00885nam0-22002531i-450 99000594692040332120230421134236.019980601d1900----km-y0itay50------baitaIT--------00-yy<<La >>verita' sulla amministrazione della giustizia penale in Italia e la riforma del codice di procedura penaleVittore Teixeira De MattosRomas.e.1900 (Tip. della Camera dei Deputati)126 p.22 cm345Teixeira de Mattos,Vittore226066ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK990005946920403321MASSARI H 2440689FGBCXIII O 4311634FGBCFGBCVerita' sulla amministrazione della giustizia penale in Italia e la riforma del codice di procedura penale583832UNINA01324nam2 22003011i 450 VAN003391420061205120000.020050311d1984 |0itac50 baengUS|||| |||||20: The Toledo museum of art, 2[a cura di] Cedric G. Boulter and Kurt T. LucknerToledoToledo museum of art198439 p.ill.33 cm[60] c. di tav.001VAN00339172001 Corpus vasorum. United States of America210 CambridgeHarvard university215 v.33 cm.20ToledoVANL000587BoulterCedric G.VANV028496LucknerKurt T.VANV028495Toledo museum of artToledo, OhioVANV028494216119Toledo museum of artVANV109642650Boulter, C. G.Boulter, Cedric G.VANV062945Boulter, C.G.Boulter, Cedric G.VANV062946ITSOL20230616RICABIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI LETTERE E BENI CULTURALIIT-CE0103VAN07VAN0033914BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI LETTERE E BENI CULTURALI07CONS Mb 470 USA 07 11619 20050311 Toledo museum of art, 21402536UNICAMPANIA04948oam 2200709I 450 991079106460332120230124184340.01-138-87116-81-315-83001-91-317-85159-51-317-85160-910.4324/9781315830018 (CKB)2550000001250934(EBL)1656273(SSID)ssj0001216120(PQKBManifestationID)11697433(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001216120(PQKBWorkID)11190836(PQKB)10492289(MiAaPQ)EBC1656273(Au-PeEL)EBL1656273(CaPaEBR)ebr10851412(CaONFJC)MIL585931(OCoLC)875096786(OCoLC)878144340(EXLCZ)99255000000125093420180331h20131970 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrHypothesis and perception the roots of scientific method /Errol E. HarrisLondon ;New York :Routledge,1970, 2013.1 online resource (400 p.)Muirhead Library of Philosophy ;Volumes 17Description based upon print version of record.0-415-29615-3 1-306-54680-X Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Original Title Page; Original Copyright Page; PREFACE; Table of Contents; PART ONE: CRITICAL; I. PREVALENT VIEWS OF SCIENCE; i. The popular view; ii. Philosophical views; II. INDUCTION; i. Disclaimer of necessity for justification; ii. Induction and probability; iii. The pragmatic justification of induction; iv. Instrumentalism; v. New puzzles for old; vi. The unreasonableness of induction; III. THE EMPIRICIST TREATMENT OF DEDUCTION AND NECESSITY; i. Conventionalism; ii. Deduction and explanation; iii. Counterfactual conditionals; iv. ConclusionIV. EMPIRICIST REFORMERSi. Dilution of empiricism; ii. Kneale on necessity, perception and consilience; iii. Popper on falsification; (a) Basic statements; (b) Hypothetico-deductive method; PART TWO: HISTORICAL; V. NON-EMPIRICAL ASPECTS OF SCIENTIFIC PROCEDURE; i. The Copernican revolution; (a) Copernicus; (b) Tycho Brahe; (c) Kepler; (d) Galileo; (e) Newton; ii. Dalton and chemical combination; iii. The conservation of mass and energy; iv. Relativity; VI. 'DEDUCTION FROM PHENOMENA'-CASE HISTORIES; i. Kepler's determination of the orbit of Marsii. Harvey's discovery of the circulation of the bloodiii. Newton's experiments; iv. Lavoisier and combustion; v. Darwin's defence of the evolution hypothesis; vi. The discovery of the positron; vii. Findings; VII. SCIENTIFIC ADVANCE; i. Conceptual systems; ii. Recognition of observed data; iii. Articulation and proliferation of schemata; iv. The origins of change; v. The transition process; vi. Innovation and conservatism; vii. System and development; PART THREE: EPISTEMOLOGICAL; VIII. PERCEPTION; i. The epistemological crux; ii. Common views of perception; iii. Sense-dataiv. Critique and merits of sense-data theoriesv. Achievement; vi. Discrepancy between 'data' and percept; vii. Schemata; viii. Context; ix. Innate and acquired schemata; x. Influence of past experience; xi. Interpretation; xii. Degrees of organization; xiii. Perception and science; IX. QUESTION AND ANSWER; i. Science and common sense; ii. Question and presupposition; iii. The origins of hypotheses; iv. Analogy and enumeration; v. Abduction; vi. Confirmation; vii. Note: What is meant by 'discovery'?; X. THE LOGIC OF CONSTRUCTION; i. The concept of structure; ii. Formalism, logic and psychologyiii. Systematic thinkingiv. Necessity and causality; v. Probability; vi. Induction and deduction; vii. Science as a system; XI. THE DIALECTIC OF PROGRESS; i. Comprehensiveness and consistency as marks of adequacy; ii. Objections and criticisms; iii. Science as a scale; iv. Dialectic; v. The unity of science; vi. Hierarchy; vii. Agreement of results; XII. SCIENCE AND TRUTH; i. Objectivity; ii. Science and reality; iii. Criticism and defence; iv. Knowledge and its object; v. Validity and progress; vi. Science and metaphysics; vii. Science and religion; INDEXFirst published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.Muirhead library of philosophy ;Volumes 17.ScienceMethodologyHypothesisPerceptionScienceMethodology.Hypothesis.Perception.501Harris Errol E.260121MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910791064603321Hypothesis and perception3856830UNINA