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Reduction and Elimination in Philosophy and the Sciences

Reduction and Elimination in Philosophy and the Sciences

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Inhalt / Contents<br />

Scepticism, Wittgenste<strong>in</strong>'s H<strong>in</strong>ge Propositions, <strong>and</strong> Common Ground<br />

Erik Stei .......................................................................................................................................................................................................... 334<br />

Neutral Monism. A Miraculous, Incoherent, <strong>and</strong> Mislabeled Doctr<strong>in</strong>e?<br />

Leopold Stubenberg ........................................................................................................................................................................................ 337<br />

A somewhat Elim<strong>in</strong>ativist Proposal about Phenomenal Consciousness<br />

Pär Sundström ................................................................................................................................................................................................ 340<br />

Impliziert der <strong>in</strong>tentionale Reduktionismus e<strong>in</strong>en psychologischen Elim<strong>in</strong>ativismus? Fodor und das Problem psychologischer Erklärungen<br />

Thomas Szanto ............................................................................................................................................................................................... 343<br />

Structure of <strong>the</strong> Paradoxes, Structure of <strong>the</strong> Theories: A Logical Comparison of Set Theory <strong>and</strong> Semantics<br />

Giulia Terzian .................................................................................................................................................................................................. 347<br />

The Orig<strong>in</strong>s of Wittgenste<strong>in</strong>’s Phenomenology<br />

James M. Thompson ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 350<br />

Objects of Perception, Objects of Science, <strong>and</strong> Identity Statements<br />

Pavla Toráčová ............................................................................................................................................................................................... 353<br />

The <strong>Reduction</strong> of Logic to Structures<br />

Majda Trobok .................................................................................................................................................................................................. 356<br />

Reduc<strong>in</strong>g Sets to Modalities<br />

Rafał Urbaniak ................................................................................................................................................................................................ 359<br />

Are Lamarckian Explanations Fully Reducible to Darw<strong>in</strong>ian ones? The Case of “Directed Mutation” <strong>in</strong> Bacteria<br />

Davide Vecchi ................................................................................................................................................................................................. 362<br />

A Note on Tractatus 5.521<br />

Nuno Ventur<strong>in</strong>ha ............................................................................................................................................................................................. 365<br />

The Place of Theory <strong>Reduction</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> Models of Interdiscipl<strong>in</strong>ary Relations<br />

Uwe Voigt ........................................................................................................................................................................................................ 368<br />

Ethik als irreduzibles Supervenienzphänomen<br />

Thomas Wachtendorf ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 371<br />

Das ‘schwierige Problem’ des Bewusstse<strong>in</strong>s – oder wie es ist, Person zu se<strong>in</strong><br />

Patricia M. Wallusch, Frankfurt am Ma<strong>in</strong>, Deutschl<strong>and</strong> .................................................................................................................................... 374<br />

The Supervenience Argument, Levels, Orders, <strong>and</strong> Psychophysical <strong>Reduction</strong>s<br />

Sven Walter .................................................................................................................................................................................................... 377<br />

No Bridge with<strong>in</strong> Sight<br />

Daniel Weh<strong>in</strong>ger .............................................................................................................................................................................................. 380<br />

On <strong>the</strong> Characterization of Objects by <strong>the</strong> Language of Science<br />

Paul We<strong>in</strong>gartner ............................................................................................................................................................................................ 383<br />

The Functional Unity of Special Science K<strong>in</strong>ds<br />

Daniel A. Weiskopf .......................................................................................................................................................................................... 387<br />

Transcendental <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>and</strong> M<strong>in</strong>d-Body <strong>Reduction</strong>ism<br />

Christian Helmut Wenzel ................................................................................................................................................................................. 390<br />

From Topology to Logic. The Neural <strong>Reduction</strong> of Compositional Representation<br />

Markus Wern<strong>in</strong>g .............................................................................................................................................................................................. 393<br />

The Calculus of Inductive Constructions as a Foundation for Semantics<br />

Piotr Wilk<strong>in</strong> ...................................................................................................................................................................................................... 397<br />

The Four-Color Theorem, Testimony <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> A Priori<br />

Kai-Yee Wong ................................................................................................................................................................................................. 399<br />

The Comprehension Pr<strong>in</strong>ciple <strong>and</strong> Arithmetic <strong>in</strong> Fuzzy Logic<br />

Shunsuke Yatabe ............................................................................................................................................................................................ 402<br />

Intentional Fundamentalism<br />

Petri Ylikoski / Jaakko Kuorikoski .................................................................................................................................................................... 405<br />

New Hope for Non-Reductive Physicalism<br />

Julie Yoo ......................................................................................................................................................................................................... 408<br />

Are Tractarian Objects Whitehead’s Pure Potentials?<br />

Piotr Żuchowski ............................................................................................................................................................................................... 412<br />

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