Results 211 to 220 of about 349,644 (345)
Jurymen Seldom Rule Against a Person That They Like: The Relationship Between Emotions Towards a Defendant, the Understanding of Case Facts, and Juror Judgments in Civil Trials. [PDF]
Phalen HJ +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT Joint inquiry requires agents to exchange public content about some target domain, which in turn requires them to track which content a linguistic form contributes to a conversation. But, often, the inquiry delivers a necessary truth. For example, if we are inquiring whether a particular bird, Tweety, is a woodpecker, and discover that it is ...
Una Stojnić, Matthew Stone
wiley +1 more source
Early Invasive Strategy in Non-ST-Elevation Acute Coronary Syndrome With Congestive Heart Failure - A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. [PDF]
Hao K +25 more
europepmc +1 more source
The Gradability of ‘Conscious’
ABSTRACT Are some creatures “more conscious” than others? A number of consciousness researchers have aimed to answer this question. Yet some have claimed that this question does not even make sense. They claim that “conscious” (in the phenomenal sense) never occurs as a gradable adjective, meaning an adjective that permits degree expressions (“more f ...
Andrew Y. Lee, Poppy Mankowitz
wiley +1 more source
Subdural hematomas and medical malpractice in the USA: an analysis of 314 patients. [PDF]
Pecorari IL +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
How to Think About Tacit (or Implicit) Beliefs
ABSTRACT This paper defends a novel theory of tacit belief (sometimes called “implicit belief”). After providing some background and taxonomy, I argue that dispositionalist theories of belief fail to provide a good account of tacit beliefs; this failure gives us a reason to reject those dispositionalist theories.
Andrew Moon
wiley +1 more source
Medical malpractice after artificial urinary sphincter implantation. [PDF]
Khawaja I +7 more
europepmc +1 more source
The Distinctness of Objects Near and Far
ABSTRACT Philosophers working on the metaphysics of persistence typically do not extend their views to the distinctness of objects at a single time. I argue that we can provide criteria to distinguish objects across time if and only if we can provide criteria to distinguish objects at a time. Furthermore, I endorse a stronger claim.
Erica Shumener
wiley +1 more source
The Illusion of Permissive Balancing
ABSTRACT The standard view among philosophers of normativity is that practical reasons balance permissively (i.e., when reasons are tied between incompatible actions, either action is rational), while epistemic reasons balance prohibitively (i.e., when reasons are tied between incompatible doxastic attitudes, neither attitude may be rationally formed).
Jordan Scott
wiley +1 more source

