Results 201 to 210 of about 164,279 (252)
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Popper and Darwinism

Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement, 1995
The first Darwin Lecture was given in 1977 by Karl Popper. He there said that he had known Darwin's face and name ‘for as long as I can remember’ (‘NSEM’ p. 339); for his father's library contained a portrait of Darwin and translations of most of Darwin's works (‘IA’, p. 6).
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Popper's Nightmare

2022
Organisms, Vol 5, No 2 (2022): Special Issue: Where is Science Going?
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“Popper” induced methemoglobinemia

Baylor University Medical Center Proceedings, 2022
Methemoglobinemia is a blood disorder in which red blood cells contain methemoglobin, a form of hemoglobin that contains iron in its oxidized state, at levels >1%, often leading to a hypoxic state. It can be acquired or congenital and has been associated with nitrate or nitrite exposure.
Fares, Elgendy   +3 more
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POPPER’S CONVENTIONALISM

2010
[No abstract available]
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Popper’s Legacy

2006
Most commentators think of Karl Popper and his intellectual legacy primarily in terms of his philosophy of science, while some recall his political philosophy. In Popper's Legacy, Raphael Sassower foregrounds Popper's political and economic ideas and relates them to his methodology of science, showing along the way the ideological convictions they ...
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On Popper, Probabilities, And Propensities

Review of Social Economy, 1996
This paper traces the development of Popper's thinking on propensities from his writings on probability during the 1950s through to his 1990 bookA World of Propensities. It is argued that there are significant commonalities between the views expressed in this (his last) book and the metaphysics and methodological implications of Critical Realism.
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Popper's Philosophy for Epidemiologists

International Journal of Epidemiology, 1975
This paper discusses the application of Popper's philosophy to epidemiological research, examining in particular the problems of replication without risk of refutation, of mistaking statistical sophistication for deductive inference, and of dealing with causality at a general level.
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Popper and nursing theory

Nursing Philosophy, 2003
Abstract  Science seems to develop by inducing new knowledge from observation. However, it is hard to find a rational justification for induction. Popper offers one attempt to resolve this problem. Nursing theorists have tended to ignore or reject Popper, often on the false belief that he is a logical positivist (and hence hostile to qualitative ...
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Against Popperized Epidemiology

International Journal of Epidemiology, 1976
The recommendation of Popper's philosophy of science should be adopted by epidemiologists is disputed. Reference is made to other authors who have shown that the most constructive elements in Popper's ideas have been advocated by earlier philosophers and have been used in epidemiology without abandoning inductive reasoning.
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