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  1. Laboratory Life. The Social Construction of Scientific Facts.Bruno Latour & Steve Woolgar - 1982 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 13 (1):166-170.
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  • (4 other versions)Two Dogmas of Empiricism.Willard V. O. Quine - 1951 - Philosophical Review 60 (1):20–43.
    Modern empiricism has been conditioned in large part by two dogmas. One is a belief in some fundamental cleavage between truths which are analytic, or grounded in meanings independently of matters of fact, and truth which are synthetic, or grounded in fact. The other dogma is reductionism: the belief that each meaningful statement is equivalent to some logical construct upon terms which refer to immediate experience. Both dogmas, I shall argue, are ill founded. One effect of abandoning them is, as (...)
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  • The Heavenly City of the Eighteenth-Century Philosophers. [REVIEW]Marjorie S. Harris - 1933 - Journal of Philosophy 30 (7):190-193.
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  • (1 other version)Darwin’s Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of Life. [REVIEW]David L. Hull - 1996 - Ethics 107 (1):170-174.
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  • Michel Foucault: A "young conservative"?Nancy Fraser - 1985 - Ethics 96 (1):165-184.
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  • Turning Points in American Educational History.A. C. F. Beales & David B. Tyack - 1968 - British Journal of Educational Studies 16 (3):352.
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  • (1 other version)Democracy in America (vol. 2).Alexis de Tocqueville - unknown
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  • Between the Absolute and the Arbitrary.Catherine Elgin - 1999 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 189 (2):237-238.
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  • The Return to Cosmology: Postmodern Science and the Theology of Nature.Stephen Toulmin - 1982 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 19 (4):266-269.
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  • (1 other version)Democracy and Education.Addison W. Moore - 1916 - International Journal of Ethics 26 (4):547-550.
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  • The Way the World Is.Nelson Goodman - 1960 - Review of Metaphysics 14 (1):48 - 56.
    Obviously enough the tongue, the spelling, the typography, the verbosity of a description reflect no parallel features in the world. Coherence is a characteristic of descriptions, not of the world: the significant question is not whether the world is coherent, but whether our account of it is. And what we call the simplicity of the world is merely the simplicity we are able to achieve in describing it.
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  • Mind, Self, and Society from the Standpoint of a Social Behaviorist. [REVIEW]Glenn R. Morrow - 1935 - Philosophical Review 44 (6):587-589.
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  • Representative Men.Ralph Waldo Emerson - unknown
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  • Consilience and complexity.Edward O. Wilson - 1998 - Complexity 3 (5):17-21.
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