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Electronic digital computers --- Computer. Automation --- Ordinateurs
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Developmental psychology --- Social psychology --- 316.63 --- 316.37 --- 316.37 Identiteit. Individu en maatschappij. Persoonlijkheid --- Identiteit. Individu en maatschappij. Persoonlijkheid --- 316.63 Sociaal bewustzijn. Zelfconcept --- Sociaal bewustzijn. Zelfconcept --- Self --- Personal identity --- Consciousness --- Individuality --- Mind and body --- Personality --- Thought and thinking --- Will --- Self.
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The principal differences between the contemporary philosophic traditions which have come to be known loosely as analytic philosophy and phenomenology are all related to the central issue of the interplay between predication and perception. Frege's critique of psychologism has led to the conviction within the analytic tradition that philosophy may best defend rationality from relativism by detaching logic and semantics from all dependence on subjective intuitions. On this interpretation, logical analysis must account for the relationship of sense to reference without having recourse to a description of how we identify particulars through their perceived features. Husserl' s emphasis on the priority and objective import of perception, and on the continuity between predicative articulations and perceptual discriminations, has yielded the conviction within the phenomenological tradition that logical analysis should always be comple mented by description of pre-predicative intuitions. These methodological differences are related to broader differences in the philosophic projects of analysis and phenomenology. The two traditions have adopted markedly divergent positions in reaction to the critique of ancient and medieval philosophy initiated by Bacon, Descartes, and Hobbes at the beginning of the modern era. The analytic approach generally endorses the modern preference for calculative rationality and remains suspicious of pre-modern categories, such as formal causality and eidetic intuition. Its goal is to give an account of human intelligence that is compatible with the modern interpretation of nature as an ensemble of quantifiable entities and relations.
Philosophy of language --- Theory of knowledge --- Husserl, Edmund --- Analyse (Filosofie) --- Analyse (Philosophie) --- Analyse linguistique (Philosophie) --- Analysis (Philosophy) --- Analysis [Linguistic ] (Philosophy) --- Analysis [Logical ] --- Analysis [Philosophical ] --- Analytical philosophy --- Analytische filosofie --- Fenomenologie --- Filosofische taalanalyse --- Intuitie --- Intuition --- Linguistic analysis (Filosofie) --- Linguistic analysis (Philosophy) --- Logical analysis --- Perceptie --- Perceptie (Filosofie) --- Perception --- Perception (Philosophie) --- Perception (Philosophy) --- Phenomenology --- Philosophical analysis --- Philosophie analytique --- Philosophy [Analytical ] --- Phénoménologie --- Psychologism --- Psychologisme --- Waarneming --- Waarneming (Filosofie) --- Husserl, Edmund, --- Phenomenology. --- Psychologism. --- Perception. --- Intuition. --- 1 HUSSERL, EDMUND --- Academic collection --- #GROL:SEMI-1-05'19' Huss --- Phenomenological psychology --- Philosophy, Modern --- Supraliminal perception --- Cognition --- Apperception --- Senses and sensation --- Thought and thinking --- Intuition (Psychology) --- Intuitionalism --- Insight --- Analysis, Linguistic (Philosophy) --- Analysis, Logical --- Analysis, Philosophical --- Analytic philosophy --- Philosophy, Analytical --- Language and languages --- Methodology --- Philosophy --- Logical positivism --- Semantics (Philosophy) --- Filosofie. Psychologie--HUSSERL, EDMUND --- 1 HUSSERL, EDMUND Filosofie. Psychologie--HUSSERL, EDMUND --- Analysis (Philosophy). --- Phénoménologie --- Husserl, Edmond --- Husserl (edmund), philosophe allemand, 1859-1938 --- Critique et interpretation --- Philosophie analytique.
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" ... a universe unfinished, with doors and windows open to possibilities uncontrollable in advance." 1 A possibility which William James would certainly not have envisaged is a phenomenological reading of his philosophy. Given James's personality, one can easily imagine the explosive commen tary he would make on any attempt to situate his deliberately unsystematic writings within anyone philosophical mainstream. Yet, in recent years, the most fruitful scholarship on William James has resulted from a confrontation between his philosophy and the phe nomenology of Husserl. The very unlikelihood of such a comparison renders all the more fascinating the remarkable convergence of perspectives that comes to light when the fundamental projects of James and HusserI are juxtaposed. At first view, nothing could be more alien to the pragmatic mentality with its constant mistrust of any global system than a philosophy whose basic drive is to discover absolute knowledge and whose goal is to establish itself as a certain and universal science.
Meaning (Philosophy) --- Signification (Philosophie) --- Husserl, Edmund, --- James, William, --- Academic collection --- Philosophy --- Semantics (Philosophy) --- Husserl, Edmund --- James, William --- جيمس، وليم --- Meaning (Philosophy). --- Husserl, Edmond --- Dzhems, Uilʹi︠a︡m, --- Jaymz, Vīlyām, --- جىمز، وىلىام --- Husserl, Edmund, - 1859-1938 --- James, William, - 1842-1910
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Computer networks --- Internet programming --- UNIX (Computer file) --- 681.3 *C2 --- 681.3*C21 --- Computer communication networks: data communications OSI security and protection --- Network architecture and design: networks (centralized, circuit switching, distributed, packet, store and forward) network communications netword topology --- Computer networks. --- Internet programming. --- 681.3*C21 Network architecture and design: networks (centralized, circuit switching, distributed, packet, store and forward) network communications netword topology --- 681.3 *C2 Computer communication networks: data communications OSI security and protection --- Computer architecture. Operating systems --- Communications management: buffering; input/output; message sending; network communication; terminal management (Operating systems)--See also {?681.3*C2} --- 681.3*D44 Communications management: buffering; input/output; message sending; network communication; terminal management (Operating systems)--See also {?681.3*C2} --- 681.3*C21 Network architecture and design: networks (centralized, circuit switching, distributed, packet, store and forward); network communications; netword topology --- Network architecture and design: networks (centralized, circuit switching, distributed, packet, store and forward); network communications; netword topology --- 681.3 *C2 Computer communication networks: data communications; OSI; security and protection --- Computer communication networks: data communications; OSI; security and protection --- 681.3*D44 --- Computer programming --- Communication systems, Computer --- Computer communication systems --- Data networks, Computer --- ECNs (Electronic communication networks) --- Electronic communication networks --- Networks, Computer --- Teleprocessing networks --- Data transmission systems --- Digital communications --- Electronic systems --- Information networks --- Telecommunication --- Cyberinfrastructure --- Electronic data processing --- Network computers --- Distributed processing --- Réseaux d'ordinateurs --- Programmation sur Internet --- Unix (computer file)
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