Results for 'materials science'

986 found
Order:
  1. The Material Theory of Values in Science.Kelli Barr - 2025 - In Isabel G. Gamero, Amadeusz Just & Jasmin Trächtler, Feminist Philosophy — Language, Knowledge, And Politics. Contributions of the Ludwig Wittgenstein Society. Band / Vol. XXXI. Kirchberg-am-Wechsel: pp. 34-44.
    How are we to understand situations where science fails on its own terms? Scientists have blamed perverse incentives for systematic epistemic failures like non-replicability and publication bias, but the exact relationship remains an open question. Let’s assume they are right to blame the (social) system. This paper presents a novel framework for understanding how features of the social organization of science are implicated in collective epistemic failures: the material theory of values in science (MTV). This project is (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  2. Earth and Life Science – Bioenergetics Module (Grade 11): Learner’s Material.Raphael Kevin Nagal - 2022 - Amazon.
    This instructional module provides a comprehensive and activity-based learning resource designed for Grade 11 students studying Earth and Life Science. It focuses on three major topics: (1) The Cell and its structures, (2) Photosynthetic Reactions, and (3) Acquisition and Utilization of Energy. Lessons are grounded in experiential learning theory, emphasizing inquiry-based learning and laboratory activities. The material incorporates conceptual explanations, guided experiments, diagrams, formative and summative assessments, and rubrics to support knowledge acquisition, critical thinking, and applied understanding. The integration (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  3. Elasticsearch-driven decision support systems for optimizing material selection in the rocket science.Oleh Murashko, Yurii Tkachov & Olena Hurko - 2025 - In Iryna Popova, Modern Scientific and Technical Research in the Context of Linguistic Space. Dnipro: Publisher Bila K. O.. pp. 297-300.
    The study is dedicated to analyzing the key role of decision support systems (DSS) in modern science and industry, emphasizing their ability to automate complex processes, reduce the risks of erroneous decisions, and efficiently handle large volumes of data. The work explores the advantages of document-oriented databases (DODBs) over traditional relational databases for managing diverse datasets in materials science and aerospace engineering. The application of Elasticsearch (ES), a distributed search and analytics engine, is investigated for optimizing material (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  4. Eliminative materialism and the distinction between common sense and science.Nada Gligorov - 2007 - Dissertation,
    It is one of the premises of eliminative materialism that commonsense psychology constitutes a theory. There is agreement that mental states can be construed as posited entities for the explanation and prediction of behavior. Disputes arise when it comes to the range of the commonsense theory of mental states. In chapter one, I review major arguments concerning the span and nature of folk psychology. In chapter two, relying on arguments by Quine and Sellars, I argue that the precise scope of (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  5. Other matters: Karen barad’s two materialisms and the science of undecidability.Jonathan Basile - 2020 - Angelaki 25 (5):3-18.
    Karen Barad’s Meeting the Universe Halfway relies on mutually incompatible grounding gestures, one of which describes the relationality of an always already material-discursive reality, while the other seeks to ground this relation one-sidedly in matter. These two materialisms derive from the gesture she borrows from the New Materialist (and other related) fields, which posits her work as an advance over the history of “representationalism” and “social constructivism.” In turn, this one-sided materialism produces a skewed reading of the quantum mechanical phenomena (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  6. The material theory of induction and the epistemology of thought experiments.Michael T. Stuart - 2020 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 83 (C):17-27.
    John D. Norton is responsible for a number of influential views in contemporary philosophy of science. This paper will discuss two of them. The material theory of induction claims that inductive arguments are ultimately justified by their material features, not their formal features. Thus, while a deductive argument can be valid irrespective of the content of the propositions that make up the argument, an inductive argument about, say, apples, will be justified (or not) depending on facts about apples. The (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   7 citations  
  7. The Unexamined Assumption: How Bell's Theorem Reveals Science's Universal Reliance on Unproven Material Reality.Brandon Sergent - manuscript
    Bell's theorem is widely regarded as one of the most profound results in modern physics, seemingly proving that nature must be either non-local or non-real. This paper argues that Bell's theorem serves as a particularly clear example of science's universal reliance on an unexamined assumption: that mind-independent material reality exists. Bell, like virtually all physicists, simply took this assumption for granted rather than questioning it. Under Experiential Empiricism, which treats experiential regularities as sufficient without assuming external material reality, Bell (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  8. The Architecture of Relational Materialism: A Categorial Formation of Onto-Epistemological Premises.Ozan Ekin Derin & Bekir Baytaş - forthcoming - Foundations of Science 30:1-51.
    This study formulates the basic premises of materialism, which has largely lost its visibility despite being one of the fundamental philosophical approaches that have been effective in the development of modern scientific practice and the construction of philosophy of science, in an alternative way, and aims to develop a new materialist interpretation of it that is non-reductive, pluralistic and open to the use of more than one scientific discipline. This interpretation, expressed with the term relational materialism, first addresses matter (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  9. Materialism as an Undeclared Religion: The Unmet Burden of Proof.Brandon Sergent - manuscript
    Materialism claims to be the scientific worldview. Yet it rests on an unprovable assumption: that a mind-independent material reality exists and causes our experiences. Every piece of evidence for this claim comes through experience itself, making the justification circular. Materialism therefore carries an impossible burden of proof that it can never meet by its own standards. This makes materialism not science but an undeclared religion. In contrast, Experiential Empiricism (EE) removes the metaphysical assumption and grounds knowledge directly in experiential (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   9 citations  
  10. Materialized Oppression in Medical Tools and Technologies.Shen-yi Liao & Vanessa Carbonell - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (4):9-23.
    It is well-known that racism is encoded into the social practices and institutions of medicine. Less well-known is that racism is encoded into the material artifacts of medicine. We argue that many medical devices are not merely biased, but materialize oppression. An oppressive device exhibits a harmful bias that reflects and perpetuates unjust power relations. Using pulse oximeters and spirometers as case studies, we show how medical devices can materialize oppression along various axes of social difference, including race, gender, class, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   26 citations  
  11. Materialism.Alan Tapper - 2006 - In Anthony Grayling, Andrew Pyle & Naomi Goulder, The Continuum Encyclopaedia of British Philosophy, Volume 3. Thoemmes Continuum. pp. 2105-2106.
    Full-bodied materialism is a rarity in British philosophy. In fact, notable British materialists before recent times seem to number only two: Thomas Hobbes in the seventeenth century, and Joseph Priestley in the eighteenth. Their materialisms were attempts to construct a scientific ontology, but there the similarity ends, since they had very different ideas of the nature of science. Hobbes took science to be the study of motion, using Galilean geometric method; Priestley worked with a Newtonian methodology and conceived (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  12. Development of a Manufacturing Ontology for Functionally Graded Materials.Francesco Furini, Rahul Rai, Barry Smith, Georgio Colombo & Venkat Krovi - 2016 - In Francesco Furini, Rahul Rai, Barry Smith, Georgio Colombo & Venkat Krovi, Proceedings of International Design Engineering Technical Conferences & Computers and Information in Engineering Conference (IDETC/CIE).
    The development of manufacturing technologies for new materials involves the generation of a large and continually evolving volume of information. The analysis, integration and management of such large volumes of data, typically stored in multiple independently developed databases, creates significant challenges for practitioners. There is a critical need especially for open-sharing of data pertaining to engineering design which together with effective decision support tools can enable innovation. We believe that ontology applied to engineering (OE) represents a viable strategy for (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   8 citations  
  13. Enriching the Functionally Graded Materials (FGM) Ontology for digital manufacturing.Munira Mohd Ali, Ruoyu Yang, Binbin Zhang, Francesco Furini, Rahul Rai, J. Neil Otte & Barry Smith - 2021 - International Journal of Production Research 59 (18):5540-5557.
    Functionally graded materials (FGMs) have been used in many different kinds of applications in recent years and have attracted significant research attention. However, we do not yet have a commonly accepted way of representing the various aspects of FGMs. Lack of standardised vocabulary creates obstacles to the extraction of useful information relating to pertinent aspects of different applications. A standard resource is needed for describing various elements of FGMs, including existing applications, manufacturing techniques, and material characteristics. This motivated the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  14. Reviving material theories of induction.John P. McCaskey - 2020 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 83 (C):1–7.
    John Norton says that philosophers have been led astray for thousands of years by their attempt to treat induction formally. He is correct that such an attempt has caused no end of trouble, but he is wrong about the history. There is a rich tradition of non-formal induction. In fact, material theories of induction prevailed all through antiquity and from the Renaissance to the mid-1800s. Recovering these past systems would not only fill lacunae in Norton’s own theory but would highlight (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   9 citations  
  15. Material Evidence.Alison Wylie & Robert Chapman (eds.) - 2014 - New York / London: Routledge.
    How do archaeologists make effective use of physical traces and material culture as repositories of evidence? Material Evidence is a collection of 19 essays that take a resolutely case-based approach to this question, exploring key instances of exemplary practice, instructive failures, and innovative developments in the use of archaeological data as evidence. The goal is to bring to the surface the wisdom of practice, teasing out norms of archaeological reasoning from evidence. -/- Archaeologists make compelling use of an enormously diverse (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  16. Correction: Material hermeneutics as cultural learning: from relations to processes of relations.Cathrine Hasse - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2385-2385.
    What is the relation between material hermeneutics, bodies, perception and materials? In this article, I shall argue cultural learning processes tie them together. Three aspects of learning can be identified in cultural learning processes. First, all learning is tied to cultural practices. Second, all learning in cultural practice entangle humans’ ability to recognize a material world conceptually, and finally the boundaries of objects, the object we perceive, are set by shifting material-conceptual entanglements. All these aspects are important for material (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  17. Challenges and Issues of Modern Science.Yurii Tkachov (ed.) - 2023 - Dnipro: Oles Honchar Dnipro National University.
    The “Challenges and Issues of Modern Science” collection comprises scientific research on relevant topics related to the latest advancements in various fields of science. Emphasis is placed on developing aerospace technology, thermodynamics and energy, mechanical engineering, materials science and technologies, automation, electronics and telecommunications, information technology, project management, ecology, and industrial and environmental safety. It can be helpful for professionals in the respective fields, scientists, educators, and students. The presented material will help readers expand their knowledge (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  18. The perception of material qualities and the internal semantics of the perceptual system.Rainer Mausfeld - 2010 - In Albertazzi Liliana, Tonder Gervant & Vishwanath Dhanraj, Perception beyond Inference. The Information Content of Visual Processes. MIT Press.
    The chapter outlines an abstract theoretical framework that is currently (re-)emerging in the course of a theoretical convergence of several disciplines. In the first section, the fundamental problem of perception theory is formulated, namely, the generation, by the perceptual system, of meaningful categories from physicogeometric energy patterns. In the second section, it deals with basic intuitions and assumptions underlying what can be regarded as the current Standard Model of Perceptual Psychology and points out why this model is profoundly inadequate for (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   16 citations  
  19. Spongy Brains and Material Memories.John Sutton - 2007 - In Mary Floyd-Wilson & Garrett Sullivan, Embodiment and Environment in Early Modern England. Palgrave.
    Embodied human minds operate in and spread across a vast and uneven world of things—artifacts, technologies, and institutions which they have collectively constructed and maintained through cultural and individual history. This chapter seeks to add a historical dimension to the enthusiastically future-oriented study of “natural-born cyborgs” in the philosophy of cognitive science,3 and a cognitive dimension to recent work on material memories and symbol systems in early modern England, bringing humoral psychophysiology together with material culture studies. The aim is (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   29 citations  
  20. (1 other version)From Locke to Materialism: Empiricism, the Brain and the Stirrings of Ontology.Charles T. Wolfe - 2018 - In A. L. Rey S. Bodenmann, 18th-Century Empiricism and the Sciences. pp. 235-263.
    My topic is the materialist appropriation of empiricism – as conveyed in the ‘minimal credo’ nihil est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu (which interestingly is not just a phrase repeated from Hobbes and Locke to Diderot, but is also a medical phrase, used by Harvey, Mandeville and others). That is, canonical empiricists like Locke go out of their way to state that their project to investigate and articulate the ‘logic of ideas’ is not a scientific project: “I shall (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  21. Classifying and characterizing active materials.Julia R. S. Bursten - 2020 - Synthese 199 (1):2007-2026.
    This article examines the distinction between active matter and active materials, and it offers foundational remarks toward a system of classification for active materials. Active matter is typically identified as matter that exhibits two characteristic features: self-propelling parts, and coherent dynamical activity among the parts. These features are exhibited across a wide range of organic and inorganic materials, and they are jointly sufficient for classifying matter as active. Recently, the term “active materials” has entered scientific use (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  22. CODES-Driven Thermoelectric Materials_ Structured Resonance Architecture for Conscious Energy Infrastructure.Devin Bostick - manuscript
    Description: This paper introduces a novel framework for embedding deterministic coherence logic—derived from the CODES architecture—into thermoelectric concrete systems. By replacing stochastic material optimization with structured resonance inference (via PAS, chirality fields, and ELF logic), the work outlines how infrastructure can become energy-generating, self-monitoring, and bioresponsive. It proposes a full integration stack: from Prime Harmonic Mapping and PAS-material matrices to echo-corrective thermal layers and symbolic coherence detection. This bridges physics, materials science, and consciousness design—laying groundwork for intelligent, self-repairing, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  23. Harmonizing Science and Religion Through Investigating Deeper Reality.Ted Hwang - manuscript
    This draft investigates the harmonization of science and religion by exploring the deeper nature of reality, proposing an unconventional, non-materialistic worldview. Synthesizing diverse evidence, it outlines a deeper understanding of reality and consciousness, aiming to reorient science from materialism and foster a new stage of human civilization. The investigation finds consciousness has a non-physical origin, supported by parapsychological phenomena like past-life memories. Quantum physics, via the double-slit experiment and entanglement, reveals matter and space are not fundamentally substantial but (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  24. (1 other version)Vital materialism and the problem of ethics in the Radical Enlightenment.Charles T. Wolfe - 2013 - Philosophica 88 (1):31-70.
    From Hegel to Engels, Sartre and Ruyer (Ruyer, 1933), to name only a few, materialism is viewed as a necropolis, or the metaphysics befitting such an abode; many speak of matter’s crudeness, bruteness, coldness or stupidity. Science or scientism, on this view, reduces the living world to ‘dead matter’, ‘brutish’, ‘mechanical, lifeless matter’, thereby also stripping it of its freedom (Crocker, 1959). Materialism is often wrongly presented as ‘mechanistic materialism’ – with ‘Death of Nature’ echoes of de-humanization and hostility (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  25. Material conditions and human freedom.Enzo Rossi, Annelien de Dijn, Grant McCall, David Wengrow & Karl Widerquist - 2024 - Contemporary Political Theory 23 (1).
    This debate or “Critical Exchange” section from Contemporary Political Theory includes the following four articles discussing the book, the Dawn of Everything by David Graeber and David Wengrow: “We make our own history, but in circumstances of other people’s choosing: intercultural materialism in The Dawn of Everything” by Enzo Rossi, “Questions about The Dawn of Everything” by Karl Widerquist and Grant McCall, “Freedom and the bureaucratic state” by Annelien de Dijn, and “On historical materialism and The Dawn of Everything” by (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  26. Rethinking empiricism and materialism: the revisionist view.Charles T. Wolfe - 2010 - Annales Philosophici 1:101-113.
    There is an enduring story about empiricism, which runs as follows: from Locke onwards to Carnap, empiricism is the doctrine in which raw sense-data are received through the passive mechanism of perception; experience is the effect produced by external reality on the mind or ‘receptors’. Empiricism on this view is the ‘handmaiden’ of experimental natural science, seeking to redefine philosophy and its methods in conformity with the results of modern science. Secondly, there is a story about materialism, popularized (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  27. Nanoelectronics Technology has Dedicated some Very Exciting Materials to Improve the Sensing Phenomenon.Afshin Rashid - 2024 - Chemrn Electrochemistry Ejournal , Elsevier Bv 7 ( 272562485).
    Note: Nanoelectronics technology has dedicated some very exciting materials to improve the sensing phenomenon. The use of various nanomaterials, including nanoparticles, nanotubes, nanotubes, and nanowires, causes faster identification and reproducibility in a much better way. The unique properties of nanomaterials such as high electrical conductivity, better shock tolerance, and sensitive responses such as versatile piezo-electric and color detection mechanisms are only results of the multitude of properties of nanomaterials. Different types of biosensors are propagated based on different types of (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  28. Materialism, Realism, Naturalism: Althusser’s Philosophy Reconsidered.David Maruzzella - 2022 - Décalages 2 (4):232-264.
    Though Althusser often spoke of his commitment to philosophical materialism—a position organically linked to his ongoing elaboration of the specific philosophical effects of Marxism—this paper argues that Althusser’s materialism must also include a commitment to realism and naturalism. Though Althusser does not use these terms himself, he nonetheless remains a realist to the extent that he argues for the capacity of conceptual thought to know a mind-independent reality and a naturalist to the extent that he is a consequent Darwinian (like (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  29. Is Science an Ideology?Gustavo E. Romero - 2025 - In Javier Pérez-Jara & Íñigo Ongay, Beyond Nature and Nurture. Perspectives on Human Multidimensionality. Cham, Switzerland AG: Springer Nature. pp. 145-171.
    The concept of ideology is central to understanding the many political, economic, social, and cultural processes that have taken place over the past two centuries in our societies. Yet the very concept of ideology remains a vague, openended, and much debated question. In this chapter I try to answer the question of whether science is a form of ideology or not from a philosophical point of view, taking a materialist approach. I begin by characterizing ideology as a complex, multifaceted (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  30. A Relational Ontology of Consciousness: Reflexive Closure and the Material Basis of Awareness.Benjamin Owino - manuscript
    Contemporary theories of consciousness—global workspace, higher-order, integrated information, recurrent processing, and predictive processing frameworks—illuminate important functional and informational distinctions among neural states. Yet they leave unresolved what the philosophical literature identifies as the hard problem or explanatory gap: how any physical process becomes present to itself. These theories successfully address the difference question (why some states of a system are conscious) but presuppose, without explaining, the more fundamental genesis question: how a standpoint from which states can appear arises at all. (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  31. A rediscovery of scientific collections as material heritage? The case of university collections in Germany.David Ludwig & Cornelia Weber - 2013 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 44 (4):652-659.
    The purpose of this article is twofold: on the one hand, we present the outlines of a history of university collections in Germany. On the other hand, we discuss this history as a case study of the changing attitudes of the sciences towards their material heritage. Based on data from 1094 German university collections, we distinguish three periods that are by no means homogeneous but offer a helpful starting point for a discussion of the entangled institutional and epistemic factors in (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  32. Material Causes and Incomplete Entities in Gallego de la Serna’s Theory of Animal Generation.Andreas Blank - 2014 - In Ohad Nachtomy & Justin E. H. Smith, The Life Sciences in Early Modern Philosophy. New York, NY: Oup Usa. pp. 117–136.
    This article examines some aspects of the natural philosophy of Juan Gallego de la Serna, royal physician to the Spanish kings Philip III and Philip IV. In his account of animal generation, Gallego criticizes widely accepted views: (1) the view that animal seeds are animated, and (2) the alternative view that animal seeds, even if not animated, possess active potencies sufficient for the development of animal souls. According to his view, animal seeds are purely material beings. This, of course, raises (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  33. (1 other version)Characterizing generics are material inference tickets: a proof-theoretic analysis.Preston Stovall - 2019 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy (5):668-704.
    An adequate semantics for generic sentences must stake out positions across a range of contested territory in philosophy and linguistics. For this reason the study of generic sentences is a venue for investigating different frameworks for understanding human rationality as manifested in linguistic phenomena such as quantification, classification of individuals under kinds, defeasible reasoning, and intensionality. Despite the wide variety of semantic theories developed for generic sentences, to date these theories have been almost universally model-theoretic and representational. This essay outlines (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   9 citations  
  34. Materials for an Indigenous Philosophy: Eco-Spirituality.Fausto César Quizhpe Gualán - 2025 - Sortuz: Oñati Journal of Emergent Socio-Legal Studies 15 (2):351-368.
    This work takes as its starting point the indigenous world, specifically the Kichwa Saraguro people in Ecuador, and within that, eco-spirituality is developed as part of indigenous eco-religion and philosophy. The method used for the approach is the analectic method, developed by liberation theology and philosophy. Based on the above, it proposes to confront an eco-spiritual meta-narrative that links a collective subject and the Pachamama with another kind of modern, capitalist meta-narrative centred on death. The first meta-narrative sacralises life; the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  35. From Probability to Phase Law — Deterministic Convergence Across Quantum, Biological, and Material Domains (Empirical Closure of Coherence).Devin Bostick - manuscript
    Between 2024 and 2025, experimental physics, photonics, materials science, and biology each produced evidence that coherence—not probability—is the invariant law governing lawful emergence. Quantum teleportation, photonic condensation, analog RRAM computing, superconducting germanium lattices, and thalamo-cortical gamma synchrony all independently show reduced stochastic drift (ΔPAS_zeta → 0). The Phase Alignment Score (PAS_h) formalism generalizes these observations: when phase states align harmonically, systems transition from probabilistic fluctuation to deterministic inference. -/- The CODES framework provides the mathematical closure for this transition, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  36. Material souls and imagination in Late Aristotelian embryology.Andreas Blank - 2010 - Annals of Science 67 (2):187-204.
    Summary This article explores some continuities between Late Aristotelian and Cartesian embryology. In particular, it argues that there is an interesting consilience between some accounts of the role of imagination in trait acquisition in Late Aristotelian and Cartesian embryology. Evidence for this thesis is presented using the extensive biological writings of the Padua-based philosopher and physician, Fortunio Liceti (1577–1657). Like the Cartesian physiologists, Liceti believed that animal souls are material beings and that acts of imagination result in material images that (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  37. Psychological Science within a Three-Dimensional Ontology.Lars-Gunnar Lundh - 2018 - Integrative Psychological and Behavioral Science 52:52-66.
    The present paper outlines the nature of a three-dimensional ontology and the place of psychological science within this ontology, in a way that is partly similar to and partly different from that of Pérez-Álvarez. The first dimension is the material realities, and involves different levels (physical, chemical, biological, psychological, etc.), where each level builds on a lower level but also involves the development of new emergent properties, in accordance with Bunge’s emergent materialism. Each level involves systems, with components, structures (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  38. On The Material Image. Affordances as a New Approach to Visual Culture Studies.Martina Sauer & Elisabeth Günther (eds.) - 2021 - New York & São Paulo: Art Style.
    This special issue on affordances bases on the thesis, that all natural and artificial things inhere affordances that appeal to our cognitive system, and thus invite us to look at them, perceive them, think about them, interpret them, and use them. The concept roots in the studies of the American psychologist James J. Gibson from the 1960s. According to him, "things" offer a certain range of possible activities depending on their form, time patterns, and material qualities, thus becoming part of (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  39. The Symbol as Material Operation – A Quantum Example.David Cota - 2025 - Https://Doi.Org/10.5281/Zenodo.16936941.
    This essay proposes a radical reformulation of the concept of the symbol, displacing it from representational traditions toward a relational materialist ontology, designated as the Ontology of Emerging Complexity (OEC). Through the distinction between trace, mark, and symbol, the text constructs a rigorous terminology that allows inscription to be thought as functional reorganization of matter, without recourse to transcendence or essences. The culmination of this conceptual trajectory takes place in the quantum experiment, taken not as an object of physics, but (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  40. Validation of Gamified Instructional Materials in Genetics for Grade 12 STEM Students.Aaron Funa & Jhonner Ricafort - 2019 - International Journal of Sciences: Basic and Applied Research 47 (2):168-180.
    Instructional material is an integral part of teaching and learning process. Validating instructional materials is imperative to ensure quality before widespread utilization. This study validated the developed Gamified Instructional Material (GIM) in genetics for grade 12 STEM students. It employed the descriptive-developmental research design involving 41 STEM students and 11 Biology education experts chosen through purposive sampling. Findings revealed that students and experts strongly agreed that the GIM satisfied the criteria for a sound and valid instructional material. Further, the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   6 citations  
  41. CAIS v1.0 — Consciousness–Aptamer Interface Standard for Material-Level Consciousness Measurement.Jinho Lee - 2025 - Zenodo.
    This paper introduces CAIS v1.0 (Consciousness–Aptamer Interface Standard), a foundational technical standard proposing a material-level interface between consciousness and biochemical sensing systems. -/- CAIS defines a hardware-independent framework based on aptamer–iodine multi-oxidation arrays, Biological Interface Molecules (BIMs), and a three-axis energy model (Ordered, Entropic, and Relational Energy). It specifies transformation logics leading to consciousness-linked indices (VCE, CRI, CFI) and is designed to function as a measurement and signal standard rather than a clinical or therapeutic protocol. -/- The document is positioned (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  42. SCIENCE AND SCIENTIST - A Comprehensive Worldview.Bhakti Madhava Puri - 2009 - Darwin Under Siege.
    The Western world has led the development of material science for over 200 years. But they have reached an impasse in confronting the problem of consciousness. Scientific knowledge requires a scientist, but regarding knowledge concerning the scientist, they must remain silent. India has always emphasized knowledge of the conscious self or atma. Vedanta-sutra begins with the aphorism “athatho brahma jijnasa” – now, therefore, inquire about brahma (pure consciousness). Even in the West, the Greek philosopher Socrates stated, “Above all else (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  43. Is the Universe a Material System?Gustavo E. Romero - 2025 - Foundations of Science 30 (4).
    I argue that the universe is a material system. I first show that what we understand by the universe meets fairly stringent criteria for materiality. I then show that the universe has all the characteristics of a system, with composition, structure, mechanisms, and even environment. After demonstrating that the universe is the maximal material system, I consider– and reject– some possible objections to my views. My conclusion: the universe is not a set, a fiction, or an idea of our mind. (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  44. Leibniz on Hobbes’s Materialism.Stewart Duncan - 2010 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 41 (1):11-18.
    I consider Leibniz's thoughts about Hobbes's materialism, focusing on his less-discussed later thoughts about the topic. Leibniz understood Hobbes to have argued for his materialism from his imagistic theory of ideas. Leibniz offered several criticisms of this argument and the resulting materialism itself. Several of these criticisms occur in texts in which Leibniz was engaging with the generation of British philosophers after Hobbes. Of particular interest is Leibniz's correspondence with Damaris Masham. Leibniz may have been trying to communicate with Locke, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   7 citations  
  45. Science of Knowing: Mathematics.Venkata Rayudu Posina - manuscript
    The 'Science of Knowing: Mathematics' textbook is the first book to put forward and substantiate the thesis that the mathematical understanding of mathematics, as exemplified in F. William Lawvere's Functorial Semantics, constitutes the science of knowing i.e. cognitive science. -/- This is a textbook, i.e. teaching material.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   7 citations  
  46. The materials of mythology: the limits of Schelling’s Philosophy of Mythology.Wagner Félix - 2024 - Acta Scientiarum. Human and Social Sciences 46 (3):1-9.
    Schelling postulates the origin of mythology as relative monotheism, preceding the polytheistic system of gods presumably present in all mythologies. A monotheism relative to the polytheism that succeeds it is understood as an inaugural moment in the formation of the consciousness of divinity, and the passage to polytheism is seen as a necessary development to overcome a relative monotheism towards absolute monotheism in the history of peoples. We would like to argue, however, that the original intuition about the communality of (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  47. Why Scientific Materialism Is Mistaken.Michael G. Rydman - manuscript
    I make what I believe is a spirited and lively treatment for the necessary abandonment of scientific materialist ontology in light of numerous difficulties that have arisen within the materialist approach when examined in the light of contemporary physics. Every effort is made to ensure that it is aimed at a non-specialized, intelligent audience (except for this abstract). Within this approach every attempt is made to avoid the jargon employed by specialists, which still remaining accurate. I make a case for (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  48. Speculative Materialism or Pragmatic Naturalism? Sellars contra Meillassoux.Carl Sachs - 2017 - In Fabio Gironi, The Legacy of Kant in Sellars and Meillassoux. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 85-105.
    Meillassoux's criticism of correlationism and the alternative he proposes are compared with Sellars's rationalistic pragmatism. I argue that Meillssoux's rejection of the principle of sufficient reason undermines the intelligibility of science itself, contra Meillassou'x own intentions. Sellars shows how to accept what is true about 'weak' correlationism within a materialistic metaphysics that upholds the PSR.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  49. Theory of Spatial Materialization of Quantum Possibilities in an Infinite Space.Nicolas Vega - manuscript
    This paper introduces the Theory of Spatial Materialization of Quantum Possibilities in an Infinite Space, proposing a novel perspective on the realization of quantum probabilities. Traditional interpretations of quantum mechanics, such as the Copenhagen interpretation and the Many-Worlds hypothesis, approach quantum probabilities as either collapsing into a single observable state or manifesting across parallel universes. This theory suggests an alternative: in an infinite space, quantum possibilities materialize simultaneously in distinct spatial regions, without requiring collapse or parallel universes. Building on principles (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  50. Time Materialization, Necessity, and Hierarchical Structure.E. N. T. Program - manuscript
    This work extends Emergent Necessity Theory (ENT) to resolve fundamental questions of time-asymmetry and scale-dependence through hierarchical nesting of timeless algebraic constraints. We derive time as an emergent property of substructure embedding, ground necessity in topological invariance, and present four experimentally falsifiable predictions testable with current technology. ENT’s core principles (τ- coherence, structurism) are preserved while addressing previous weaknesses in the framework. All mathematical claims are designed for experimental verification with existing laboratory capabilities.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
1 — 50 / 986