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inauthor:"Adolf Grünbaum" from books.google.com
A festschrift dedicated to Adolf Grünbaum on the occasion of his 60th birthday, this volume contains contributions which are original works on scientific and philosophical issues related to his fields of scholarship.
inauthor:"Adolf Grünbaum" from books.google.com
Offers a systematic analysis of Freud's theories, examines the effectiveness of the retrospective clinical methods used in psychoanalysis, and discusses free association, dreams, and personality.
inauthor:"Adolf Grünbaum" from books.google.com
Following this essay by Adolf Grünbaum, one of the world's leading philosophers of science, nine senior scholars offer their own critical reflections on Freud's work and its hidden motives, on the potential of psychoanalytic ideas for the ...
inauthor:"Adolf Grünbaum" from books.google.com
It is ten years since Adolf Griinbaum published the first edition of this book. It was promptly recognized to be one of the few major works in the philosophy of the natural sciences of this generation.
inauthor:"Adolf Grünbaum" from books.google.com
This volume is a collection of Adolf Grünbaum's most discussed essays on Scientific Rationality.
inauthor:"Adolf Grünbaum" from books.google.com
A treatise on the philosophical consequences of scientific developments for our conceptions of space, time, and causality.
inauthor:"Adolf Grünbaum" from books.google.com
In this volume Professor Grunbaum substantially extends and comments upon his essay "Geometry, Chronometry, and Empiricism," which was first published in Volume III of the Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science.
inauthor:"Adolf Grünbaum" from books.google.com
"" "This volume joins the issue with Marshall Edelson's defenses of the investigative viability of the single-subject case study method.
inauthor:"Adolf Grünbaum" from books.google.com
Originally published in 1971. The three contributions collected in this volume deal with different aspects of a single theme—the logical status of scientific theories in their relation to observation.