Results 151 to 160 of about 3,168,134 (332)
Zeros of a Class of Transcendental Equation with Application to Bifurcation of DDE
K. Kou, Yijun Lou, Yonghui Xia
semanticscholar +1 more source
Artificial Creativity and Human Fragility
Abstract This article critiques the widespread assumption that generative AI systems exhibit genuine artistic creativity. While such systems can produce novel and aesthetically appealing outputs, assessments based solely on results obscure fundamental differences between human and artificial agents.
Johanna Merz
wiley +1 more source
The simplicity of physical laws
Abstract Physical laws are strikingly simple, yet there is no a priori reason for them to be so. I propose that nomic realists—Humeans and non‐Humeans—should recognize simplicity as a fundamental epistemic guide for discovering and evaluating candidate physical laws.
Eddy Keming Chen
wiley +1 more source
Predictive processing's flirt with transcendental idealism
Abstract The popular predictive processing (PP) framework posits prediction error minimization (PEM) as the sole mechanism in the brain that can account for all mental phenomena, including consciousness. I first highlight three ambitions associated with major presentations of PP: (1) Completeness (PP aims for a comprehensive account of mental phenomena)
Tobias Schlicht
wiley +1 more source
Value distribution of the q-difference product of entire functions
For a complex value $q\neq 0, 1$, and a transcendental entire function f(z) with order ...
Na Xu, Ting-Bin Cao, Chun-Ping Zhong
doaj
“A Practice of Fairness”: Social Equity Budgeting in Freedom City
ABSTRACT Social justice is often theorized as fairness and expressed in equity as part of public administration and associated budgeting practices. Whereas much literature contrasted deontological positions, emphasizing a procedural justice with fairness based on rules, with consequentialist theory that emphasizes a distributional justice based on ...
Laurence Ferry, Thomas Ahrens
wiley +1 more source
A TRANSCENDENTAL EQUATION SOLVER IMPROVING THE DKA-SCHEME AND ITS APPLICATION TO STRUCTURAL ANALYSES
Tsuneo Usuki +3 more
openalex +2 more sources
Apparent Paradoxes Are Paradoxes and the Problem of Change Is an Apparent Paradox
ABSTRACT In this paper, we argue that, under certain conditions, if something is, apparently, a paradox, then it is a paradox. We then apply this claim to a recent discussion on the so‐called “Problem of Change.” Throughout the history of Philosophy, many authors have viewed change as a paradoxical phenomenon. More recently, some have defended that the
Sergi Oms, Marta Campdelacreu
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Objectives In recent decades, research has increasingly highlighted the devastating effects of childhood trauma and relational processes that violate human development. However, the unique dynamics of such early‐life deprivations in adults who practice meditation, a context where the complexity of such wounding (and healing) may become ...
Anna‐Maria Frastali, Adhip Rawal
wiley +1 more source
Certainties and the Bedrock of Moral Reasoning: Three Ways the Spade Turns
ABSTRACT In this paper, we identify and explain three kinds of bedrock in moral thought. The term “bedrock,” as introduced by Wittgenstein in §217 of the Philosophical Investigations, stands for the end of a chain of reasoning. We affirm that some chains of moral reasoning do indeed end with certainty.
Konstantin Deininger, Herwig Grimm
wiley +1 more source

