Necessary But Not Sufficient

Necessary But Not Sufficient

Author: Eliyahu M. Goldratt

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-08-02

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781138418776

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In the 1990s we witnessed the growth of computer software providers from small businesses into multi-billion dollar giants. In 1998 it was easy for such companies to raise money. But investment funds have dried up. Why? And more importantly, is there a way to reverse the trend?


The Gertrude Stein Reader

The Gertrude Stein Reader

Author: Gertrude Stein

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 533

ISBN-13: 0815412460

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This anthology collects 51 of Stein's most experimental poems, stories, portraits, and plays.


Rules, Reason, and Self-Knowledge

Rules, Reason, and Self-Knowledge

Author: Julia Tanney

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Published: 2013-01-08

Total Pages: 425

ISBN-13: 0674071727

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Julia Tanney offers a sustained criticism of today’s canon in philosophy of mind, which conceives the workings of the rational mind as the outcome of causal interactions between mental states that have their bases in the brain. With its roots in physicalism and functionalism, this widely accepted view provides the philosophical foundation for the cardinal tenet of the cognitive sciences: that cognition is a form of information-processing. Rules, Reason, and Self-Knowledge presents a challenge not only to the cognitivist approach that has dominated philosophy and the special sciences for the last fifty years but, more broadly, to metaphysical-empirical approaches to the study of the mind. Responding to a tradition that owes much to the writings of Davidson, early Putnam, and Fodor, Tanney challenges this orthodoxy on its own terms. In untangling its internal inadequacies, starting with the paradoxes of irrationality, she arrives at a view these philosophers were keen to rebut—one with affinities to the work of Ryle and Wittgenstein and all but invisible to those working on the cutting edge of analytic philosophy and mind research today. This is the view that rational explanations are embedded in “thick” descriptions that are themselves sophistications upon ever ascending levels of discourse, or socio-linguistic practices. Tanney argues that conceptual cartography rather than metaphysical-scientific explanation is the basic tool for understanding the nature of the mind. Rules, Reason, and Self-Knowledge clears the path for a return to the world-involving, circumstance-dependent, normative practices where the rational mind has its home.


Is the Planet Full?

Is the Planet Full?

Author: Ian Goldin

Publisher: OUP Oxford

Published: 2014-05-15

Total Pages: 275

ISBN-13: 0191017450

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What are the impacts of population growth? Can our planet support the demands of the ten billion people anticipated to be the world's population by the middle of this century? While it is common to hear about the problems of overpopulation, might there be unexplored benefits of increasing numbers of people in the world? How can we both consider and harness the potential benefits brought by a healthier, wealthier and larger population? May more people mean more scientists to discover how our world works, more inventors and thinkers to help solve the world's problems, more skilled people to put these ideas into practice? In this book, leading academics with a wide range of expertise in demography, philosophy, biology, climate science, economics and environmental sustainability explore the contexts, costs and benefits of a burgeoning population on our economic, social and environmental systems.