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Unamuno´s mirrow-games: on the seeming omnipotence and meaningfulness of writing in the grammatical void
(Linguistic and Philosophical Investigations, 2017)
Miguel de Unamuno wanted the readers of some of his novels and plays to seriously doubt whether they are fictitious characters, for such a doubt should lead them to fervently crave for immortality. In this article, I argue ...
Can a culture of error be really developed in the classroom without teaching students to distinguish between errors and anomalies?
(Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2019-08-24)
It is expected that children increasingly learn to identify errors throughout their schooling process and even before it. As a further step, however, some scholars have suggested how a culture of error should be implemented ...
Teaching children to ignore alternatives is sometimes necessary: indoctrination as a dispensable term
(Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2019-07)
Literature on indoctrination has focused on imparting and revising beliefs, but it has hardly considered the way of teaching and acquiring certaintiesin Wittgenstein's sense. Therefore, the role played by rationality in ...
La formación de delirios a través de la incertidumbre y la ceguera a posibilidades
(Logos. Anales del Seminario de Metafísica, 2019)
Algunos autores han intentado considerar los delirios como certezas –entendidas en el sentido de Wittgenstein– debido a las similitudes que parecen existir entre sus respectivos estatus epistemológicos. Sin embargo, dicho ...
Karl Jaspers y la distinción hermenéutica entre entender y explicar en psicopatología. ¿Podríamos reencontrarnos en alguien que padeciera el síndrome de Cotard tipo I?
(Revista de Filosofía, 2011)
Aunque Karl Jaspers afirmó en su Psicopatología general que la génesis de un
delirio es incomprensible tanto empática como racionalmente, millones de espectadores
de todo el mundo y multitud de críticos parecen haber ...
Moore and Wittgenstein. Scepticism, Certainty and Common Sense
(2012)
Moore and Wittgenstein. Scepticism, Certainty and Common Sense