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1318. Reflexion and InnatenessIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 291-320. 1999.
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69. Pure and Empirical ThoughtIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 96-106. 1999.
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Marcelo Dascal, Leibniz: Language, Signs and Thought (review)Philosophy in Review 8 (7): 258-260. 1988.
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419. The Model of the MindIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 321-335. 1999.
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417. The Inferential Import of the ErgoIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 279-290. 1999.
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21Part one: Thought and consciousnessIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 55-55. 1999.
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18PrefaceIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. 1999.
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77Review of: Leibniz et la méthode de la science, by Francois Duchesneau (review)The Leibniz Review 3 2-7. 1993.This is a very impressive piece of philosophical scholarship, in the best tradition of French-language studies in the history of philosophy and science in the seventeeth and eighteenth centuries. Its theme is Leibniz’s philosophy of science, which, François Duchesneau contends, is at bottom a doctrine of method in the seventeenth-century manner of Descartes. Leibniz’s philosophy of science, however, is as antithetical to the principles of Cartesian science as to those of the “experimental philos…Read more
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31. The "Twin Pillars" of CartesianismIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 3-10. 1999.
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107. Thought, Consciousness, and 'the Cogito'In Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 68-85. 1999.
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221. Realism, Subjectivism, and TranscendenceIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 361-377. 1999.
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12Part five: Sartre and the road to freedomIn Inroads: Paths in Ancient and Modern Western Philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 557-630. 2003.
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68Leibniz on Apperception and Animal SoulsDialogue 33 (4): 701-. 1994.InLeibniz: Perception, Apperception, and Thought, Robert McRae alleges a flat “contradiction” at the heart of Leibniz's doctrine of three grades of monads: bare entelechies characterized by perception; animal souls capable both of perception and of sensation; and rational souls, minds or spirits endowed not only with capacities for perception and sensation but also with consciousness of self or what Leibniz calls “apperception.” Apperception is a necessary condition of those distinctively human …Read more
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34. The New Order of KnowingIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 39-44. 1999.
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1916. Idea and ObjectIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 263-278. 1999.
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7FrontmatterIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. 1999.
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1014. Certainty and CircularityIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 205-228. 1999.
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9ContentsIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. 1999.
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16Index of namesIn Inroads: Paths in Ancient and Modern Western Philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 663-666. 2003.
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9IntroductionIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 1-2. 1999.
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10Descartes's MethodIn John Carriero & Janet Broughton (eds.), Blackwell Companion to Descartes, Blackwell. 2007.This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction; The Intuitive, the Discursive, and the Ratiocinative; The Order of Intuition; Analytic and Synthetic Method; Method and the Mathematical Ideal; Universal Mathematics, Metaphysics, and Physics; Conclusion; Acknowledgments; Notes References and Further Reading.
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12ContentsIn Inroads: Paths in Ancient and Modern Western Philosophy, University of Toronto Press. 2003.
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19Russian Translation of: Kant’s ‘Copernican Revolution’: Toward Rehabilitation of a Concept and Provision of a Framework for the Interpretation of the Critique of Pure Reason (Translated by M.D. Lakhuti)Studies in Transcendental Philosophy 3 (1-2). 2022.Against those commentators who consider Kant’s explicit reference to Copernicus’s heliocentric reversal either grossly misleading or simply irrelevant to the revolution in philosophy carried out in the Critique of Pure Reason, it is argued in this paper that Kant’s transcendental idealist inversion of the familiar standpoint of realism and sound common sense fully justifies the talk of a ‘Copernican revolution,’ even if Kant himself never used the expression. It is not just the dominant ‘moving …Read more
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32Fundamental Ontology and Existential Analysis in Heidegger’s Being and TimeInternational Philosophical Quarterly 34 (3): 349-359. 1994.
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620. Experience and InductionIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 336-360. 1999.
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65Connaissance de Dieu et conscience de soi chez DescartesDialogue 49 (1): 1-24. 2010.ABSTRACT: The analytic method by which Descartes established the first principle of his philosophy is a unique cognitive process of direct insight and non-logical inference that differs markedly from the deductive model of noetic apprehension long associated with seventeenth-century rationalism. In this paper, it is shown that the same analytic process is at work in the Third Meditation proof of the innateness of the idea of God, where, however, there are serious doubts about its legitimacy
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14IndexIn Murray Lewis Miles (ed.), Insight and inference: Descartes's founding principle and modern philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 547-564. 1999.
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4FrontmatterIn Inroads: Paths in Ancient and Modern Western Philosophy, University of Toronto Press. 2003.