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  1. Thomas brown: Associationist (?).Margaret W. Landes - 1926 - Philosophical Review 35 (5):447-464.
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  • Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man.Thomas Reid - 1785 - University Park, Pa.: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Derek R. Brookes & Knud Haakonssen.
    Thomas Reid was a philosopher who founded the Scottish school of 'common sense'. Much of Reid's work is a critique of his contemporary, David Hume, whose empiricism he rejects. In this work, written after Reid's appointment to a professorship at the university of Glasgow, and published in 1785, he turns his attention to ideas about perception, memory, conception, abstraction, judgement, reasoning and taste. He examines the work of his predecessors and contemporaries, arguing that 'when we find philosophers maintaining that there (...)
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  • Reid, Stewart and the Association of Ideas.Emanuele Levi Mortera - 2005 - Journal of Scottish Philosophy 3 (2):157-170.
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  • The propositional nature of human associative learning.Chris J. Mitchell, Jan De Houwer & Peter F. Lovibond - 2009 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (2):183-198.
    The past 50 years have seen an accumulation of evidence suggesting that associative learning depends on high-level cognitive processes that give rise to propositional knowledge. Yet, many learning theorists maintain a belief in a learning mechanism in which links between mental representations are formed automatically. We characterize and highlight the differences between the propositional and link approaches, and review the relevant empirical evidence. We conclude that learning is the consequence of propositional reasoning processes that cooperate with the unconscious processes involved (...)
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  • (2 other versions)An enquiry concerning human understanding.David Hume - 2000 - In Steven M. Cahn (ed.), Exploring Philosophy: An Introductory Anthology. New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press USA. pp. 112.
    David Hume's Enquiry concerning Human Understanding is the definitive statement of the greatest philosopher in the English language. His arguments in support of reasoning from experience, and against the "sophistry and illusion"of religiously inspired philosophical fantasies, caused controversy in the eighteenth century and are strikingly relevant today, when faith and science continue to clash. The Enquiry considers the origin and processes of human thought, reaching the stark conclusion that we can have no ultimate understanding of the physical world, or indeed (...)
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  • An essay towards a new theory of vision.George Berkeley - 1709 - Aaron Rhames.
    touch 27 Thirrdly, the straining of the eye 28 The occasions which suggest distance have in their own nature no relation to it 29 A difficult case proposed by Dr. Barrow as repugnant to all the known theories 30 This case contradicts a ...
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  • Thomas brown's theory of causation.John A. Mills - 1984 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 22 (2):207-227.
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  • Dissertation First, Vol. 2: Exhibiting a General View of the Progress of Metaphysical, Ethical, and Political Philosophy, Since the Revival of the Letters in Europe (Classic Reprint).Dugald Stewart - 2017 - Forgotten Books.
    Excerpt from Dissertation First, Vol. 2: Exhibiting a General View of the Progress of Metaphysical, Ethical, and Political Philosophy, Since the Revival of the Letters in Europe The foregoing considerations, combined with the narrow limits assigned to the sequel of my work, will sufficiently ac count for the contracted scale of some of the following sketches, when compared with the magnitude of the ques tions to which they relate, and the peculiar interest which they derive from their immediate influence on (...)
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  • Two Approaches to the Distinction between Cognition and 'Mere Association'.Cameron Buckner - 2011 - International Journal for Comparative Psychology 24 (1):1-35.
    The standard methodology of comparative psychology has long relied upon a distinction between cognition and ‘mere association’; cognitive explanations of nonhuman animals behaviors are only regarded as legitimate if associative explanations for these behaviors have been painstakingly ruled out. Over the last ten years, however, a crisis has broken out over the distinction, with researchers increasingly unsure how to apply it in practice. In particular, a recent generation of psychological models appear to satisfy existing criteria for both cognition and association. (...)
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  • The notion of 'suggestion' in Thomas Reid's theory of perception.P. G. Winch - 1953 - Philosophical Quarterly 3 (13):327-341.
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  • Philosophical Essays.Dugald Stewart - 1810 - Printed by George Ramsay and Company, for William Creech, and Archibald Constable and Company ...; T. Cadell and W. Davies ..., John Murray ..., and Constable, Hunter, Park, and Hunter, London.
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  • Regularities all the way down: Thomas Brown's Philosophy of Causation∗.Stathis Psillos - unknown
    Thomas Brown was one of the tail-enders of the Scottish Enlightenment. He shared with Dugald Stewart the chair of Moral Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh from 1810 until his premature death in 1820. He is sometimes classed with the Scottish common-sense philosophers and, to some extent at least, his basic philosophical principles were akin to those of the common-sense philosophy. He did, for instance, forfeit the issue of the justification of some of our most basic beliefs and rested them, (...)
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  • Thomas Brown's Theory Thoery of Causation.John A. Mills - 1984 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 22 (2):207.
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