Cautionary Notes
... 1. First, and most importantly, these data are at the event level, which means that characteristics of particular events do not always map onto social movement organizational actors or social movement issues easily. For example, for a very complex event with many different types of participants and ...
... 1. First, and most importantly, these data are at the event level, which means that characteristics of particular events do not always map onto social movement organizational actors or social movement issues easily. For example, for a very complex event with many different types of participants and ...
Inferential Knowledge of the Occurrence of Something
... This and other technical terms used in scholastic terminology are adopted by Dharmakīrti in particular contexts, in which they contribute to a very precise and concise expression of his own point of view. At the same time, these terms have a high semantic density. It will be shown how saṃbhavānumāna ...
... This and other technical terms used in scholastic terminology are adopted by Dharmakīrti in particular contexts, in which they contribute to a very precise and concise expression of his own point of view. At the same time, these terms have a high semantic density. It will be shown how saṃbhavānumāna ...
Tree of Knowledge
... ask for and give explanations for their actions. Arguments, debates, moral dictates, rationalizations, and excuses all involve the process of explaining why one’s claims, thoughts or actions are warranted. In virtually every form of social exchange, from warfare to politics to family struggles to sc ...
... ask for and give explanations for their actions. Arguments, debates, moral dictates, rationalizations, and excuses all involve the process of explaining why one’s claims, thoughts or actions are warranted. In virtually every form of social exchange, from warfare to politics to family struggles to sc ...
PowerPoint 簡報
... of increasing specialization (sociology), the iron law of oligarchy (political science), the laws of motion of capitalism (Marxian economics), Pareto's law of income distribution (economics), the law of diminishing returns (economics), etc. When we examine such statements we discover that, while the ...
... of increasing specialization (sociology), the iron law of oligarchy (political science), the laws of motion of capitalism (Marxian economics), Pareto's law of income distribution (economics), the law of diminishing returns (economics), etc. When we examine such statements we discover that, while the ...
PowerPoint 簡報
... of increasing specialization (sociology), the iron law of oligarchy (political science), the laws of motion of capitalism (Marxian economics), Pareto's law of income distribution (economics), the law of diminishing returns (economics), etc. When we examine such statements we discover that, while the ...
... of increasing specialization (sociology), the iron law of oligarchy (political science), the laws of motion of capitalism (Marxian economics), Pareto's law of income distribution (economics), the law of diminishing returns (economics), etc. When we examine such statements we discover that, while the ...
Buddhist View of Mind_home
... experiences according to whether our ego finds them: – attractive (desire, grasping at an object) – unattractive (anger, aversion, rejecting, repulsion) – neutral (ignorance that drives a view of reality that induces suffering; a definite state of mind which causes us to act in a certain way) – cons ...
... experiences according to whether our ego finds them: – attractive (desire, grasping at an object) – unattractive (anger, aversion, rejecting, repulsion) – neutral (ignorance that drives a view of reality that induces suffering; a definite state of mind which causes us to act in a certain way) – cons ...
Dia 0
... − More than just rationalisations / justifications / errorprone reconstructions? • Influence of measurement − Framing effects and order effects • Combine with additional data − Non-verbal approaches (e.g., response time) − Information search behaviour (or eye tracking) ...
... − More than just rationalisations / justifications / errorprone reconstructions? • Influence of measurement − Framing effects and order effects • Combine with additional data − Non-verbal approaches (e.g., response time) − Information search behaviour (or eye tracking) ...
What is Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)? What is Post
... • Failed relationships and social isolation (also contributing to occurrence of criminal acts) ...
... • Failed relationships and social isolation (also contributing to occurrence of criminal acts) ...
Functionalism According to functionalism, the essential or defining
... our functional states (or rather, their physical realizations) do indeed have an intrinsic nature on which our introspective identification of those states depends; while also insisting that (2) such intrinsic natures are nevertheless not essential to the type-identity of a given mental state, and m ...
... our functional states (or rather, their physical realizations) do indeed have an intrinsic nature on which our introspective identification of those states depends; while also insisting that (2) such intrinsic natures are nevertheless not essential to the type-identity of a given mental state, and m ...
CHAPTER 4
... • Tom, Boris, and Jacques might all have the belief that a Frenchman committed murder in Trafalgar square, though their brains are in different states, they make different inferences from that belief due to varying backgrounds, and the like. • Nonetheless certain acts are predictable from the “virtu ...
... • Tom, Boris, and Jacques might all have the belief that a Frenchman committed murder in Trafalgar square, though their brains are in different states, they make different inferences from that belief due to varying backgrounds, and the like. • Nonetheless certain acts are predictable from the “virtu ...
02_Thought_and_Language
... Someone leaves a beautiful puppy at your door. You don’t like animals, but you know it would be a great birthday present for your 7 year-old child. He loves animals and so does your husband/wife. However, you know that your apartment is too small and they aren’t ...
... Someone leaves a beautiful puppy at your door. You don’t like animals, but you know it would be a great birthday present for your 7 year-old child. He loves animals and so does your husband/wife. However, you know that your apartment is too small and they aren’t ...
Response to George Johnson`s Review of The Universe in a Single
... Scientists have established that specific neural processes are necessary for producing specific conscious mental processes in humans and some other animals. In this way, correlations have been identified between brain and mind processes. Brain processes are detected with the third-person methods of ...
... Scientists have established that specific neural processes are necessary for producing specific conscious mental processes in humans and some other animals. In this way, correlations have been identified between brain and mind processes. Brain processes are detected with the third-person methods of ...
Introduction to Cognitive Science
... most if not all explanations of mental processes. But computations themselves might not be sufficient (enough) to explain all mental processes. ...
... most if not all explanations of mental processes. But computations themselves might not be sufficient (enough) to explain all mental processes. ...
Anomalous monism
Anomalous monism is a philosophical thesis about the mind–body relationship. It was first proposed by Donald Davidson in his 1970 paper Mental Events. The theory is twofold and states that mental events are identical with physical events, and that the mental is anomalous, i.e. under their mental descriptions, relationships between these mental events are not describable by strict physical laws. Hence, Davidson proposes an identity theory of mind without the reductive bridge laws associated with the type-identity theory. Since the publication of his paper, Davidson has refined his thesis and both critics and supporters of anomalous monism have come up with their own characterizations of the thesis, many of which appear to differ from Davidson's.