1 April 2017
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CO2, the greenhouse effect and global warming: from the pioneering work of Arrhenius and Callendar to today’s Earth System Models -
Science with a British Accent: Review of Making Nature: The History of a Scientific Journal, Melinda Baldwin, University of Chicago Press, 2015 -
Clinical dimensions of a ‘biological concept’: transsexualism and the interplay between etiological theory and clinical therapy -
Strategies of Containment: Containment (2015), A film by Peter Galison and Robb Moss. -
Prisoners of Solitude: Bringing History to Bear on Prison Health Policy -
Technologies of Distance: Review of “Eye in the Sky” (Raindog Films and Entertainment One Features, 2015). -
Review of Women in Science: The Stories Are All Around Us at University of Massachusetts, Amherst -
Getting the question right: Review of Alfred Wegener: Science, Exploration, and the Theory of Continental Drift, Mott T. Greene, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2015 -
Darwin’s Body-Snatchers? -
The waste crisis in Campania, South Italy: a historical perspective on an epidemiological controversy -
Was Queen Jane Seymour (1509–1537) Delivered by a Cesarean Section? -
Living in a Toxic World, 1800–2000 -
Process and Impact of Niels Bohr’s Visit to Japan and China in 1937: A Comparative Perspective -
Never pure: Review of Masterminding Nature: The Breeding of Animals, 1740–2010, by Margaret E. Derry, University of Toronto Press, 2015 -
Knowing By Number: Learning Math for Thinking Well -
La Moisissure et la Bactérie: Deconstructing the fable of the discovery of penicillin by Ernest Duchesne -
Arrival: The Circle of Life?: Review of Arrival, Denis Villeneuve, Paramount Pictures, 2016 (116minutes) -
Determining Nuclear Fingerprints: Glove Boxes, Radiation Protection, and the International Atomic Energy Agency -
Contents -
Risky Business: Review of The Knick, Cinemax Original Television Series, Season 1, 2014 -
Civilization VI and its Discontents: Review of Sid Meier’s Civilization VI (2016) -
Borrowing Physics’ “Epistemological Credit Card”: Review of Physics Envy: American Poetry and Science in the Cold War and After. Peter Middleton, University of Chicago Press, 2015 -
Imagining Anthropocene Futures: Review of The Water Knife by Paolo Bacigalupi, Vintage Books, New York, 2015; and The Wind Up Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi, Nightshade Books, New York, 2009. -
From forensic toxicology to biological chemistry: Normal arsenic and the hazards of sensitivity during the nineteenth century -
To understand this, let us step back in history: Review of A Remarkable Journey: The Story of Evolution, R. Paul Thompson, University of Chicago Press, 2015 -
Serving at the pleasure of the state: Review of Scientists at War: The Ethics of Cold War Weapons Research, Sarah Bridger, Harvard University Press, 2015 -
The turn toward toxins: an essay review -
Gender identity and the politics of etiology -
Introducing In Vivo -
The Lost Worlds of Messmore & Damon -
In defence of story-telling -
Epigenesis in Kant: Recent reconsiderations -
Mechanistic explanation, cognitive systems demarcation, and extended cognition -
Natural history and the formation of the human being: Kant on active forces -
Graph-based inductive reasoning -
Introduction: Kant and the empirical sciences -
Deflating Cold War rationality -
Did Samuel Clarke really disavow action at a distance in his correspondence with Leibniz?: Newton, Clarke, and Bentley on gravitation and action at a distance -
Taming theory with thought experiments: Understanding and scientific progress -
Linguistic turns: Scientific Babel, the language of science, and the science of language -
A choice-semantical approach to theoretical truth -
Newton and the ideal of exegetical success -
Democratic values and their role in maximizing the objectivity of science -
Locke on measurement -
Structural realism beyond physics -
Can the behavioral sciences self-correct? A social epistemic study -
Looking forward, not back: Supporting structuralism in the present -
Whewell on the classification of the sciences -
The re-emergence of hyphenated history-and-philosophy-of-science and the testing of theories of scientific change -
Forms of presentism in the history of science. Rethinking the project of historical epistemology -
Carnap on unified science -
Repertoires: A post-Kuhnian perspective on scientific change and collaborative research -
Overlapping ontologies and Indigenous knowledge. From integration to ontological self-determination -
From secondary causes to artificial instruments: Pierre-Sylvain Régis’s rethinking of scholastic accounts of causation -
Process tracing in political science: What’s the story? -
How we load our data sets with theories and why we do so purposefully -
Analogical reflection as a source for the science of life: Kant and the possibility of the biological sciences -
The experimenters’ regress reconsidered: Replication, tacit knowledge, and the dynamics of knowledge generation -
Philosophical bodies in early modern Europe -
Other histories, other sciences -
Structural realism versus deployment realism: A comparative evaluation -
Silent performances: Are “repertoires” really post-Kuhnian? -
The ontology of quantum field theory: Structural realism vindicated? -
Essentially narrative explanations -
Editorial board and publication information -
Pluto and the platypus: An odd ball and an odd duck – On classificatory norms -
‘Natures’ and ‘Laws’: The making of the concept of law of nature – Robert Grosseteste (c. 1168–1253) and Roger Bacon (1214/1220–1292) -
Quine’s ‘needlessly strong’ holism -
The many encounters of Thomas Kuhn and French epistemology -
Reactionary responses to the Bad Lot Objection -
Hermann Cohen’s Das Princip der Infinitesimal-Methode: The history of an unsuccessful book -
Kepler’s optics: Ocular anatomy, the visual faculty, and the continuity-discontinuity debate -
Kant on anatomy and the status of the life sciences -
Who was William Hyde Wollaston? -
Extensional scientific realism vs. intensional scientific realism -
Kepler: Analogies in the search for the law of refraction -
Introduction: Testing philosophical theories -
The contribution of the ontological turn in education: Some methodological and political implications -
Environmental Externalities and Weak Appropriability: Influences on Firm Pollution Reduction Technology Development -
Environmental Externalities and Weak Appropriability -
Two Upper Bounds on Consistency Strength of $negsquare_{aleph_{omega}}$ and Stationary Set Reflection at Two Successive $aleph_{n}$ -
Decision and optimization problems in the unreliable-circuit logic -
Minimizing disjunctive normal forms of pure first-order logic -
Relatively compatible operations in BCK-algebras and some related algebras -
If Addiction is not Best Conceptualized a Brain Disease, then What Kind of Disease is it? -
Squaring the Circle: Addiction, Disease and Learning -
What Is Wrong with the Brains of Addicts? -
The sense of agency – a phenomenological consequence of enacting sensorimotor schemes -
Self across time: the diachronic unity of bodily existence -
Types of abduction in tool behavior -
The phenomenology of self-presentation: describing the structures of intercorporeality with Erving Goffman -
No-Self and the phenomenology of agency -
Functions and mental representation: the theoretical role of representations and its real nature -
On the role of depersonalization in Merleau-Ponty -
Kantian Decision Making Under Uncertainty: Dignity, Price, and Consistency -
Quantifiers Defined by Parametric Extensions -
Revisiting Quine on Truth by Convention -
Hierarchical Propositions -
Referential Dependencies Between Conflicting Attitudes -
Review of Shé Hawke, Aquamorphia: falling for water