Mind, Volume 83Oxford University Press, 1974 Issues for 1896-1900 contain papers of the Aristotelian Society. |
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... effect . For such an explanation pre- supposes that there are causal conditions continuing right up to the moment of the effect . So must we then say that the interval just is the length it is ? To let this go as a brute fact might be ...
... effect . For such an explanation pre- supposes that there are causal conditions continuing right up to the moment of the effect . So must we then say that the interval just is the length it is ? To let this go as a brute fact might be ...
Página 380
... effect in so far as it continues during that effect , and since without continuity of cause and effect there is no causa- tion , it follows that only in so far as the earlier event continues during the effect is it cause of that effect ...
... effect in so far as it continues during that effect , and since without continuity of cause and effect there is no causa- tion , it follows that only in so far as the earlier event continues during the effect is it cause of that effect ...
Página 382
... effect and continues up to and during it . The question is , would this structure be adequately represented if , instead , we described the cause - event as extending from before the effect , up to it , and over- lapping with it ? Any ...
... effect and continues up to and during it . The question is , would this structure be adequately represented if , instead , we described the cause - event as extending from before the effect , up to it , and over- lapping with it ? Any ...
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A. J. Ayer accept action agent analysis argued argument Aristotle assertion Austin backwards causation Bar-Ilan University basic behaviour belief causal cause claim College compatibilist concept conclusion consider context criteria deontic logic Department of Philosophy Descartes discussion distinction Edited energeia entail epistemology example existence existential explain expression fact false forgiveness freedom hypothesis imagine implies intention interpretation involved justice kind knowledge language Leibniz linguistic logically possible London maxims meaning mind moral natural necessary notion object one's ontology Oxford P. F. Strawson pain particular performative person Philosophy Department physical plausible pleasure predicate principle priori problem Prof proposition puffins question rational reason reference relation relevant requires rules seems semantic sense sentence social someone sort statement subject term suggestion suppose synonymy theory thesis things thought tion true truth truth-functional University University of Sussex utterance visual Wittgenstein words