- Something is said
- How computerized advancements have reshaped the medical profession
- The public: an insider to scientific research
- Ten years and farewell
- Less is more, more or less
- Let a thousand Carnapian projects bloom
- Abduction, inference to the best explanation, and Bayesianism: a compatibilist proposal
- Bird on the aim of science and scientific method
- Empiricism bad, knowledge good, understanding better?
- Knowledge and the aim of science—replies to commentaries
- One more time, from the top: Marx and ethics
- Against knowledge
- Kantian modality for the contemporary metaphysician
- Are mathematical concepts socially constructed?
- Still more luminous patterns
- A hobbit’s guide to technology ethics
- Fighting back
- Reigning over the living world
- Psychedelic science
- On the normality of trust
- Exploring computational theories of mind, algorithms, and computations
- Eyeing up the master’s tools
- Reading this is a process, but a short one
- The scholastic scientific revolution
- The art and science of magic in premodern Europe
- ‘Units of selection’ is polysemous?
- Forms of thinking through poetry and science
- How some ideas about the earth got around
- The bipartite metatheory of Neurath and Carnap
- Scientific and social progress?
- Publishers and platforms: a symbiotic relationship of asymmetrical challenges
- The great chain of knowing
- Celebrating the 500th anniversary of Leonardo Da Vinci’s death in his birthplace
- About time, concisely
- Statistical paradoxes and some afterthoughts
- Bloodshot life
- Stoics on love and education
- The end of the Anthropocene?
- Health and healthfulness: Galen on prevention, gymnastics, and the art of medicine
- Correction to: Philosophical data and the tri-level method
- Experimentalism and its challenges
- The myth of the value-free biological individual
- Pliny’s Naturalis Historia: more than an encyclopedia of geography
- Important histories for a nuclear future
- Mars, Mars and more Mars forever
- The logic of regeneration
- The transmutation of humanity
- A new paradigm in social ontology
- Moral progress and reasons
- A history of women science writers: hidden in plain sight
- The shining star of natural selection
- Philosophical data and the ti-level method
- Ageing French style
- The shaping and evolution of Greek mathematics
- On the edges of science
- To the discerning reader: Galileo’s philosophical comedy in a new translation
- “For the benefit of the whole civilized world”: 350 years of journal publishing at the Royal Society of London
- Aesthetic to ecology
- The blameworthiness of wholes and the moral responsibility of parts
- Flipping arrows
- The role of mathematics in explanation
- Scientific and philosophical publication: the current state of affairs
- Mark Weiser and the origins of ubiquitous computing
- Completing the landscape on models and scientific representation
- The Minnesota model and its legacy
- Lives with cancer and their stories
- Kierkegaard’s “Mission Possibility”
- Will we need a machine overlord after all?
- How racial science shapes visual art
- Practical organic chemistry
- Exploring the boundaries: an epistemology of interactions at the fringes of experimental practice
- Cancer as a breakdown of multicellular life
- Human remains in the enlightenment
- Obstacles to environmental progress: a valuable resource for real-world problems
- Correction to: Debating Kuhn
- Philosophical perspectives on physics
- Listening in on the universe
- Riding red rockets
- Is everything a bit mysterious?
- A neighbour’s eye view of a science in motion
- When nature inspires technology
- Platonists on Platonism
- An important survey of the history of machine-body analogies through intellectual history
- Glass ceilings in bacterial genetics
- A multitasking Montesquieu, or, an Enlightenment beyond science and salons
- Debating Kuhn
- Completing Otto Neurath
- Peirce as a philosopher of science
- The historian as an ethnographer: Kuhn’s last philosophy of science
- Physical objects as possibilities for experience
- Will do? Causes and volitions
- Much more than one of Bohr’s faithful lieutenants
- Nietzsche’s conflicts
- From classical to quantum, from physics to philosophy
- Understanding why we are confused
- Don’t we all believe in scientific facts? Replies to my critics
- Stability, growth, and the problem of thresholds
- Science evaluation and future-proof science
- A pragmatist’s guide to philosophy of science
- Just the facts ma’am: some concerns about the identification of future-proof science
- The nature of knowledge and human cognitive evolution
- Thinking through illustration
- What is (the philosophy of) computer science?
- Beyond data sharing in open science
- What I did on my summer vacation
- Not a static structure, not science alone, but revolutions
- The role of physics in logical empiricism
- History of biology repackaged for philosophers of biology
- The end of the soul and the origins of analytic philosophy
- External and internal threats to scientific credibility
- Rooting for the machines
- Cracking the hieroglyphic code
- Darwinian evolution and scientific revolutions
- Single-minded animals sharing intentionality and norms
- Aesthetics for enigmatologists
- A quick overview of scientific representation and modelling
- The computer will see you now
- A military-philosophical complex
- Being part of science
- Embracing quantitative methods in history and philosophy of science
- Rorty, Brandom, and women
- Francis Skinner’s dictations of Wittgenstein
- Anselm of Canterbury: A rational account of Christian faith
- Causation, from a human point of view
- Women’s access to scientific societies
- Why we die
- Dethroning Mineral King
- The man who lived one hundred and fifty years
- Failed revolutions and lasting evolutions of telemedicine
- Frugal nature: on the principle of optimality in Leibniz’s physics
- Imagining a better future
- Thinking philosophically
- From theory to experience, in James’ voice
- Sighing with relief
- Great expectations: reviews post-Covid
- The frontiers of science
- A burning question
- Studies on cosmology and biology in ancient philosophy
- Boyle’s chemical properties
- A history of rules and the rules of history
- The breadth of Cassirer
- Shifting world science: towards new inclusive narratives
- The rise of mathematics in biology was not a matter of luck
- The role of metaphor in shaping scientific inquiry
- Good will or lost opportunities?
- Chance would be a fine thing
- Eating up Davies’s universe
- The periodic system and modern chemistry
- On colonialism: it is crypto, and it has currency
- The Port Royal Logic and its scholastic past
- Ethics of human germline editing
- Some Noise for philosophers
- Jeremy Bentham’s democratic liberal constitutionalism
- Plants, organicism, and politics
- Imperfections abound
- People who bought books you like also like this book
- There is no gene for fate
- De-idealizing idealizations
- Uniting social constructivism and logic
- Phenomenal! Perspectival scientific realism
- The method of mathematics and the method of philosophy
- How to tame your Feyerabend
- The literary life of colonial parasites
- Standing on the shoulders of giants with feet of clay
- Explaining the entangled networks of the brain
- Mapping science theatre: collaboration, creativity and unbounded diversity in science communication
- All manner of mind
- North American drug cultures
- What DNA ancestry testing can and cannot tell us
- Get real! A new pragmatist vision for the philosophy of science
- Lady Ranelagh’s contributions to early modern science
- On the diagnosis of time in French psychiatry
- A global history of nuclear weapons
- A foundational text in scientometrics
- Finding the right paradigm
- The glassy essence of transparency
- A taxonomy of pseudosciences
- Correction to: On human-centered artificial intelligence
- Friendship as characterological and educational
- How fossils become specimens
- Metascience builds connections
- Rethinking the ethics of digital communication
- Contractevolism: A promising novel way to evaluate moral claims?
- How American colleges and universities got the hook
- Understanding video game players through game data analysis
- What the social sciences can learn from the natural sciences
- On human-centered artificial intelligence
- Aristotle, law, and contemporary jurisprudence
- Rudolf Carnap’s diaries: from the German Youth Movement to the Vienna Circle
- Thinking about mechanisms need not be deep
- A new grammar of science
- Mind, material, meditation
- The meaning and definition of ‘species’
- A smorgasbord of essays on metaphor and analogy
- Finding new stories in eighteenth-century manuscripts
- Robert Nola as I remember him
- The legal background to Kant’s practical and theoretical philosophy
- Is Social Darwinism wrong because mechanistic explanation is useful?
- In search of the elements
- The experience, representational content, and epistemology of perceptual and intellectual impressions
- The obituary of AI
- Nobel Prizes and cancer
- Writing public-facing philosophy about science
- Fireworks of AI
- Chasing the human in modern economics
- Normative judgements about the epistemic lives of people like us
- Climbing the ladder: agency and its evolution
- Microbial communities as interactors
- What we publish in Metascience
- If so, I beg to disagree
- Epistemic bricolage
- Brains, ectobrains, and the construction of a subgenre
- A compendium of paradoxes
- Standard assessments
- A cautionary tale and how-to guide to wonder
- The incubus of inter-translatability … a realist’s nightmare?
- Psychiatry and biomarkers
- Philosophy, ethics, and conservation science
- Colonial microbiology
- The conflict thesis between science and Christianity: it makes for a good story
- Understanding life through metaphors
- Everyday censorship
- Traces in probability space
- The limits of moral imagination
- Payment by results
- Sameness, schools, and satire
- Bringing back morality to animal research ethics
- Hilbert space gone bananas (again)
- Darwin’s anthropology in the light of contemporary science
- The assessment of standards
- Should we turn down the anger and turn up the shame?
- Chemistry and industry
- Conventions can still rescue us: Where did maps come from and where are they going?
- The rise of science in the Maghrib
- Social care and individualised risk in a changing environment
- Stresses and strains in postwar families
- What powers logical inference?
- The transnational turn in the history of the social sciences
- Following Leibniz through the labyrinth
- Author’s response to Mousa Mohammadian, William Peden and Elay Shech
- Virtues of ‘values’ and ‘virtues’: on theoretical virtues and the aim of science
- Explanatory reasoning in the material theory of induction
- The material side of mathematics
- An introduction to Epicurus’s ethical thought
- The ramifications of medieval thought
- Technology and the history of science
- Women doctors and contraception
- Why bother with mental representations?
- Domestication as natural selection?
- Networks of mathematics and teaching
- Replies to the Critics
- The psychology of science denialism
- Darwin’s Origin: classical analogy and modern metaphor
- Rorty and metaphilosophy
- Do the objections of Darwin’s critics indicate the use of a proportional analogy in the Origin?
- Biology and pharmacy under Franco
- In defence of scientific realism?
- The humanities within and outside the academic world
- Processes and individuals in biological theory and practice
- From the inside looking out
- Demystifying narratives about loss of biodiversity
- Has the problem (or puzzle) of the element concept been solved?
- Developments in book reading, a 25-year personal history
- Can scientific revolutions be incentivised?
- Standing on the shoulders of not so well-known giants
- Consciousness, objectivity, and bias in comparative psychology
- Quantum mechanics comes of age
- A trans-disciplinary book on the maternal body and infant health
- What virtue can do for science
- Arendt’s integrity
- Is medical science for sale?
- Radical and limited empiricisms
- A multifaceted view of the land of fire and ice
- Kuhn’s normal scholarship
- A new direction for global epistemology
- Some of the things everyone needs to know about robots
- Understanding, manipulating and owning life
- Science and its enemies: a defence of scientific values
- Universality is not universal: how much can we explain with falsehoods?
- Kurt Gödel behind the rational mathematics
- The proof of the pudding
- The emergence of a quantitative worldview and why everyone should care about mathematics
- Entertaining ideas in Renaissance Italy
- AI in the dock
- Message in a bottle: Philipp Frank’s last manuscript restored
- The hidden life of molecular biology
- Some good reasons to write a book review
- The metaphysical elements of the unity of science
- Middle path realism and anti-realism
- Weiner on the Standard Interpretation of Frege
- A useful overview of contemporary debates about scientific objectivity
- Real quantitativeness: what formal investigations can(not) show
- Niels Bohr’s experimentalist approach to understanding quantum mechanics
- The many vices of self-assessment
- Kate Crawford’s contribution to the AI industry
- Prudential people and moral brains
- History as a moral endeavor
- Newton’s secrets revealed
- Steven Pinker defends a damagingly irrational conception of reason
- Women and networks in the late Renaissance
- The cultural legacy of Galileo and the problematic concept of myth
- Kant’s two worlds
- Ike’s folly in Greenland
- Helmholtz and energy conservation reconsidered
- Mathematicians are certain but open to new ideas
- Knowledge and its challenges
- Lessons from the small and big screens
- Unimpeded volition
- The cosmic toolkit for all possible observations
- Shedding new light on Newton’s optical writings
- Quantum foundations in a nutshell
- Secret bombs in a democratic society
- Interpreting Bergson: rubbing up against the grain of our intellectual habits
- Responses to holism, but no arguments against
- Early modern medical interaction
- A metaphor dismantled
- Deduction as a dialogical device
- The unity of Plato’s Academy
- The French disease in literature
- Are beautiful theories better theories?
- Small Bohr
- Cash, credit and drugs
- Reproductive justice beyond the pill
- Linguistic intuitions and the faculty of language
- The non-relativistic Einstein
- Playing with your heart?
- The geopolitics of book publishing and book reviews
- Essential readings: contemporary debates on Kit Fine’s philosophy
- From Aristotle to systems biology
- Animal welfare: science without hard problems
- It was the best of virus research
- Technology leads the way
- Do free will skeptics swallow their own medicine?
- The Mystery of the Majorana affair
- Science and the church
- Test-tube ethics
- The rule in the knowledge machine
- Fastening the philosophical buttons
- Good thinking with poisons
- The fortunes of modern oceanography
- Metascientific language and the changing identities of modern science
- Would we lie to you?
- What caused the Ice Age extinctions?
- Demystifying Manhattan
- Kuhn’s Lowell lectures
- WHO cares: a history of light and shadows
- Tales from the extinction imaginary
- Out of harm’s way
- How did the atomic hypothesis turn into a well-founded theory?
- Reclaiming the lives and experiences of pioneering women in mathematics
- The far-reaching impact of dispositionalism?
- Correction to: Trust issues
- Exploring the limits of decision theory, or refuting it?
- It’s time to talk
- Can humans dream of electric sheep?
- Scientific academies: the early years
- The philosophers’ stone
- Places matter: virtues and challenges of geophysics in Bergen
- Monopolizing contraception
- Learning moral rules
- The lives and ideas of the Vienna Circle
- Portraying the relativist spectrum
- Alchemical reading in action
- Doctor, philosopher, and much more
- Book of epidemics
- Playing with (experimental) fire
- Rampling and the Ripley Corpus
- Alchemical exegesis
- Judith Simon (ed.): The Routledge handbook of trust and philosophy
- Active and passive concept change
- The spirit of Darwinism
- Bernard Bolzano’s early essays on mathematics and method
- Planetary science through an ethnographic telescope
- The end of phantasmagoria
- Quine—structuralism and all
- How to make sense of science
- Power matters
- The pope of condensed matter physics
- Treating trauma
- An invitation to truthmaker theory
- Thinking about scientific thinking
- Occupational germs
- A fish-hook for biologists: will they take the bait?
- The importance of mathematical surplus
- Philosophy needs to face up to the global problems of our times
- The Academy’s best kept secrets
- The environment of the people
- Science, scientism, and never-ending myths about the scientistic stance
- A big picture perspective on the philosophy of chemistry
- A revisionist history of the trade in contraceptives
- All your Bayes (are) belong to us
- Following the chromosome through history
- Friends of the cactus
- The science of the Cosmos and all the art in between
- The original vaccine
- Timing discoveries, timing updated editions
- Meditations on …
- A productive exchange of views on race
- Prospects for non-negationist regulative epistemology
- A pioneering life in the clouds
- Correlation isn’t good enough: causal explanation and Big Data
- Minding the mountains
- Seventeen lectures in the history of physics
- Analyzing and labeling evolution in modern drug therapy
- Consolidating a new approach in the philosophy of science
- Life in Prague
- An inconvenient truth: the end of western scientific culture
- At the precipice now, in eternal safety thereafter?
- New frontiers in the aesthetics of science
- If genes exist, then theories and models exist
- Are there really no such things as theories?
- On French on theories and representation
- A French botanist in North America
- Narrative as cognitive instrument
- Antarctic conservation
- Chinese medicine in America
- Computer-aided lives
- Reckoning with assessment: can we responsibly innovate?
- Living climate change
- Halverson’s non-equivalent concepts of equivalence
- Science in the press
- Can’t see the forest for the sleaze
- Laying the foundation for the Galileo myth
- A succinct primer to philosophy of science
- A stellar career in a male universe
- Cyborg futures
- The perfecting, or near-perfecting, of philosophy
- Death and dissection in Belgium
- Some historical scaffolding for mathematical structuralism
- The visible and invisible atom: from Hiroshima to Fukushima
- Other stars, other planets, and other life: a primer that goes two-thirds of the way
- The depths of the sea
- The medicalization of autonomy
- Conscientious refusals to provide reproductive health care
- A clear mind and a gurgling laugh
- The social construction of human categories
- The fortunes of social science within the American National Science Foundation
- Modeling modeling
- Science and public policy
- Research infrastructures: the European way to Big Science
- Strategies for knowledge transfer
- Staging cancer research
- The anatomy of gender
- The Victorian invention of dog breeds
- Henry Moseley, between history and memory
- Can you hear the writing on the wall?
- Reviews in the time of COVID
- Social epistemology: what’s in a name?
- The X-Men and their networks of power
- Shedding light on a neglected physicist of international importance
- Assessing empirically based ethics
- Download robot ethics updates
- Pocketable philosophy of biology
- How real is the quantum?
- Venereal disease and the blame game
- Revolution without progress
- The early modern subject of experience
- Experimentation, “models” and the turn to practice
- Humankind, human nature, and misanthropy
- Continuity, containment, and coincidence: Leibniz in the history of the exact sciences
- Depicting Watt: contextualism, myopia and the long view
- Extreme science
- The logic and politics of cosmology
- Watt a legend!
- Models in ecology: ubiquitous, idealized, useful
- Watt as an ‘improver’ and chemist
- Building up steam
- A resourceful account of sustainability
- The scientific hypothesis is here to stay
- The epistemic fights of the twenty-first century
- The ‘sedimented meanings and compounded politics’ of skin lighteners
- Dr. James’s Fever Powder and other Georgian remedies
- Roads to nowhere: footnotes on a classic
- The science of skulls from a global perspective
- Paracelsus the mystical revolutionary
- A concise history of mathematics, but not for philosophers
- The last Viennese polymath
- Science and the state in nineteenth century Prussia
- Towards a new cosmopolitan social contract: social trends and political challenges
- An erudite exchange between metaphysics and physics
- Biography as a two-edged sword
- Daughters of Selene
- Big data in the experimental life sciences
- A new English translation of Poincaré’s masterpiece
- Calling algorithms by their name (and engineers’ and philosophers’ novel teamwork)
- A scientific Jacob’s ladder: Tom McLeish’s natural philosophy
- Five years… and still going
- Malte-Ludolf Babin, Gerd van den Heuvel, and Regina Stuber (Eds): Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Sämtliche Schriften und Briefe. Erste Reihe: Allgemeiner politischer und historischer Briefwechsel. Volume 25 (August 1705–April 1706). Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2017, lxii + 959 pp, €259.95 HB
- Star gazing
- The return of plasticity
- Rabies and the city
- Defending scientific naturalism in philosophy of art
- Inside remembering from the outside
- Calculating surprises: a review for a philosophy of computer simulations
- Evidence of evidence in higher-order evidence
- Enablement, the adjacent possible and the becoming of the biosphere
- The devout but unorthodox Isaac Newton
- Making room for science
- A new justification of induction
- The peculiar power of historical science
- A history of the continuum, without too many gaps
- New twists on the great chain of being
- Reading the paper to know the past
- Deep learning and the sociology of human-level artificial intelligence
- Kuhn’s Structure : revolutionary thinking in turbulent times
- Cold comforts
- Reflections on the History of Science and the Modern University
- Upholding morphological freedom
- Not one North Pole, but many
- Wigwam Tonic and Other Medicines
- Soft selling a powers-friendly ontology
- Epistemic ideals
- The philosophical significance of social sciences
- Concluding unscientific image
- Throwing new light on Kepler’s contribution to optics
- The best of all possible books?
- Too many demons, not enough details
- Einstein in exile
- The world view of a biologist
- Seek and you will find
- Some perspective on perspectivism
- A rich resource on scientific knowledge
- The strange death, ongoing resurrection, and renewed life of John Tyndall
- Undecidability and interpretation: metatheoretic distinctions in Western philosophy
- Mechanism and biology in the seventeenth century
- Stalking the eighteenth-century empiricists
- Why history and philosophy of science matters
- Surveying science and the state
- Risking reputation in the colonies
- Resisting Scientific Realism with or Without van Fraassen’s Darwinian Explanation
- Are biological functions selected effects?
- Instrumentalism revitalized
- Where is ‘where is everybody?’?
- Resisting scientific anti-realism
- Still resisting: replies to my critics
- Resistance is futile!
- Companion and commentary on Alfred Wallace
- The unexplainable
- An empiricist view of reality
- An idea to an image: the prediction and confirmation of black holes
- Science and patents
- A glimpse on European science policy from the viewpoint of SSH research infrastructures
- Plagueonomics and the rise of economancers
- Following Feynman’s path
- Debunking the illusion of a gulf between science and philosophy: towards a new kind of theorization
- Block party
- Pathological illustrations between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries
- ‘Robot’ is a machine that makes the functions of a man
- Exemplifying Metascience
- In the footsteps of Galileo: raising the twenty-first-century profile of Father Angelo Secchi
- The truth about ‘post-truth’
- From saying to seeing
- Almost but not quite human: defining the human species through infrahuman figures
- Transforming economics with a film projector
- If only it were all a game
- Preserved and safeguarded copies of Vesalius’s fabrica
- Medicine as unsuccessful inquiry
- The early modern information age
- The post-war shaping of general relativity and gravitation studies
- Peirce’s phenomenology
- Putnam’s Last Papers
- Reply to Dennett, Gardner and Rubin
- Finance in the land of make-believe
- The Bayesian perspective in the post-truth era
- A review of actor-network theory and crime studies
- Clever evolution
- The agent concept is a scientific tool
- The rationality of mother nature
- Hermann Helmholtz from A to Z
- Niccolò Tartaglia: new historical insights
- The illusion of doubt
- In search of respect: the struggles of Indonesian physicians against the Dutch colonialists, Indonesian despots, and the agents of global health
- An apt celebration of Agassi’s Career
- Climatography for the Anthropocene
- The Darwinian revolution and its counterrevolutionaries then and now
- Correction to: Review socially extended epistemology
- Science and religion at war about war
- The uneven space of scientific collaboration
- Material entanglements and the “two cultures” in fin – de – siècle magazines
- Wallace’s World: Darwin in reverse—From natural selection to natural theology?
- Going up?
- Exploring thought experiments
- Two symposia worth reading: science, religion, and the history of mechanics
- Latour on politics, modernity, and climate change
- Causality in medicine, and its relation to action, mechanisms, and probability
- Making many kinds of moral progress
- An Insightful Companion
- Beyond human nurture
- Decoding the Darwinian mother lode
- The world is my representation: Direct realism and the extended mind
- J. Adam Carter, Andy Clark, Jesper Kallestrup, S. Orestis Palermos, and Duncan Pritchard (eds.): Socially Extended Epistemology . Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018, 336pp, £55.00 HB
- …and three centuries of steam power
- Principles of weighing water
- Science in cold war America
- Non-teleological progress in hydrostatics from practitioners’ knowledge to scientific knowledge
- Under pressure
- Toward a European history of scientific materialism
- Challenging the fake news about Mileva Einstein-Marić and setting the record straight
- Towards a philosophy of oncology
- The mind(s) brought to light
- Getting to know Adam Smith
- A review of theoretical virtues in science debate
- Naturalness in physics: just a matter of aesthetics?
- Beyond or above? The adynamical explanation meets ontological contextuality without a fundamental level
- Decision theory (and a little of that human touch)
- Is it time for a Nietzschean genealogy of laws of nature?
- Evolutionary theory: conceptual controversies and pluralism
- A finite review of a finite book on an infinite topic
- A new collection of studies on Spinoza
- The puzzle of idealization
- Out of the frame
- Talking bipedal ape writes book
- A syllabus of (some of) Gingras’ errors
- Art, politics, and particle physics, with one eye on the past
- Rehabilitating the historical sciences
- When wild nature meets the soundscape of modernity
- Unravelling the sequence of events
- A dialogue with the damned
- In defence of dialogue
- Human subject research
- From the division of polyps to the multiplication of animalcules: the truth behind Saussure’s discoveries
- Scientific devotion
- Learning to understand Quine
- What happens when an anti-realist and a realist read each other’s book?
- Some remarks on phenomenology’s past
- Response to critics: how religious beliefs distort historical understanding
- Rescuing Renouvier
- Should we distrust medical interventions?
- What if there are laws of nature? Reflections on van Fraassen’s Laws and Symmetry
- Science and humanity: virtues and vices
- Feminist criticism in biology exemplifies philosophy of science
- Faith reason and dialogue
- Stories of ancestors
- Where science ends and scientism begins
- Careful with knowledge ascriptions!
- Peter Menzies, Difference maker
- Reflections on a classic in scientific realism, 20 years later
- Correction to: Philosophy in the age of science
- ‘Just stick to the science’ is not enough
- Insight into meaningful living
- Epistolary practices in the Enlightenment
- Formalization and mathematical practices
- Science of science communication
- An indispensable guide to evolutionary ethics
- The generous ontology of thin objects
- A persistent particle ontology for Quantum field theory
- The ultimate articulation of the account of explanatory understanding
- Philosophical method and the limits of empirical science
- Laws of nature in Kant’s critical philosophy
- State formation and the draining of the fens
- Philosophical and scientific perspectives on cosmology
- Reflections on a future of sex with robots
- Erased history: the forgotten Arabic sources of the Western Renaissance
- Consciousness all over the place
- Science and technology as a mixed blessing
- An uneven introduction to (too) many forgotten women scientists, studded with many interesting (if not necessarily on-topic) facts
- Philosophy in the age of science
- Four years, and 12 issues later
- The evolving periodic table
- An intriguing development of Husserl’s project
- Understanding, explanation, and intelligibility
- The price of sociality
- The commercial machine: selling botanical knowledge at the turn of the eighteenth century
- How the scientific journal came of age in the nineteenth century
- Reality and the ashtray
- Changing your mind, closing your mind
- A partisan introduction to the philosophy of mathematics
- What is inductive risk?
- Thomas Kuhn, The American philosopher
- Augustine meets Meno: the many faces of temporality
- Physics and the manifest image of time
- Looking for collective scientific knowledge
- Broca’s area in Broca’s era
- Hayek vs. Keynes
- Explanation and reality: comment on Chakravartty
- Feelings in Guts and Bones: Reply to Lewis, Magnus, and Strevens
- Inferring particles
- Cautious realism and middle range ontology
- A minimalist Humeanism?
- Tough love for science
- Reflections on game theory
- Technical expertise in colonial Australia
- Process philosophy, reconsidered
- Remaking participation: or, cheering on participation
- Superstition and science
- Putting sex and gender at the center of sexual selection theory
- A reassessment of civilization
- Modelling anatomy in eighteenth-century Italy
- Identifying a classic in history, philosophy, and social studies of science
- The aesthetics of evolution
- A comprehensive guide to the New Mechanistic Philosophy
- The dawning of the age of graphene
- Another fine footnote to Plato
- The search for planets
- Authors’ response: the virtues of minimalism in ontology and epistemology
- Super-Humeanism: insufficiently naturalistic and insufficiently explanatory
- Atomism, holism and structuralism: costs and benefits of a minimalist ontology of the world
- Model-based science: diverse perspectives, little cross-disciplinary dialogue
- Critical perspectives on sport, technology, and science
- Constructions of exclusion: the processes and outcomes of technological imperialism
- Tracing the evolution of telegraphy and society in nineteenth and twentieth century America
- Scientists making a difference, editors not so much
- Must philosophy be constrained?
- Boundaries, blunders, and scientific imperialism
- A comprehensive study of abstractionism
- Can Homo erectus put an end to Chomsky’s mechanistic metaphysics?
- A new perspective on Kuhn—in Spanish
- Revisiting Amerigo Vespucci’s biography and his role in the discovery of America
- We need progress in ideas about how to achieve progress
- Genes, Determinism and More
- The future of the reduction and emergence debate?
- Biogeography, evolution, and the arrogations of the Darwin industry
- A guide to nineteenth-century French history and philosophy of science
- Kuhn’s Image of Science
- A coffee-table book on “the art of science”
- James B. Conant and the fulfillment of three life ambitions
- How theoretical physics makes progress
- Understanding in epistemology and philosophy of science: a complicated relationship
- A rich study of James’ pragmatism
- Early modern conceptions and treatments of space and spatiality
- Scholars and their books
- Culture’s essential tension
- Now in color and video with sound: scholarship on the internet
- Cases as methodological tools
- You are being watched
- In all probability, quite handy
- The scientific life of Warren McCulloch: from autobiography to biography
- ‘Re-enchanting’ the world? Science meets philosophy in pursuit of wisdom
- Robo-ref? Technology and officiating in sport
- Science and ethics on a (very) shaky foundation
- Reflections on the evolutionary basis of morality
- Snakes and methods
- The mechanical philosophy, mechanisms, and values
- Correction to: An analytic perspective on panpsychism
- The latest telling of a remarkable life in Victorian science
- Locke’s Fusion of the Scientific and Manifest Images
- Embracing the nature of complex interactions: climate change and human survival
- From species to classification and back again
- “Beyond a trace…”
- The environment in the history of Ottoman Egypt
- Confronting insanity at the Old Bailey
- Luck versus Cunning
- On rotation, for the curious technician and engineer
- A pluralist account of non-causal explanation in science and mathematics
- Postmodern Davy
- The play’s the thing: science and satire in the English enlightenment
- Epistemology without concepts?
- Where the pasts and futures of science and technology studies meet
- Frege on thinking and thoughts
- Are de Broglie and Bohm right?
- Reflections on the origins and importance of our fields
- The high cost of water
- Mechanisms can be complex
- Relativism as a means to alleviate biology from genomic reductionism: But is the remedy effective?
- Science, environment and empire on the frozen continent
- Language is not merely a means of communication
- The lingering specter of Lysenkoism
- On the Couch with Freud and Kuhn
- A pragmatist challenge to constraint laws
- Author’s response
- Emotions and social imaginaries
- Enactive emotions and imaginative association: a multi-layered account
- Tracing comparative historicism between the Darwins
- How not to write an introduction to relativism
- Reply to my Critics: On explanations by constraint
- Of strawberries and energy conservation
- Mechanism and agency in science from premodern automata to cybernetics
- A new way of understanding the wave function
- Databall
- Mathematics as hammer: the makings of the masters tool
- The relics of scientists
- Gaston Bachelard as a surrationalist
- With great power comes great responsibility: facing the challenges posed by the prospect of human enhancement
- Philosophy of science for the uninitiated
- The life and death of magic in the canonical history of philosophy
- Appropriate roles for ethical and social values in scientific activity
- Finding the Metaphysics Within Quantum Mechanics
- Complexity and its context in science and religion
- Marconi’s good fortune and his convenient death
- Geometry and geography of morality
- Reasons without argument
- An analytic perspective on panpsychism
- The role of mathematics in science
- Rewriting the script on solutions
- The social construction of real human kinds
- Chinese plants rediscovered
- A classic of Bayesian confirmation theory
- Kepler in a witch’s world
- The secret lives of women
- Knowledge and groups
- Genetics, behavior, and lessons from C. elegans
- More new essays on epistemic agency
- To be rational, or not to be rational—that is the question
- Enlarging the picture, enlarging the audience: response to my three critics
- Structures of explanations for the scientific revolution
- Saving the phenomena: the scientific revolution(s) explained
- Enter the terminator
- Evolutionary chance and contingency: in search for systematics
- Not just another philosophy of language book
- Rendering satellites more visible
- The many lives of Alexandre Koyré
- A handbook for social change
- What, if anything, does quantum field theory explain?
- How the West was won
- What lies beneath: Early modern discovery and The Invention of Science
- Metascience is on the move
- Hume’s science of man as a Newtonian artefact
- Reflections on recollections: a Jewish mathematician’s life
- How to deal with complex technology and its unexpected effects?
- A history of American psychology
- The politics of the acceptable: citizen science in a troubled age
- Covering the basics in the philosophy of science
- Assessing the credence of Bayesian epistemology
- The counter-revolution over multiple realization
- Ethics for an uncertain future
- What is noise, and what isn’t?
- Blinded by (economic) science
- Disrupting our picture of nature: eighteenth-century reordering of the natural order
- Myths my teacher told me
- Hunter’s multifaceted Boyle
- Biology and political ideologies: on the futility of scientific justification for political values, now and in the past
- Space as place, not program
- Text and context in the history of medieval thought
- Toward a philosophy of discovery: Friedrich Steinle’s exploratory experiments
- Old questions, new contexts
- Copernicus: paving the way for Kepler
- Forecasting the weather
- A deliciously accessible introduction to quantum mechanics
- The role of biology in philosophy
- Understanding case studies
- Stasis and change: the evolution of a philosopher
- Taking stock of the metaphysics of science debate: drawing disciplinary frontiers
- Harding then and now
- Pioneering women in astronomy and aerospace
- An introduction to the scientific realism debate
- Do we really experience temporal passage?
- A new approach to philosophy of science textbooks
- Math and its uses: it is complicated
- Destination: a career in STEM
- The politics and power of astrology in Renaissance Europe
- Naturalization/humanization
- An entangled bank: Charles Darwin and romanticism
- One hundred years of general relativity
- Exciting days
- Time, inside and out
- The state of the art on Newton
- Placing universal grammar on the agenda of evolutionary linguistics?
- A bit of guidance on doing global science
- The functions of models
- How Nature changed