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of 51
pro vyhledávání: '"William A. Rottschaefer"'
Autor:
William A. Rottschaefer
Publikováno v:
Biological Theory. 16:30-48
In this article I elaborate a scientifically based moral realism that I call affordance moral realism, and I offer a promissory note that affordance moral realism is the best current explanation of morality. Affordance moral realism maintains that mo
Publikováno v:
WIREs Cognitive Science. 13
Rejecting the received account, which includes procedural and semantic memory, Stanley B. Klein claims that only episodic memory is genuine memory. This is so, he asserts, because only episodic memory is partly constituted by a quale, a Nagelian "wha
Autor:
William A. Rottschaefer
Publikováno v:
Cognitive Systems Research. 45:124-144
Proponents of cognitive Situationism argue that the human mind is embodied, embedded in both natural and social-cultural environments and extended creating both extended and distributed cognition. Anti-situationists reject all or some of these claims
Autor:
William A. Rottschaefer
Publikováno v:
Religious Studies. 52:475-496
In Evolutionary Religion, J. L. Schellenberg synthesizes his previous impressive contributions to an understanding of religion by formulating an account of religion supported by a Darwinian evolutionary theory understood as a science of the deep futu
Autor:
William A. Rottschaefer
Publikováno v:
Journal of the History of Philosophy. 55:745-746
Autor:
William A. Rottschaefer
Publikováno v:
Journal of Philosophical Research. 36:361-369
Autor:
William A. Rottschaefer
Publikováno v:
Journal of Philosophical Research. 36:291-325
Autor:
William A. Rottschaefer
Publikováno v:
Teaching Philosophy. 32:96-102
Autor:
William A. Rottschaefer
Publikováno v:
Zygon®. 42:369-408
In his book Religion Is Not About God, Loyal Rue presents an evolutionarily based explanation of religion as a means to further the personal and social fulfillment of human beings. Rue argues that religions in the form of myths, adaptive falsities, p
Autor:
William A. Rottschaefer
Publikováno v:
Philosophy of the Social Sciences. 34:408-422
In Science, Truth and Democracy, Philip Kitcher has argued that science ought to meet both the epistemic goals of significant truth and the nonepistemic goals of serving the interests of a democratic society. He opposes this science as servant model