Despite the existence of a diverse and burgeoning specialist literature (see, for example, Casati and Varzi, 2009), theorists and researchers involved or interested in mixed method research have not perhaps attended sufficiently to the problematic nature of ‘events’ and ‘event identity’. In this presentation I draw upon personal experience as a lecturer and researcher to illustrate and outline some of the major arguments and problems regarding event identity. Moreover, I propose that, because different ontological positions or traditions – specifically, Humean empiricism and Roy Bhaskar’s Critical Realism – allow or presume different notions of what an ‘event’ entails, researchers who combine methods that invoke or derive from varied episte...
Consider the most recent Yale-Harvard football game, an event which occurred on 11/20/21 in New Have...
The token identity theory, the claim that each mental event is identical to some physical event, rem...
The appeal to and use of events in philosophical theorising, implicitly or explicitly, is utterly ub...
Whilst mixed method research is not universally accepted as an appropriate research choice (and in c...
Theoretic interest in the nature of events and event identity is apparent across a wide range of fie...
to appear in: F. Shipley and J. Zacks (eds.), Understanding Events: How Humans See, Represent, and A...
Theoretic interest in the nature of events and event identity is apparent across a wide range of fie...
This thesis investigates a specific kind of criticism of the token-token identity-theory. This criti...
We present in this paper a novel ontological theory of events whose central tenet is the Aristotelia...
The issue of event identity may be interesting in itself, but it also bears on more specific, and pe...
This thesis presents a detailed investigation of Jaegwon’s Kim familiar analysis of events which hol...
We have, since the beginning of the 20th century, been witness to a conflict, occasionally explicit ...
A task confronting all the theoretical branches of philosophy is Peacocke’s Integration Challenge: “...
This paper defends the claim that the critique of ideology requires creative interventions in the sy...
This article challenges the idea that mixed methods research (MMR) constitutes a coherent research p...
Consider the most recent Yale-Harvard football game, an event which occurred on 11/20/21 in New Have...
The token identity theory, the claim that each mental event is identical to some physical event, rem...
The appeal to and use of events in philosophical theorising, implicitly or explicitly, is utterly ub...
Whilst mixed method research is not universally accepted as an appropriate research choice (and in c...
Theoretic interest in the nature of events and event identity is apparent across a wide range of fie...
to appear in: F. Shipley and J. Zacks (eds.), Understanding Events: How Humans See, Represent, and A...
Theoretic interest in the nature of events and event identity is apparent across a wide range of fie...
This thesis investigates a specific kind of criticism of the token-token identity-theory. This criti...
We present in this paper a novel ontological theory of events whose central tenet is the Aristotelia...
The issue of event identity may be interesting in itself, but it also bears on more specific, and pe...
This thesis presents a detailed investigation of Jaegwon’s Kim familiar analysis of events which hol...
We have, since the beginning of the 20th century, been witness to a conflict, occasionally explicit ...
A task confronting all the theoretical branches of philosophy is Peacocke’s Integration Challenge: “...
This paper defends the claim that the critique of ideology requires creative interventions in the sy...
This article challenges the idea that mixed methods research (MMR) constitutes a coherent research p...
Consider the most recent Yale-Harvard football game, an event which occurred on 11/20/21 in New Have...
The token identity theory, the claim that each mental event is identical to some physical event, rem...
The appeal to and use of events in philosophical theorising, implicitly or explicitly, is utterly ub...