Scholars' Bank will
be on a content freeze from 9/6 - 9/16 as we transition to a new & improved version. Minimal downtime expected
on 9/16. Stay tuned for more updates!
Browsing Konturen: Vol 2 (2009) by Title
Navigation
Display Options
Results
-
Misselhorn, Catrin
(University of Oregon, 2009)
The fact that we develop feelings towards androids, i.e., objects with a humanlike appearance, has fascinated people since ancient times. However, as a short survey of the topic in history, science fiction literature and ...
-
Frisk, Henrik; Weijland, Bart; Frisk, Henrik
(University of Oregon, 2009)
In this essay the first initiatives are presented to come to a new theoretical approach of musical improvisation. The main idea is to regard musical improvisation as a nonlinear dynamical system in which various (f)actors ...
-
Klebes, Martin
(University of Oregon, 2009)
The metaphysics of possible worlds proposed by the analytic philosopher David K. Lewis offers an account of fictional discourse according to which possible worlds described in fiction are just as real as the actual world. ...
-
Librett, Jeffrey S.
(University of Oregon, 2009)
-
Wheeler, Samuel C.
(University of Oregon, 2009)
This essay argues that what Livingston calls the “structuralist” project, combined with a naturalistic,
external approach to language, does not in fact lead to a paradoxical failure to match lived language.
Quine’s ...
-
Wheeler, Samuel C.
(University of Oregon, 2009)
At this point in the discussion, I am beginning to suspect that Livingston and I have different
conceptions of what Davidson’s “framework” is. I take it to be quite a bit more than the idea
that a theory of meaning is a ...
-
Livingston, Paul M.
(University of Oregon, 2009)
-
Kramer, Lawrence
(University of Oregon, 2009)
Ludwig Wittgenstein’s thinking about musical aesthetics (a small but persistent strain in his writings) focused primarily on questions of demonstration and proper performance: how should this waltz or march sound? These ...
-
Livingston, Paul M.
(University of Oregon, 2009)
-
Mann, Bonnie
(University of Oregon, 2009)
Feminists, including this one, have two problems with nature: a special problem which is a historical and political problem, and an ontological problem that we share with everyone else (our metabolism with the earth). My ...
Search Scholars' Bank
Browse
-
All of Scholars' Bank
-
This Collection
My Account
Statistics