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Cogito:
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An Interview with Richard Sorabji
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2.
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Cogito:
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William Grey
Hume, Miracles, and the Paranorrnal
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Cogito:
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Howard Sankey
Five Varieties of Cognitive Relativisrn
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Cogito:
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Jamie T. Whyte
Relativisrn is Absolutely False
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Cogito:
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Alec Fisher
Exercises in non-formal logic:
specimen analysis of exercise 1 (Ayer), plus exercise 2 (Dawkins)
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Cogito:
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Anne Thomson
Page Three - to ban or not to ban?
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7.
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Cogito:
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Piers Benn
Pornography, Degradation and Rhetoric
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Cogito:
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Paul Davis
Drearning On:
Malcolm and the coherence principle
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Cogito:
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Christopher Ormell
A Modern Cogito 3:
unpredictability and the other
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In the first paper of this series (Cogito, 1992) the author outlined ‘the showdown phenomenon’: a live sequence of events of two distinct kinds, ‘red’ and ‘green’, which was experienced by the would-be predictor as absolutely and irreducibly unpredictable, because the predictor invariably got his or her predictions wrong. (In a second paper (Cogito, 1993) he argued that the showdown phenomenon is an epistemological landmark, because it establishes a clearly conceptualized, tangible, localized ‘limit of knowledge’.) At the end of the original paper the author remarked that if we actually experienced suchabsolute, relentless unpredictability, we would infer the existence of another ‘out there’ doing this to us ... In the current paper he returns to this ontological aspect of the new Cogito and fills out some of the thinking which lies behind it.
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Cogito:
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Beverley Duckworth
Is Aid to Third World Countries a Matter of Justice?
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Cogito:
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Thomas Bittner
Probability and Infinite Sets
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Cogito:
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Mary Haight
Gunddh 2
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Cogito:
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Andrew Harrison
Music and the Emotions:
the Philosophical Theories
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Cogito:
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Adam Morton
Consciousness Explained
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Cogito:
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Christopher Bertram
A Hegel Dictionary
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Cogito:
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Editor’s Booknotes
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Cogito:
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Philosophy News
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18.
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Cogito:
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Letter to the Editor
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19.
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Cogito:
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Issue: 2
Puzzles and Posers
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20.
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Cogito:
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Issue: 2
Crossword
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