Strategy Logic
... However, because of limitations inherent in the definition of ATL, several extensions have been proposed [2], among them the temporal logic ATL∗ , the alternating-time µ-calculus, and a so-called game logic of [2]: these are motivated by expressing general ω-regular winning conditions, as well as tr ...
... However, because of limitations inherent in the definition of ATL, several extensions have been proposed [2], among them the temporal logic ATL∗ , the alternating-time µ-calculus, and a so-called game logic of [2]: these are motivated by expressing general ω-regular winning conditions, as well as tr ...
Evolutionary Psychology Primer by Leda Cosmides and John Tooby
... experience moral outrage, to navigate a landscape, and myriad others -- are possible only because there is a vast and heterogenous array of complex computational machinery supporting and regulating these activities. This machinery works so well that we don’t even realize that it exists -- We all suf ...
... experience moral outrage, to navigate a landscape, and myriad others -- are possible only because there is a vast and heterogenous array of complex computational machinery supporting and regulating these activities. This machinery works so well that we don’t even realize that it exists -- We all suf ...
The emergence of primary strategies in evolving virtual
... The environment was modelled as a 10 × 10 square cell toroidal array to eliminate edge effects, in which a maximum of one plant could occupy a cell. Above-canopy light was constant and uniform and, after initialization, total nitrogen in the array was also constant. Each cell had homogeneously distr ...
... The environment was modelled as a 10 × 10 square cell toroidal array to eliminate edge effects, in which a maximum of one plant could occupy a cell. Above-canopy light was constant and uniform and, after initialization, total nitrogen in the array was also constant. Each cell had homogeneously distr ...
The influence of the evolutionary paradigm
... publication of the Origin. Although it was nearly universally granted that Darwin’s mechanism played some role in evolution, by this time there were relatively few defenders of the idea that natural selection is a major contributor – let alone the major contributor – to the fundamental patterns of e ...
... publication of the Origin. Although it was nearly universally granted that Darwin’s mechanism played some role in evolution, by this time there were relatively few defenders of the idea that natural selection is a major contributor – let alone the major contributor – to the fundamental patterns of e ...
Clarifying the Foundations of Evolutionary Psychology: A Reply to
... has not been a single new discovery about human cognition or behavior that has been directly guided by either multilevel selection models or gene–culture coevolution models. Instead, these models have at best provided post hoc explanations of known phenomena. This is problematic because, as Lakatos ...
... has not been a single new discovery about human cognition or behavior that has been directly guided by either multilevel selection models or gene–culture coevolution models. Instead, these models have at best provided post hoc explanations of known phenomena. This is problematic because, as Lakatos ...
Ethics, Empathy, and the Education of Dentists
... Descent of Man, in which Darwin devoted several chapters to the issue of the origin of human morality.20 He opens Chapter IV with these words: “…of all of the differences between man and the lower animals, the moral sense or conscience is by far the most important…it is summed up in that short but i ...
... Descent of Man, in which Darwin devoted several chapters to the issue of the origin of human morality.20 He opens Chapter IV with these words: “…of all of the differences between man and the lower animals, the moral sense or conscience is by far the most important…it is summed up in that short but i ...
Essays On Origins - clclutheran.net home page
... to its own legitimate domain. But what limits can be set for a natural process that claims to be nothing less than the whole of reality? Science, or more accurately "scientism," has not hesitated to wade into the domain of religion. In 1981, theologians and scientists met at Massachusetts Institute ...
... to its own legitimate domain. But what limits can be set for a natural process that claims to be nothing less than the whole of reality? Science, or more accurately "scientism," has not hesitated to wade into the domain of religion. In 1981, theologians and scientists met at Massachusetts Institute ...
Two Approaches to Evolutionary Epistemology
... the question of speciation—i.e., how do new specie arises from old species?—could be fully explained in terms of these two theses. The current consensus is that Darwin did not succeed in providing a complete account of speciation because he had failed to see that speciation could also be achieved by ...
... the question of speciation—i.e., how do new specie arises from old species?—could be fully explained in terms of these two theses. The current consensus is that Darwin did not succeed in providing a complete account of speciation because he had failed to see that speciation could also be achieved by ...
The application of animal signaling theory to human phenomena
... theory. Rather, it consists of exhortations to behave or to refrain from behaving in particular ways. Such exhortations typically occur where there is at least the potential for a con¯ict of interests between signalers and receivers. The commonplace use of religious rhetoric by social, political, an ...
... theory. Rather, it consists of exhortations to behave or to refrain from behaving in particular ways. Such exhortations typically occur where there is at least the potential for a con¯ict of interests between signalers and receivers. The commonplace use of religious rhetoric by social, political, an ...
The Role of Evolutionary Explanations in Criminology
... matter of dispute (see Mesoudi, Whiten & Laland, 2006 and commentaries) it is clear that just as humans have an evolutionary history, so too do human social groups have cultural histories that provide important inputs into developmental and proximate processes. Tinbergen’s framework speaks to the di ...
... matter of dispute (see Mesoudi, Whiten & Laland, 2006 and commentaries) it is clear that just as humans have an evolutionary history, so too do human social groups have cultural histories that provide important inputs into developmental and proximate processes. Tinbergen’s framework speaks to the di ...