10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «INTRINSICALNESS»
Discover the use of
intrinsicalness in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
intrinsicalness and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Measurement of Moral Judgement: Volume 2, Standard Issue ...
Intrinsicalness: Pass. Question 5. Promises that are broken result in disappointed
expectations. Prescriptivity: Pass. Question 5. It is important to keep promises.
Mutual Respect: Pass. Question 3. Both the father and the son should respect ...
2
Foundations of Space-Time Theories
... intrinsic curvature of, 282; Leibniz, 3-7, 24; measurement grounded in rigid
bodies and light rays for Riemann, 23; metric, intrinsicalness of, 285; metrical
relations, 317-318, 321-323; Newton and Leibniz, 330-332; Newton's metric
absolutism ...
John Earman, Clark N. Glymour, John J. Stachel, 1977
3
The Essential Dewey: Pragmatism, education, democracy
But to take into account the reason for liking and enjoyment concerns the cause
of the existence of a value, and has nothing to do with the intrinsicalness or
nature of the value-quality, which either does or does not exist. Things that are
means ...
John Dewey, Larry A. Hickman, Thomas M. Alexander, 1998
But totake into account the reasonfor liking and enjoyment concerns the cause of
the existence of a value, andhas nothing to do with the intrinsicalness or natureof
the valuequality, which eitherdoesordoes notexist. Things thatare means ...
5
The Later Works of John Dewey, 1925-1953: 1925, Experience ...
The difference is not one that has anything to do with the immediacy or
intrinsicalness of value-quality; it is a difference between one affair and quality
and another. It is self-contradictory to suppose that when a fulfillment possesses
immediate ...
Jo Ann Boydston, John Dewey, Patricia Baysinger, 2008
6
Substance and Individuation in Leibniz
Second, and equally important: When Leibniz is treating a property as intrinsic to
its bearer (in the sense of'intrinsic' at issue), it is frequently intrinsicalness (I) that
is doing the work. Recall, for example, this: You will object that it is possible for ...
J. A. Cover, John O'Leary-Hawthorne, 1999
7
The Science of the Individual: Leibniz's Ontology of ...
It remains to be explained, however, what sense can be made of such
intrinsicalness. Ontological Intrinsicalness: The Embodiment ofLaw Let me return
to Arnauld's attempt at assimilating Leibniz's notion of law with the Occasionalist
view.
8
A Companion to Philosophical Logic
The intrinsicalness of the postulated properties (along with the fact that they are
all instantiated) ensures that the theory is compatible with what is commonly
called a 'sparse' conception of properties. And because it postulates only these
very ...
9
Martin Heidegger: Between Good and Evil
In brief: Hans Jonas describes gnosis as a historically fixable religious movement
in search of an "intrinsicalness" understood in the Heideggerian sense. During
his time in Marburg Heidegger experienced the surprising opportunity — the ...
10
Handbook of Theories of Aging, Second Edition
The ensuing problems (Uffink, 2007) demonstrate the antagonistic nature of two
basic concepts: “openness” and “intrinsicalness.” As soon as a certain system or
organism is in any way open to its environment, its processes are no longer ...
Merril Silverstein PhD, Vern L. Bengtson PhD, Norella Putney PhD, 2008