Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments

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 Forms of Thinking - Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments
 
Forms of thinking: Here we are concerned with typical patterns according to which problems are explained, such as the image of communicating tubes, which is supposed to explain why we are not equally qualified in all fields, or the introduction of different levels of description in order to justify why certain phenomena are independent of each other. It is always the question whether these patterns are suitable for an explanation in a particular case. See also theories, explanations.
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Annotation: The above characterizations of concepts are neither definitions nor exhausting presentations of problems related to them. Instead, they are intended to give a short introduction to the contributions below. – Lexicon of Arguments.
 
Author Item    More concepts for author
Barth, Karl Forms of Thinking   Barth, Karl
Brandom, Robert Forms of Thinking   Brandom, Robert
Danto, Arthur C. Forms of Thinking   Danto, Arthur C.
Davidson, Donald Forms of Thinking   Davidson, Donald
Dennett, Daniel Forms of Thinking   Dennett, Daniel
Deutsch, David Forms of Thinking   Deutsch, David
Goodman, Nelson Forms of Thinking   Goodman, Nelson
Leibniz, G.W. Forms of Thinking   Leibniz, G.W.
Logic Texts Forms of Thinking   Logic Texts
Nagel, Thomas Forms of Thinking   Nagel, Thomas
Rawls, John Forms of Thinking   Rawls, John
Rorty, Richard Forms of Thinking   Rorty, Richard
Sellars, Wilfrid Forms of Thinking   Sellars, Wilfrid
Wittgenstein, Ludwig Forms of Thinking   Wittgenstein, Ludwig

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