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¡Ö°å³ØÉôÅù¶µ°é¡¦Æ¯¤­Êý²þ³×»Ù±ç»ö¶È¡ÊÎáÏÂ4ǯÅÙÊäÀµ¡Ë¡×¤ÎÁªÄê·ë²Ì  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2023-2-17 14:24) 

¼Á¤Î¹â¤¤¶µ»Õ¤Î³ÎÊݤΤ¿¤á¤Î¶µ¿¦¤ÎÌ¥Îϸþ¾å¤Ë¸þ¤±¤¿´Ä¶­¤Îºß¤êÊýÅù¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ëÄ´ºº¸¦µæ²ñ¡ÊÂè3²ó¡Ë¤Î³«ºÅ¤Ë¤Ä¤  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2023-2-17 14:00) 

»äΩ³Ø¹»Ë¡¤Î°ìÉô¤ò²þÀµ¤¹¤ëˡΧ°Æ  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2023-2-17 13:33) 

¬ÃϳØÊ¬²Ê²ñ¡ÊÂè47²ó¡Ë ¡¦ ÃϿ̲л³´Ñ¬¸¦µæ·×²èÉô²ñ¡ÊÂè51²ó¡Ë¹çƱ²ñµÄ ÇÛÉÕ»ñÎÁ  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2023-2-17 10:48) 

Creativity  from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy  (2023-2-17 9:34) 
[New Entry by Elliot Samuel Paul and Dustin Stokes on February 16, 2023.] Few things shape the human experience as profoundly or as pervasively as creativity does. And creativity raises a wealth of philosophical issues. Since art is such a salient domain of creativity, you might assume, at first, that the philosophy of creativity is the philosophy of art or aesthetics, or a branch thereof. But creativity invites questions of its own that go beyond the purview of those other fields....
Aesthetic Judgment  from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy  (2023-2-17 6:13) 
[Revised entry by Nick Zangwill on February 16, 2023. Changes to: Main text, Bibliography] Beauty is an important part of our lives. Ugliness too. It is no surprise then that philosophers since antiquity have been interested in our experiences of and judgments about beauty and ugliness. They have tried to understand the nature of these experiences and judgments, and they have also wanted to know whether these experiences and judgments were legitimate. Both these projects took a sharpened form in the twentieth century, when this part of our lives came under a sustained attack in both European and North American intellectual...
Double Consciousness  from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy  (2023-2-17 5:30) 
[Revised entry by John P. Pittman on February 16, 2023. Changes to: Main text, Bibliography] Double-consciousness is a concept in social philosophy referring, originally, to a source of inward "twoness" putatively experienced by African-Americans because of their racialized oppression and disvaluation in a white-dominated society. The concept is associated with William Edward Burghardt Du Bois, who introduced the term into social thought in his groundbreaking The Souls of Black Folk (1903). Its source has been traced back from there, by recent commentators, to the development of clinical...
Âç³Ø±¡Éô²ñ¡ÊÂè109²ó¡Ë¡¡ÇÛÉÕ»ñÎÁ  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2023-2-17 0:00) 

Propositional Dynamic Logic  from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy  (2023-2-16 20:44) 
[Revised entry by Nicolas Troquard and Philippe Balbiani on February 16, 2023. Changes to: Main text, Bibliography] Logics of programs are modal logics arising from the idea of associating a modality ([alpha]) with each computer program (alpha) of a programming language. The formula ([alpha]A) is then to be read as: (A) is true after the execution of the program (alpha). This idea comes from the line of works by Engeler [1967], Hoare [1969], Yanov [1959], and others who formulated and studied logical languages in which the properties of program connectives can be expressed. The algorithmic logic (AL) first developed by Salwicki...
ÎáÏ£µÇ¯ÅÙ¡¡Î¤¿ÆÍܰéÊñ³ç»Ù±ç¡Ê¥Õ¥©¥¹¥¿¥ê¥ó¥°¡Ëµ¡´Ø¿Íºà°éÀ®»ö¶È¤Ë·¸¤ë¸øÊç¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ  from ¸üÀ¸Ï«Æ¯¾Ê¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2023-2-16 20:03) 




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