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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Peter_SuberPeter Suber - Wikipedia

    Peter Dain Suber (born November 8, 1951) is an American philosopher specializing in the philosophy of law and open access to knowledge. He is a Senior Researcher at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society , Director of the Harvard Office for Scholarly Communication, [4] and Director of the Harvard Open Access Project (HOAP).

  2. The original of this file is an electronic hand-out for Suber's course,Symbolic Logic. This version of the file was created by William J. Rapaportfor those who prefer arrow notation. Peter Suber, Department ofPhilosophy, Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana,47374, U.S.A. peters@earlham.edu.

  3. The journey has led to his recent full-time, double-duty appointment. In his office, a particularly important photograph hangs on the wall. One of his daughters took it for a photography-class assignment about “Objects of Desire.” It depicts books. Some are closed, and some, much to Suber’s delight, lie open.

  4. Open access to research is still held back by misunderstandings repeated by people who should know better, says Peter Suber Peter Suber Mon 21 Oct 2013 10.10 EDT

  5. Naomi Cahn, John Calmore, Mary Coombs, Dwight Greene, Geoffrey Miller, Jeremy Paul, and Laura Stein wrote one opinion each for the George Washington Law Review, vol. 61 (1993) pp. 1754-1811. Paul Butler, Alan Dershowitz, Frank Easterbrook, Alex Kozinski, Cass Sunstein, and Robin West wrote one opinion each for the Harvard Law Review , vol. 112 (1999) pp. 1834-1923.

  6. of fallacious reasoning is notably provided by Peter Suber (1998). In addition, some authors give a significantly different presentation from that of Suber, by assimilating the OSF to the confirmation bias. Lastly, some other authors present this fallacy like an argument which results in mentioning only the

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  8. Peter Suber is the Senior Advisor on Open Access (in Harvard Library) and Director of the Harvard Open Access Project (in the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society). By training he's a philosopher and lawyer, and gave up his position as a tenured full professor of philosophy in 2003 to work full-time on open access. He was the principal ...

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