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Philosophical Foundations of Science
Bergson, Reichenbach and Piaget
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Author(s):
Milič Čapek
Publication date
(Print):
1971
Publisher:
Springer Netherlands
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March
pp. 288–293. Cf. also A Atom and Cosmos
(1960)
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Atomic Physics
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Publication date (Print):
1971
Pages
: 65-71
DOI:
10.1007/978-94-010-3096-0_8
SO-VID:
5ddce7cb-fdc6-4b3e-ba83-d005512525a5
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Book chapters
pp. 1
The Logical Theory of Scientific Knowledge
pp. 3
An Aspect of Leonardo’s Painting
pp. 3
The Classical Biological Theory of Knowledge
pp. 15
The Intermediate Stage: Helmholtz, Mach and Poincaré
pp. 17
Leonardo Da Vinci and the Sublimatory Process
pp. 8
Signs
pp. 21
Terms
pp. 30
Bergson’s Amendment of the Classical Biological Theory of Knowledge
pp. 41
On the Physical Insights of Leonardo Da Vinci
pp. 32
Sentences
pp. 40
Why Mechanical-Pictorial Models Failed
pp. 55
Leonardo as Military Engineer
pp. 46
The Contrast Between Technical Control and Intellectual Insight: The Persistent Influence of Macroscopic Imagery
pp. 52
Sentential Logic
pp. 97
Leonardo Da Vinci and the Beginnings of Factories with a Central Source of Power
pp. 119
Physics and the Explanation of Life
pp. 51
Limitations of Panmathematism
pp. 64
The General Theory of Logical Entailment
pp. 133
New Concepts in the Evolution of Complexity
pp. 58
Negative Aspects of Bergson’s Epistemology — Its Relations to Bachelard, Bridgman and Empirio-Criticism
pp. 75
Formalization of the General Theory of Logical Entailment
pp. 155
Boltzmann, Monocycles and Mechanical Explanation
pp. 65
Bergson, Reichenbach and Piaget
pp. 90
Subject-Predicate Structures
pp. 109
Empirical and Abstract Objects
pp. 179
Introduction to the Symposium on Cosmology
pp. 72
The Logic of Solid Bodies from Plato to Quine
pp. 123
Sentences with Quantifiers
pp. 181
Cosmology as a Science
pp. 83
The Meaning of Immediacy
pp. 146
Theory of Quantifiers
pp. 189
Open or Closed?
pp. 89
Content of the Bergsonian Intuition
pp. 157
Conditional Sentences
pp. 203
Cosmic Evolution
pp. 92
The Dynamic Continuity of Duration
pp. 162
Theory of Terms
pp. 215
Highly Condensed Objects
pp. 99
The Incompleteness of Duration: Novelty and Its Denials
pp. 106
Superfluity of Succession in the Deterministic Schemes
pp. 166
Classes
pp. 227
The Case for a Hierarchical Cosmology
pp. 113
The Leibniz-Fouillé Argument for the Compatibility of Succession and Determinism
pp. 185
Existential Logic
pp. 257
From Mendeléev’s Atom to the Collapsing Star
pp. 118
The Heterogeneity of Duration: Lovejoy-Ushenko’s Objections
pp. 187
Modal Sentences
pp. 305
Objectivity in the Social Sciences
pp. 126
The Deeper Meaning of the ‘Indivisible Heterogeneity’ Of Duration
pp. 210
Relations
pp. 317
On the Objectivity of Anthropology
pp. 133
The Unreality of Durationless Instants: Becoming not Mathematically Continuous
pp. 226
Physical Entailment
pp. 325
Acquired Models and the Modification of Anthropological Evidence
pp. 142
The Inadequacy of the Atomistic Theory of Time
pp. 239
Theories
pp. 337
The Present Status of Anthropology as an Explanatory Science
pp. 147
The Unity and Multiplicity of Duration: Bergson, Russell and Brouwer
pp. 247
Logic and Ontology
pp. 349
‘Subjective’ and ‘Objective’ in Social Anthropological Epistemology
pp. 152
Immortality of the Past: Bergson and Whitehead
pp. 257
The Universality of Logic
pp. 365
Scientific Concepts and Social Structure in Ancient Greece
pp. 155
James’s and Bergson’s Views of the Past Compared
pp. 263
Conclusion
pp. 383
Algébre et Linguistique: L’analyse Combinatoire Dans La Science Arabe
pp. 164
The Irreversibility of Duration: The Comments of Royce and Ingarden
pp. 401
Scientific Strategies and Historical Change
pp. 170
Duration as Concrete Universal. Bergson and Croce
pp. 415
Logicality and Rationality: A Comment on Toulmin’s Theory of Science
pp. 176
An Outline of Bergson’s Philosophy of Mathematics
pp. 431
On Pursuing the Unattainable
pp. 189
The Reality of Duration in the Physical World and its Implications
pp. 195
Different Degrees of Temporal Span. Microcosmos as Microchronos
pp. 497
The Unity of Science and Theory Construction in Molecular Biology
pp. 202
Two Fundamental Questions
pp. 535
The Evolution of the Problem of the Unity of Science
pp. 208
The Rejection of the Cartesian Dogma of the Completely Extensionless Mind
pp. 214
The Correlation of Different Temporal Rhythms with Different Degrees of Extension
pp. 223
Juxtaposition as the Ideal Limit of Distended Duration
pp. 226
The Negation of Instantaneous Space in the Relativistic Physics
pp. 238
Bergson and Einstein. The Physical World as Extensive Becoming
pp. 257
Limitations and Usefulness of the Corpuscular Models
pp. 270
Change without Vehicle and Container. Fallacy of Simple Location
pp. 278
Limits of the Criticism of Simple Location: Contemporary Independence
pp. 284
The Indeterminacy of Microphysical Events Bergson and Boutroux
pp. 292
Bergson and Louis De Broglie
pp. 302
Physical Events as Proto-Mental Entities. Bergson, Whitehead and Bohm
pp. 313
The Significance and the Limitations of Auditory Models. Bergson and Strawson
pp. 331
Concluding Remarks: The World of Laplace and the World of Bergson
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