while often believed to be essential, are shown to be contingent. They contribute to the flawed public narrative around science today, and especially to the misconceptions around science and religion. Four are examined in detail, each of which contributes to the demise of the contemplative stance that science both requires and offers. They are: (1) a turn from an immersed subject to the pretense of a pure objectivity, (2) a (...)
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  • A test of the scientific method.Bill McKee - 1993 - Philosophy of Science 60 (3):469-476.
    A conventional experiment is proposed to resolve the realist/idealist debate by challenging the premise that double blinding and an attitude of objectivity in general deter the corroborative influence which preconceptions exert on perception. The possibility that objectivity enhances corroboration would not contradict empirical findings, and would account for the success of science.
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  • Rubber scales and partial quantification.William J. McGill - 1989 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 (2):283-284.
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  • A "revolutionary" philosophy of science: Feyerabend and the degeneration of critical rationalism into sceptical fallibilism.John G. McEvoy - 1975 - Philosophy of Science 42 (1):49-66.
    The works of Paul K. Feyerabend, Norwood Russell Hanson and Thomas S. Kuhn have come to occupy a central place in the annals of contemporary philosophy of science. Some of their contemporaries,, tend to regard them as the vanguard of a new “revolutionary” intellectual movement. Reacting against the views of their positivist predecessors, they embrace and propagate the idea that “pervasive presuppositions” are fundamental to scientific investigations. Thus, Feyerabend thinks that, “... scientific theories are ways of looking at the world; (...)
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  • The Path Not Taken.Jane Roland Martin - 2020 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 54 (3):744-756.
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  • Time, human being and mental health care: an introduction to Gilles Deleuze.Marc Roberts - 2005 - Nursing Philosophy 6 (3):161-173.
    The French philosopher, Gilles Deleuze, is emerging as one of the most important and influential philosophers of the 20th century, having published widely on philosophy, literature, language, psychoanalysis, art, politics, and cinema. However, because of the ‘experimental’ nature of certain works, combined with the manner in which he draws upon a variety of sources from various disciplines, his work can seem difficult, obscure, and even ‘willfully obstructive’. In an attempt to resist such impressions, this paper will seek to provide an (...)
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  • Reflections on the peer review process.Herbert W. Marsh & Samuel Ball - 1991 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 14 (1):157-158.
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  • Discussion notes: IS planck'S ‘PRINCIPLE’ TRUE?John T. Blackmore - 1978 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 29 (4):347-349.
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  • Is behaviorism under stimuls control?John C. Marshall - 1986 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9 (4):710-710.
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  • Sensory analysis: Phenomena, models, and theories concerning life near threshold.John C. Malone - 1988 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11 (2):304-305.
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  • Justice, efficiency and epistemology in the peer review of scientific manuscripts.Michael J. Mahoney - 1991 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 14 (1):157-157.
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  • Psychophysical laws: A call for deregulation.Neil A. Macmillan, Louis D. Braida & Nathaniel I. Durlach - 1989 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 (2):282-282.
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  • How sensory an Analysis?Neil A. Macmillan - 1988 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11 (2):303-304.
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