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Robbers Cave04:49

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During the 1950s, the landmark Robbers Cave experiment demonstrated that when groups must compete with one another, intergroup conflict, hostility, and even violence may result. At the Oklahoman summer camp, two troops of boys—termed the Rattlers and the Eagles—took part in a week-long tournament. During this time, their negativity culminated in derogatory name-calling, fistfights, and even vandalism and destruction of property. However, this work also revealed that such tension...
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Negative reinforcement and punishment are often confused but serve distinct functions in behavior modification. Reinforcement, whether positive or negative, increases the likelihood of a desired behavior, while punishment decreases it.
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Jealousy is an instinctive yet socially complex emotion that arises when a close relationship is threatened. Its origins lie in both biological imperatives and sociocultural conditioning, making it a multifaceted psychological construct. Although universally experienced, the triggers and expressions of jealousy vary notably between individuals, especially across genders, due to evolutionary pressures and cultural influences.Gender Differences and Evolutionary TheoryEvolutionary theory explains...
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The famous and controversial Stanford Prison Experiment, conducted by social psychologist Philip Zimbardo and his colleagues at Stanford University, demonstrated the power of social roles, social norms, and scripts.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Dec 24, 2025

In Vitro Directed Evolution of a Restriction Endonuclease with More Stringent Specificity
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Generalized Revenge.

Julien Murzi1, Lorenzo Rossi1

  • 1University of Salzburg.

Australasian Journal of Philosophy
|April 8, 2020
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Revisionary approaches to semantic paradoxes, which weaken classical logic, face new challenges. This paper introduces a revenge argument showing these popular methods create new paradoxes they cannot resolve.

Keywords:
non-contractive logicsnon-transitive logicsparacomplete logicsparaconsistent logicsrevenge paradoxessemantic paradoxes

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Area of Science:

  • Philosophy of Language
  • Logic
  • Metaphysics

Background:

  • Saul Kripke's work popularized revisionary approaches to semantic paradoxes.
  • These approaches involve weakening classical logic to resolve paradoxes.
  • The popularity of revisionary semantics has grown since the 1970s.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To present a novel revenge argument against dominant revisionary approaches to semantic paradox.
  • To demonstrate that existing revisionary strategies are insufficient to block new paradoxes.

Main Methods:

  • Developing a new "revenge argument" tailored to semantic paradoxes.
  • Analyzing the logical consequences of weakening classical logic in semantic theories.

Main Results:

  • The primary revisionary approaches to semantic paradoxes generate new, unresolvable paradoxes.
  • These new paradoxes arise as a direct consequence of the proposed logical weakenings.

Conclusions:

  • Revisionary semantic theories, despite their popularity, are vulnerable to revenge paradoxes.
  • A fundamental flaw exists in the main strategies for resolving semantic paradoxes by weakening logic.