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1

Jamison, Martin. Title index for the Directory of unpublished experimental mental measures: Volumes 1-7. Association of College and Research Libraries, 2001.

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Cantrill, Arthur. Index to Cantrills filmnotes: Issues 1 to 51/52 (1971-1986). Arthur and Corinne Cantrill, 1987.

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Vielakamen, Esther Castañeda. El vanguardismo literario en el Perú: Estudio y selección de la revista Flechas (1924). AMARU Editores, 1989.

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Rockford, Doris E. Drug effects on the fetus: Medical research subject analysis with bibliography. ABBE Publishers, 1987.

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5

United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Space station systems: A bibliography with indexes. NASA, 1986.

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6

Science experiments index for young people, update 91. Libraries Unlimited, 1992.

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7

Harter, Christopher. An author index to little magazines of the mimeograph revolution, 1958-1980. Scarecrow Press, 2008.

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8

An author index to little magazines of the mimeograph revolution, 1958-1980. Scarecrow Press, 2008.

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9

Science experiments index for young people. 4th ed. Libraries Unlimited, 2005.

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10

Lisa, Holonitch, and Columbus Metropolitan Library (Franklin County, Ohio). Center for Discovery., eds. Science experiments & projects index. Highsmith, 1994.

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11

Science experiments index for young people. Libraries Unlimited, 1988.

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12

Science experiments index for young people. 3rd ed. Libraries Unlimited, 2002.

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13

Science experiments index for young people. 2nd ed. Libraries Unlimited, 1996.

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14

Bishop, Cynthia. Science fair project index, 1981-1984. Scarecrow Press, 1986.

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15

Kenaga, E. E. Commercial and experimental organic insecticides: Indexed as to their scientific, common, and trade names, code designations, uses, empirical formulas, manufactureres, mammalian toxicology, and chemical structures. Entomological Society of America, 1987.

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16

Kirsch, Daniel Lawrence. The science behind cranial electrotherapy stimulation: A complete annotated bibliography of 106 human and 20 experimental animal studies, plus reviews and meta-analyses, a current density model of CES, side effects and follow-up tables, all indexed and cross-referenced. Medical Scope Pub. Corp., 1999.

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17

Metamaterials: Critique and alternatives. Wiley, 2008.

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18

(Editor), Marc De Graef, and Thomas Lucatorto (Editor), eds. Cumulative Subject Index Volumes 1-32, Volume 34 (Experimental Methods in the Physical Sciences). Academic Press, 1998.

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19

(Editor), Marc De Graef, and Thomas Lucatorto (Editor), eds. Cumulative Subject Index Volumes 1-32, Volume 34 (Experimental Methods in the Physical Sciences). Academic Press, 1998.

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20

Title Index for the Directory of Unpublished Experimental Mental Measures. Amer Library Assn, 2001.

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21

Cumulative Author Index and Tables of Contents Volumes1-32, Volume 33A: Author Cumulative Index (Experimental Methods in the Physical Sciences). Academic Press, 1998.

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22

Robert, Celotta, and Lucatorto T. B. 1937-, eds. Cumulative author index and tables of contents, volumes 1-32. Academic, 1999.

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23

(Editor), Marc De Graef, and Thomas Lucatorto (Editor), eds. Cumulative Author Index and Tables of Contents Volumes1-32, Volume 33A: Author Cumulative Index (Experimental Methods in the Physical Sciences). Academic Press, 1998.

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24

Batson, C. Daniel. A Scientific Search for Altruism. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190651374.001.0001.

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This book provides an example of how the scientific method can be used to address a fundamental question about human nature. For centuries—indeed for millennia—the egoism–altruism debate has echoed through Western thought. Egoism says that the motivation for everything we do, including all of our seemingly selfless acts of care for others, is to gain one or another self-benefit. Altruism, while not denying the force of self-benefit, says that under certain circumstances we can care for others for their sakes, not our own. Over the past half-century, social psychologists have turned to laborato
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25

McKnight, Joyce. Science Fair Project Index 1973-1980. The Scarecrow Press, Inc., 1989.

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26

Cynthia, Bishop, Ertle Katherine, Zeleznik Karen, and Akron-Summit County Public Library. Science and Technology Division., eds. Science fair project index: 1985-1989 for grades K-8. Scarecrow Press, 1992.

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27

Cynthia, Bishop, Ertle Katherine, Zeleznik Karen, and Akron-Summit County Public Library. Science and Technology Division., eds. Science fair project index, 1985-1989. Scarecrow Press, 1992.

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28

Pilger, Mary Anne. Science Experiments Index for Young People: Fourth Edition (Science Experiments Index for Young People). 4th ed. Libraries Unlimited, 2005.

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29

Pilger, Mary Anne. Science Experiments Index for Young People:. 3rd ed. Libraries Unlimited, 2001.

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30

Puranam, Phanish. Methodologies for Microstructures. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199672363.003.0009.

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I review developments in theory and methodology that may allow us to begin creating innovative forms of organizing, rather than rest content with studying them after they have emerged. We now have the conceptual and technical apparatus to prototype organization designs at small scale, cheaply and fast. The process of organization re-design can be seen in terms of multiple stages. It begins with careful observation of phenomena. Qualitative or indeed quantitative induction (i.e. data mining) can play a critical role here. Once we have some understanding or at least conjectures about underlying
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31

FitzPatrick, William. Cognitive Science and Moral Philosophy. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190462758.003.0011.

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Can empirical work in cognitive science and moral psychology impact issues of general theoretical relevance to moral philosophy? Some think it can. They take it to underwrite debunking arguments against mainstream philosophical views. This chapter first critiques recent philosophical work by two prominent experimentalists, Joshua Greene and Shaun Nichols. The chapter argues that the cases they make for this sort of strong impact of experimental work on moral philosophy suffer from a problematic form of scientism and ultimately fail. Indeed, they fail for reasons that likely apply to other proj
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32

Downey, James, and Michael Cohen. Endogenous Mechanisms of Cardioprotection. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199544769.003.0008.

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• Ischaemic preconditioning is the most powerful endogenous mechanism for limiting myocardial infarct size in the experimental setting. Its clinical application is limited to scenarios in which the index episode of ischaemia and reperfusion can be anticipated such as in the setting of cardiac surgery• Ischaemic postconditioning represents an endogenous cardioprotective strategy which is applied at the onset of myocardial reperfusion, thereby allowing its use as an adjunct to reperfusion in patients presenting with an acute myocardial infarction• Both ischaemic preconditioning and postcondition
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33

Anjum, Rani Lill, and Stephen Mumford. Getting Involved. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198733669.003.0024.

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Science is an activity and this creates some tension with one of its perceived norms, namely its objectivity. We do not simply record data in a detached way. We perform experimental interventions, which is a matter of choice, informed by our interests. There are interventionist accounts of causation that clearly cannot be used to define causation, since intervention is already a causal notion. However, the idea shows what is important about causal knowledge: it allows us to manipulate the world to our own ends, or at least to have good fallible reasons for what would happen if a certain sort o
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34

Beal, Amy C. Introduction. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036361.003.0001.

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This introductory chapter provides a background of Carla Bley and her music. Bley is a prolific and influential American composer. And though her career, which began in the 1950s, has taken place largely within the venues and institutions of the jazz world, her music is often characterized as Third Stream, postmodernist, or just plain experimental—these labels due in part to her ability to write conventional big-band charts as well as classically influenced chamber works. Her compositions fall into a number of overlapping categories: lead sheets and short jazz tunes designed for improvising, c
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35

Cole, Jonathan, and Shaun Gallagher. Narrative and Clinical Neuroscience: Can Phenomenologically Informed Approaches and Empirical Work Cross-Fertilise? Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474400046.003.0021.

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Science (from the Latin, scientia) originally meant knowledge, so that ‘natural science’ meant knowledge of the natural world and of its laws. The term has since come to mean empirical, experimentally acquired knowledge and, as such, refers to some of the most powerful tools we have for understanding the world and indeed our own physiology. Scientific medicine has led to huge improvements in outcomes from a variety of conditions, from infectious diseases to cancer and heart disease. These advances have come, largely, from a mechanistic or reductionist approach to illness, which focuses on putt
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36

Kassell, Lauren. Paper Technologies, Digital Technologies: Working with Early Modern Medical Records. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474400046.003.0006.

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As the digital revolution takes hold, historians have begun to reflect on the ways in which paper technologies – the codex, notebook, printed book and their indexes, annotations and tools of ordering – have come into being and contributed to the production of knowledge. Objects that were once considered evidence for historical inquiry have become their subjects.1 The same reflexivity applies to notions of evidence, observation and objectivity, often labelled as facts and data, which have themselves been historically studied. This chapter is about what happens when historians use digital techno
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37

Ferreira, Fernanda, and James Nye. The Modularity of Sentence Processing Reconsidered. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190464783.003.0004.

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Today, the modular view of sentence processing is unpopular, but the arguments against modularity are not as strong as this apparent consensus would suggest. Almost all experimental investigations of modularity have focused on properties pertaining to information encapsulation, and most of those studies have evaluated just one specific modular architecture. A review of these studies of sentence comprehension suggests that the evidence against information encapsulation is really evidence against that one architecture only, and a whole range of other possible modular architectures remain unteste
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38

Batson, C. Daniel. Empathy and Altruism. Edited by Kirk Warren Brown and Mark R. Leary. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199328079.013.11.

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Do we humans ever, in any degree, care about others for their sakes and not simply for our own? Psychology has long assumed that everything humans do, no matter how nice and noble, is motivated by self-interest. Research over the past four decades suggests this assumption is wrong. The empathy-altruism hypothesis claims that empathic concern produces altruistic motivation. Results of the over 35 experiments designed to test this hypothesis against various egoistic alternatives have proved remarkably supportive, leading to the tentative conclusion that feeling empathic concern for a person in n
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39

James, Nicholas D., and Elizabeth J. Bradbury. Autotomy. Edited by Paul Farquhar-Smith, Pierre Beaulieu, and Sian Jagger. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198834359.003.0065.

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The landmark paper discussed in this chapter is ‘Autotomy following peripheral nerve lesions: Experimental anaesthesia dolorosa’, published by Wall et al. in 1979. This paper was the culmination of a series of studies in which Wall, together with a number of colleagues, investigated the underlying causes of neuropathic pain following peripheral nerve injury. In this paper, the authors used a variety of nerve injury models to show that the extent of resultant anaesthesia combined with ectopic firing from damaged axons in nerve-end neuromas correlated with the severity of self-mutilation (termed
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40

Chhibber, Pradeep K., and Rahul Verma. The Myth of Vote Buying in India. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190623876.003.0006.

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A common view is that in Indian elections parties, politicians, and voters are engaged in a quid-pro-quo in which citizens vote for a politician who offers them individual benefits. We find no evidence that voters exchange votes for benefits. In fact, ideology is a better predictor of the vote than the receipt of private or club goods. The use of cash is indeed widespread in India during election time but money is needed to build the campaign, to mobilize votes and for candidates, and to establish candidates’ credibility as leaders of import. We show this using the survey data from national el
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41

Kotzor, Sandra, Allison Wetterlin, and Aditi Lahiri. Bengali geminates. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198754930.003.0009.

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Bengali has a robust medial geminate/singleton contrast across oral stops and nasals in five places of articulation. This chapter presents a synchronic account of the phonological system involving the consonantal length contrast, which supports an asymmetric moraic representation of geminates. Based on these representational assumptions, two EEG and two behavioural experiments were conducted to investigate the processing of this geminate/singleton contrast by Bengali native speakers. The results reveal a processing asymmetry for the duration contrast: the processing of the duration contrast is
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42

Massimini, Marcello, and Giulio Tononi. Assessing Consciousness in Other Humans: From Theory to Practice. Translated by Frances Anderson. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198728443.003.0007.

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This chapter translates the theoretical principles illustrated in Chapter 5 into an empirical measure that can be applied to real human brains. It explains how transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and simultaneous electroencephalography (EEG) can be employed to derive a surrogate measure of information integration, the perturbational complexity index (PCI). By describing the results of a series of experiments, it demonstrates that PCI can discriminate with very high accuracy between consciousness and unconsciousness, across many different conditions, ranging from wakefulness to sleep, dream
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43

Schechter, Elizabeth. The Unity Puzzle. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198809654.003.0001.

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This chapter introduces the major philosophical debate about the split-brain phenomenon. Split-brain surgery severs the major white matter fiber tract connecting the two cerebral hemispheres. A number of individuals who underwent this surgery later agreed to act as participants in experiments designed to reveal its psychobehavioral consequences. The basic finding is that, after they are surgically divided in this way, the two hemispheres cannot interact in all the ways they once could: indeed, split-brain subjects sometimes give the impression of having two minds and spheres of consciousness,
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44

Healey, Richard. “Non-locality”. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198714057.003.0004.

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Quantum entanglement is popularly believed to give rise to spooky action at a distance of a kind that Einstein decisively rejected. Indeed, important recent experiments on systems assigned entangled states have been claimed to refute Einstein by exhibiting such spooky action. After reviewing two considerations in favor of this view I argue that quantum theory can be used to explain puzzling correlations correctly predicted by assignment of entangled quantum states with no such instantaneous action at a distance. We owe both considerations in favor of the view to arguments of John Bell. I prese
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45

Levy, Arnon, and Peter Godfrey-Smith, eds. The Scientific Imagination. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190212308.001.0001.

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Science is both a creative endeavor and a highly regimented one. It involves surprising, sometimes unthinkably novel ideas, along with meticulous exploration and the careful exclusion of alternatives. At the heart of this productive tension stands a human capacity typically called “the imagination”: our ability, indeed our inclination, to think up new ideas, situations, and scenarios and to explore their contents and consequences in the mind’s eye. This volume explores our capacity to imagine and its implications for the philosophy and practice of science. One central aim is to integrate philo
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46

Knoll and, Benjamin R., and Cammie Jo Bolin. A Second Look at Views on Women’s Ordination. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190882365.003.0005.

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This chapter asks whether it is reasonable to expect that the data is revealing a fully accurate picture of the prevalence of support for female ordination in the United States. When asked by a telephone surveyor whether they are in favor of women being allowed to serve as clergy in their own congregation, respondents might feel social pressure to say “yes” when in actuality they are more hesitant. This chapter takes advantage of a survey tool called a “list experiment” (or “item-count technique”) to examine whether there is any evidence that support for female ordination is either over- or un
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47

Livermore, Roy. Ups and Downs. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198717867.003.0011.

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Despite the dumbing-down of education in recent years, it would be unusual to find a ten-year-old who could not name the major continents on a map of the world. Yet how many adults have the faintest idea of the structures that exist within the Earth? Understandably, knowledge is limited by the fact that the Earth’s interior is less accessible than the surface of Pluto, mapped in 2016 by the NASA New Horizons spacecraft. Indeed, Pluto, 7.5 billion kilometres from Earth, was discovered six years earlier than the similar-sized inner core of our planet. Fortunately, modern seismic techniques enabl
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48

Fontinell, Eugene. Self, God and Immortality. Fordham University Press, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823220700.001.0001.

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Can we, who have been touched by the scientific, intellectual, and experimental revolutions of modern and contemporary times, still believe that we as individual persons are immortal? Indeed, is there even good cause to hope that we are? In examining the present relationship of reason to faith, can we find justifying reasons for faith? These are the central questions in this book, a compelling exercise in philosophical theology. Drawing upon the works of William James and the principles of American Pragmatism, the book extrapolates carefully from “data given in experience” to a model of the co
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49

Gibson, James L., and Michael J. Nelson. Change in the Legitimacy of the U.S. Supreme Court. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190865214.003.0006.

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Positivity Theory suggests that increased exposure to the symbols of judicial authority stimulates positive associations within individuals that help courts build and maintain their legitimacy. Indeed, recent research suggests that exposure to the symbols of judicial authority negates the linkage between decisional disappointment and changes in judgments of institutional legitimacy. However, this research has been conducted on predominantly white samples and fails to account for the possibility that individuals’ group attachments and experiences with legal authorities might affect the extent t
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50

Moore, Michael S. Mechanical Choices. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190863999.001.0001.

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This book assays how the remarkable discoveries of contemporary neuroscience impact our conception of ourselves and our responsibility for our choices and our actions. Dramatic (and indeed revolutionary) changes in how we think of ourselves as agents and as persons are commonly taken to be the implications of those discoveries of neuroscience. Indeed, the very notions of responsibility and of deserved punishment are thought to be threatened by these discoveries. Such threats are collected into four groupings: (1) the threat from determinism, that neurosciences shows us that all of our choices
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