Elgin Four, It Is Real!

Elgin Four, It Is Real!

Author: Joyce Elgin

Publisher: iUniverse

Published: 2022-09-01

Total Pages: 586

ISBN-13: 1663244030

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The Elgin family and friends are a different group with questions about there being aliens among them. In Book One, Jimmy Elgin discovers a life he never understood, possibly being an alien? In Book Two, Jimmy brings his old spy friends from the shadows of their world to interact with his group of people. In Book Three, Jimmy needs to travel into the future to keep his one true love, Sylvia alive and to see what issues there are for them. They are an active family with friends having to deal with fighting, spying, and romance. They don’t work and play well together. Their halos are crooked, as they move through their adventures. Secrets are the name of the game as there are questions about being an ET!


True Enough

True Enough

Author: Catherine Z. Elgin

Publisher: MIT Press

Published: 2017-10-20

Total Pages: 351

ISBN-13: 0262341387

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The development of an epistemology that explains how science and art embody and convey understanding. Philosophy valorizes truth, holding that there can never be epistemically good reasons to accept a known falsehood, or to accept modes of justification that are not truth conducive. How can this stance account for the epistemic standing of science, which unabashedly relies on models, idealizations, and thought experiments that are known not to be true? In True Enough, Catherine Elgin argues that we should not assume that the inaccuracy of models and idealizations constitutes an inadequacy. To the contrary, their divergence from truth or representational accuracy fosters their epistemic functioning. When effective, models and idealizations are, Elgin contends, felicitous falsehoods that exemplify features of the phenomena they bear on. Because works of art deploy the same sorts of felicitous falsehoods, she argues, they also advance understanding. Elgin develops a holistic epistemology that focuses on the understanding of broad ranges of phenomena rather than knowledge of individual facts. Epistemic acceptability, she maintains, is a matter not of truth-conduciveness, but of what would be reflectively endorsed by the members of an idealized epistemic community—a quasi-Kantian realm of epistemic ends.


Exploring Language Change

Exploring Language Change

Author: Mari C. Jones

Publisher: Psychology Press

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 236

ISBN-13: 9780415317757

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

In this student-friendly text, Jones and Singh explore the phenomenon of language change, with a particular focus on the social contexts of its occurrence and possible motivations, including speakers' intentions and attitudes. Presenting new or little-known data, the authors draw a distinction between "unconscious" and "deliberate" change. The discussion on "unconscious" change considers phenomena such as the emergence and obsolescence of individual languages, whilst the sections on "deliberate" change focus on issues of language planning, including the strategies of language revival and revitalization movements. There is also a detailed exploration of what is arguably the most extreme instance of "deliberate" change; language invention for real-world use. Examining an extensive range of language situations, Exploring Language Change makes a clear, but often ignored distinction between concepts such as language policy and planning, and language revival and revitalization. Also featured are a number of case studies which demonstrate that real-life language use is often much more complex than theoretical abstractions might suggest. This is a key text for students on a variety of courses, including sociolinguistics, historical linguistics and language policy and planning.


Catalog

Catalog

Author: Sears, Roebuck and Company

Publisher:

Published: 1923

Total Pages: 1134

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK