Search by property

Jump to navigation Jump to search

This page provides a simple browsing interface for finding entities described by a property and a named value. Other available search interfaces include the page property search, and the ask query builder.

Search by property

A list of all pages that have property "Brief" with value "a philosophy lecturer in University of Lancaster.". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 26 results starting with #1.

View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)


    

List of results

  • Robert Goldstone  + (a modern distinguished professor of psychological and brain sciences at Indiana University.)
  • Colin Allen  + (a modern distinguished professor of the history and philosophy of science at the University of Pittsburgh.)
  • Jack Nelson  + (a modern philosopher at Temple University, Philadelphia)
  • Deborah Tollefsen  + (a modern professor of philosophy at the University of Memphis.)
  • Aaron D. Cobb  + (a philosopher and author specializing in ethics, epistemology, philosophy of religion and the history and philosophy of science. He has written about Faraday's electromagnetism, as well as Herschel, Mill, and Whewell's philosophies of science)
  • Lynn Hankinson Nelson  + (a philosopher at Rowan College, Glassboro)
  • Antonella Corradini  + (a philosopher at the Catholic University of Milan)
  • Catherine Legg  + (a philosopher notable for her work on diagrammatic reasoning)
  • Justin Donhauser  + (a philosopher notable for his work on socially relevant applied philosophy of science, including the role of environmental sciences in public policy and resource management decision-making)
  • Karen Yan  + (a philosopher of cognitive neuroscience in practice notable for her work on causal understanding, technique-enabled reasoning, conceptualization of cognition, and infrastructure of transdisciplinary research)
  • Curt John Ducasse  + (a philosopher of mind and aesthetics who primarily wrote on art, religion and reincarnation)
  • Hong Yu Wong  + (a philosopher of mind and cognitive scientist)
  • Karim Bschir  + (a philosopher of science)
  • Edward H. Madden  + (a philosopher of science and religion)
  • Carole J. Lee  + (a philosopher of science notable for her work on the social structure of science - including its production, communication, and evaluation - with a focus on peer review)
  • Anjan Chakravartty  + (a philosopher of science notable for his work on the topics in metaphysics and epistemology of science)
  • Andrea Roselli  + (a philosopher of science notable for his work on embedded cognition and verisimilitude)
  • David Stump  + (a philosopher of science notable for his work on the disunity of science, Poincaré, Duhem, the history and philosophy of mathematics, and naturalized philosophy of science)
  • Robert Butts  + (a philosopher of science whose research interests included the work of Leibniz, Newton, Galileo, Whewell, and Kant)
  • Patrick Fraser  + (a philosopher who participated in the development of scientonomy during his undergraduate studies. He is no longer an active member of the scientonomy community)
  • Robin Hendry  + (a philosopher who studies philosophical issues in chemistry)
  • John Losee  + (a philosopher who was the author of A Historical Introduction to the Philosophy of Science)
  • Charles Sanders Peirce  + (a philosopher who was the founder of American pragmatism)
  • Paul Needham  + (a philosopher who worked on time and tense, causation and subjunctive conditionals, and various topics in the history and philosophy of science)
  • Saul Fisher  + (a philosopher who works as Executive Director of Grants and Academic Initiatives in the Office of the Provost at Mercy College in New York.)
  • Benjamin Abbott  + (a physicist at the California Institute of Technology and a member of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) collaboration.)
  • Thomas Kuhn  + (a physicist, historian, and philosopher of science who played a significant role in the discussions on scientific change in the 1960-80s)
  • Sigrid Beck  + (a professor and Chair of Descriptive and Theoretical Linguistics in the Department of English at the Eberhard Karls University in Tubingen, Germany)
  • Douglas McDermid  + (a professor at Trent University. Professora professor at Trent University. Professor McDermid earned his BA in Philosophy from the University of Western Ontario, and his MA and PhD from Brown University where he graduated in 1998. Prior to coming to Trent University in 2002, he spent two years as a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Instituto de Investigaciones at the National Autonomous University of Mexico in Mexico City (Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico), followed by two years in a tenure track position at St. Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia. Professor McDermid’s primary research interests are in epistemology, metaphysics, and the history of modern philosophy.ics, and the history of modern philosophy.)
  • James Fieser  + (a professor at the University of Tennessee at Martin, USA.)
  • Yael Sharvit  + (a professor in the Department of Linguistics at the University of California in Los Angeles, She specializes in formal semantics and the syntax-semantics interface)
  • Brandon Look  + (a professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Kentucky in the United States who specializes in the history of modern philosophy, especially Leibniz and Kant.)
  • Marc Ereshefsky  + (a professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Calgary, who specializes in the philosophy of science and of biology)
  • Leora Bar-el  + (a professor in the Linguistics Program in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Montana)
  • Francis E. Mineka  + (a professor of English at Cornell University and an editor of six volumes of the Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, in 33 vols. (1963-1991))
  • Regine Eckardt  + (a professor of general and German linguistics in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Konstanz in Germany)
  • Richard S. Olson  + (a professor of history of science at Harvey Mudd College who specializes in the interactions between the natural sciences and culture)
  • Gideon Yaffe  + (a professor of law and philosophy at Yale University)
  • Alvin Goldman  + (a professor of philosophy and cognitive science at Rutgers University in New Jersey and a leading figure in epistemology)
  • Bradley Dowden  + (a professor of philosophy at California State University, Sacramento)
  • John Wright  + (a professor of philosophy at Central Michigan University with research interests in Early Modern Philosophy, especially Hume, Locke, Descartes, Malebranche, Reid, and Hutcheson; Philosophy of the Scottish Enlightenment; History of the Mind Body Problem)
  • Ralph Schumacher  + (a professor of philosophy at Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany)
  • Michael Friedman  + (a professor of philosophy at Stanford Univa professor of philosophy at Stanford University, his interests include Kant, Philosophy of Science, History of Twentieth Century Philosophy, including the interaction between philosophy and the exact sciences from Kant through the logical empiricists, prospects for post-Kuhnian philosophy of science in light of these developments, and the relationship between analytic and continental traditions in the early twentieth century.traditions in the early twentieth century.)
  • Lisa Downing  + (a professor of philosophy at The Ohio State University who specializes in early modern philosophy and its relationship to natural philosophy.)
  • David Owen  + (a professor of philosophy at the Universita professor of philosophy at the University of Arizona. He received his B. Phil. and D. Phil. from Oxford University and has taught in Scotland, England, and Canada. He is the author of Hume’s Reason (1999) and editor of Hume: General Philosophy(2000), and he has published many articles in the history of early modern philosophy, especially on Locke and Hume. philosophy, especially on Locke and Hume.)
  • Peter Markie  + (a professor of philosophy at the University of Missouri in the United States who specializes in epistemology, ethics, and philosophy of mind.)
  • Zev Bechler  + (a professor of philosophy of science interested in Newtonian studies.)
  • John Dunn  + (a professor of political philosophy at King's College, Cambridge.)
  • Edward Grant  + (a prolific medievalist and historian of science)
  • William Warren  + (a psychologist whose research focuses on ta psychologist whose research focuses on the visual control of action – in particular, human locomotion and navigation. He seeks to explain how this behavior is adaptively regulated by multi-sensory information, within a dynamical systems framework. Using virtual reality techniques, his research team investigates problems such as the visual control of steering, obstacle avoidance, wayfinding, pedestrian interactions, and the collective behavior of crowds. Experiments in the Virtual Environment Navigation Lab (VENLab) enable his group to manipulate what participants see as they walk through a virtual landscape, and to measure and model their behavior. The aim of this research is to understand how adaptive behavior emerges from the dynamic interaction between an organism and its environment. He believes the answers will not be found only in the brain, but will strongly depend on the physical and informational regularities that the brain exploits. This work contributes to basic knowledge that is needed to understand visual-motor disorders in humans, and to develop mobile robots that can operate in novel environmentsots that can operate in novel environments)