[citation needed] In the 1950s, emotivism appeared in a modified form in the universal prescriptivism of R. M. Hare. Emotivism reached prominence in the early... 36 KB (5,101 words) - 04:13, 16 November 2023 |
Emotiv Inc. is a privately held bio-informatics and technology company developing and manufacturing wearable electroencephalography (EEG) products including... 11 KB (996 words) - 14:06, 12 December 2023 |
Emotiv Systems is an Australian electronics innovation company developing technologies to evolve human computer interaction incorporating non-conscious... 3 KB (273 words) - 03:39, 8 March 2024 |
Non-cognitivism (section Emotivism) not candidates for truth or falsity, but have non-cognitive meaning. Emotivism, associated with A. J. Ayer, the Vienna Circle and C. L. Stevenson, suggests... 14 KB (2,001 words) - 15:37, 15 April 2024 |
Expressivism (section Historical development: from noncognitivism/emotivism to cognitivist expressivism) typically called "noncognitivist". A. J. Ayer's emotivism is a well-known example. According to emotivism, the act of uttering a moral sentence of the type... 12 KB (1,477 words) - 19:57, 6 November 2023 |
Prescriptivism stands in opposition to other forms of non-cognitivism (such as emotivism and quasi-realism), as well as to all forms of cognitivism (including... 7 KB (838 words) - 11:05, 29 February 2024 |
elaboration of Ayer's." Satris, Ethical Emotivism, 25: "It might be suggested that there are two broad types of ethical emotivism. The first, represented by Stevenson... 15 KB (1,691 words) - 11:13, 12 April 2024 |
According to non-cognitive versions of ethical subjectivism, such as emotivism, prescriptivism, and expressivism, ethical statements cannot be true or... 32 KB (3,796 words) - 00:07, 9 April 2024 |
Analytic philosophy (section Emotivism) disapproval. While analytic philosophers generally accepted non-cognitivism, emotivism had many deficiencies. It evolved into more sophisticated non-cognitivist... 91 KB (10,435 words) - 07:09, 25 April 2024 |