Results 41 to 50 of about 14,395 (194)
Abstract Meta‐analyses have demonstrated how inoculation interventions increase the detection of misinformation, but their scalability has remained elusive. To address this, Study 1 (pre‐registered; N = 1,583) tested the efficacy of three short inoculation videos (prebunks) against three common manipulation tactics used in misinformation: (1 ...
Mikey Biddlestone +4 more
wiley +1 more source
MOTIVES STILL DON'T MATTER: REPLY TO PYNES
This paper continues a dialogue that began with an article by Jeffrey Koperski entitled “Two Bad Ways to Attack Intelligent Design and Two Good Ones,” published in the June 2008 issue of Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science.
doaj +2 more sources
Visionaries and Crackpots, Maniacs and Saints: Existential Risk and the Politics of Longtermism
ABSTRACT Despite advancing strong claims about our collective priorities, longtermism has received little attention in debates in political philosophy. I first provide an account of longtermism that highlights the way it departs from established work on intergenerational justice.
Alex McLaughlin
wiley +1 more source
As part of the mission to promote the Anglo-Scottish Union (1707) which had been entrusted to him by Robert Harley, Defoe wrote several works, including six Essays at Removing National Prejudices against a Union.
Yannick Deschamps
doaj +1 more source
The Linnaean revolution – A history of the Natural System
Abstract A very brief history of the Natural System (NS) is presented, focusing on angiosperms. The account is divided into four parts. The first, “Setting the stage”, gives an outline of my understanding of evolutionary ontology and how this reflects on taxonomy.
Magnus Lidén
wiley +1 more source
La réforme des accords du participe passé. Réception dans les presses belge, française et québécoise
This article examines the reception of the reform of past participle agreements in the print media in France, Belgium, and Quebec. Using a corpus of newspaper articles collected from the Europress and Eureka databases, covering the period from 2014 to ...
Mireille Elchacar +3 more
doaj +1 more source
The Greek Roots of the Ad Hominem-Argument [PDF]
In this paper, I discuss the current thesis on the modern origin of the ad hominem-argument, by analysing the Aristotelian conception of it. In view of the recent accounts which consider it a relative argument, i.e., acceptable only by the particular respondent, I maintain that there are two Aristotelian versions of the ad hominem, that have ...
openaire +3 more sources
Abstract Both internalist and externalist accounts of knowledge typically propose analyses of the schematic ‘S knows that p’. What follows when we substitute ‘I’ (the first‐person pronoun) for ‘S’? In the first part of this paper, it is argued that the peculiarity of ‘I know…’ makes problems for both species of account. In the second part of the paper,
Roger Teichmann
wiley +1 more source
TWO BAD WAYS TO ATTACK INTELLIGENT DESIGN AND TWO GOOD ONES
Four arguments are examined in order to assess the state of the Intelligent Design debate. First, critics continually cite the fact that ID proponents have religious motivations.
doaj +2 more sources
Abstract The patrician Francesco Barbaro (1390–1454) is well known for having been both a first‐class humanist and a figurehead of the Venetian government in the new territories of the Stato da Terra. This article explores the pioneering use of humanist culture in the official praises he received during his political career, which helped shape a ...
Clémence Revest
wiley +1 more source

