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| | Paul Horwich - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Paul Horwich (born 1947) is a British analytic philosopher at New York University, whose work includes writings on causality, truth, and meaning. |
 | | Horwich earned his PhD from Cornell University; his thesis advisor was Arthur Fine. |
 | | In the context of philosophical speculations about time travel, Horwich coined the term autoinfanticide to describe a scenario, depicting a variant of the grandfather paradox, in which a person goes back in time and deliberately or inadvertently kills his or her infant self, although he malformed the word as "autofanticide". |
| en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Paul_Horwich (185 words) |
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