Results 221 to 230 of about 392 (262)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Remarks on The Cartesian Closure
Mathematical Logic Quarterly, 1991``The present paper is a correction and completion of'' the second author's paper ``Notion of interpretation of nonelementary languages'' [ibid. 34, 541-552 (1988; Zbl 0669.03025)]. `Cartesian closure', as in the title, is used in the sense of the previous paper (and not of category theory.) The authors show that the logic with a quasi-ordering ...
Lauri Hella, Michal Krynicki
openaire +2 more sources
The Cartesian Test for Automatism
2003Summary: In Part V of his Discourse on the Method, Descartes introduces a test for distinguishing people from machines that is similar to the one proposed much later by Alan Turing. The Cartesian test combines two distinct elements that Keith Gunderson has labeled the language test and the action test.
openaire +1 more source
Against Neo-Cartesianism: Neurofunctional Resilience and Animal Pain
Philosophical Psychology, 2021Kenneth Williford +2 more
exaly
Robert Desgabets’ eucharistic thought and the theological revision of Cartesianism
Intellectual History Review, 2022Niall Dilucia
exaly
Locke on Cartesian Bodies and Cartesian Souls
2019The anti-Cartesian agenda of the Essay Concerning Human Understanding is better understood when Locke’s intellectual debt to Descartes is fully recognized. Many theoretical options of the Essay, including the most explicitly anti-Cartesian ones, would not have been possible without Descartes, and without the tacit adoption of a number of Cartesian ...
openaire +1 more source
2017
This chapter examines the crisis of perception as it figures in the work of four of Descartes’s immediate successors: Louis de la Forge, Robert Desgabets, Pierre-Sylvain Régis, and Antoine Arnauld. La Forge opts for a version of Descartes’s last view, which has no place for natural geometry.
openaire +1 more source
This chapter examines the crisis of perception as it figures in the work of four of Descartes’s immediate successors: Louis de la Forge, Robert Desgabets, Pierre-Sylvain Régis, and Antoine Arnauld. La Forge opts for a version of Descartes’s last view, which has no place for natural geometry.
openaire +1 more source

