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11Galen's Remedies in the Early Modern Period: Traditions, Theories, Transformations, and Trades (1400–1750)Springer Nature Switzerland. 2026.Surviving the demise of his humoral pathology and anatomy, Galen’s works on simple and compound remedies (the so-called ‘galenicals’) formed the backbone of Western pharmacology up until the Industrial Revolution. Over its long and multicultural tradition—spanning the Roman Empire and Byzantium, through Islamicate societies, India, and China, to the New World and even Japan—Galenic pharmacopoeia evolved to incorporate new remedies, foods, philosophical rationales, and modes of preparation, inclu…Read more
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16DarwinIn Aviezer Tucker (ed.), A Companion to the Philosophy of History and Historiography, Wiley-blackwell. 2011.This chapter contains sections titled: Progress and the Tree of History Discovering the Past Teleological Thinking References and Further Reading.
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27Getting over systematics: David M. Williams and Malte C. Ebach: Foundations of systematics and biogeography. New York: Springer, 2008, xviii+310pp, 62.95€ HB (review)Metascience 21 (2): 383-386. 2012.
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1709The Salem Region: Two Mindsets about ScienceIn Massimo Pigliucci & Maarten Boudry (eds.), Philosophy of Pseudoscience: Reconsidering the Demarcation Problem, University of Chicago Press. pp. 397. 2013.This chapter distinguishes between two mindsets about science—the deductivist mindset and inductivist mindset—and explores the cognitive styles relating to authority and tradition in both science and pseudoscience. The deductivist tends to see problems as questions to be resolved by deduction from known theory or principle. The inductivist sees problems as questions to be resolved by discovery. Those leaning towards a deductivist mindset may find results that conflict with prior theoretical comm…Read more
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34Selfhood and the Soul: Essays on Ancient Thought and Literature in Honour of Christopher Gill (edited book)Oxford University Press UK. 2016.Selfhood and the Soul is a collection of new and original essays in honour of Christopher Gill, Emeritus Professor of Ancient Thought at the University of Exeter. Although they all share the same concern - the experience of being a person and the question of how best to live - as in the work of the honorand himself they are distinguished by a diversity of approach and subject matter, taking the reader on a journey from ancient philosophy to medical writing via discussions of topics as varied as …Read more
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39Wine and Words in Classical Antiquity and the Middle AgesThe Classical Review 57 (2): 480-482. 2007.
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205Land and sea: Italy and the Mediterranean in the Roman discourse of diningAmerican Journal of Philology 124 (3): 359-375. 2003.Discussions of dining in Roman literature often focus on moralising discourses of the satirists in the imperial period. This article seeks to extend the discussion in four areas: (1) a broader temporal frame, which runs from Cato the Elder to Athenaeus; (2) a wider cultural frame, which sets Greek commentaries of Rome alongside Rome's attitudes towards the Greeks; (3) a cultural range beyond Rome's elite, to the majority of the population; (4) a more ambitious literary frame, which presents Gale…Read more
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3380Crossing the Milvian bridge: When do evolutionary explanations of belief debunk belief?In Paul E. Griffiths & John S. Wilkins (eds.), Crossing the Milvian bridge: When do evolutionary explanations of belief debunk belief?. pp. 201-231. 2015.Ever since Darwin people have worried about the sceptical implications of evolution. If our minds are products of evolution like those of other animals, why suppose that the beliefs they produce are true, rather than merely useful? In this chapter we apply this argument to beliefs in three different domains: morality, religion, and science. We identify replies to evolutionary scepticism that work in some domains but not in others. The simplest reply to evolutionary scepticism is that the truth o…Read more
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6002The Origins of Species ConceptsDissertation, University of Melbourne. 2003.The longstanding species problem in biology has a history that suggests a solution, and that history is not the received history found in many texts written by biologists or philosophers. The notion of species as the division into subordinate groups of any generic predicate was the staple of logic from Aristotle through the middle ages until quite recently. However, the biological species concept during the same period was at first subtly and then overtly different. Unlike the logic sense, which…Read more
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32Does Philosophy have a role in science today?COSMOS: The Science of Everything (18): 44-45. 2007.
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47The appearance of Lamarckism in the evolution of cultureIn J. Laurent & J. Nightingale (eds.), Darwinism and Evolutionary Economics, Edward Elgar. pp. 160-183. 2001.
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1453The Hunting of the SNaRC: A Snarky Solution to the Species ProblemPhilosophy, Theory, and Practice in Biology 10 (1). 2018.We argue that the logical outcome of the cladistics revolution in biological systematics, and the move towards rankless phylogenetic classification of nested monophyletic groups as formalized in the PhyloCode, is to eliminate the species rank along with all the others and simply name clades. We propose that the lowest level of formally named clade be the SNaRC, the Smallest Named and Registered Clade. The SNaRC is an epistemic level in the classification, not an ontic one. Naming stops at that l…Read more
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237The Advantages of Theft over Toil: The Design Inference and Arguing from IgnoranceBiology and Philosophy 16 (5): 709-722. 2001.Intelligent design theorist William Dembski hasproposed an ``explanatory filter'' fordistinguishing between events due to chance,lawful regularity or design. We show that ifDembski's filter were adopted as a scientificheuristic, some classical developments inscience would not be rational, and thatDembski's assertion that the filter reliablyidentifies rarefied design requires ignoringthe state of background knowledge. Ifbackground information changes even slightly,the filter's conclusion will var…Read more
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155The roles, reasons and restrictions of science blogsTrends in Ecology and Evolution 23 (8): 411-413. 2008.Over the past few years, blogging (“web logging”) has become a major social movement, and as such includes blogs by scientists about science. Blogs are highly idiosyncratic, personal and ephemeral means of public expression, and yet they contribute to the current practice and reputation of science as much as, if not more than, any popular scientific work or visual presentation. It is important, therefore, to understand this phenomenon.
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125An oft-repeated claim is that there is information in some biological entity or process, most especially in genes. Some of these claims derive from the Central Dogma, population genetics, and the neo-Darwinian program. Others derive from attacks upon evolution, in an attempt to show that “information cannot be created” by natural selection. In this paper I will try to show that the term “information” is a homonym for a range of distinct notions, and that these notions are either of concrete prop…Read more
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2318Biological essentialism and the tidal change of natural kindsScience & Education 22 (2): 221-240. 2013.The vision of natural kinds that is most common in the modern philosophy of biology, particularly with respect to the question whether species and other taxa are natural kinds, is based on a revision of the notion by Mill in A System of Logic. However, there was another conception that Whewell had previously captured well, which taxonomists have always employed, of kinds as being types that need not have necessary and sufficient characters and properties, or essences. These competing views emplo…Read more
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2265Selection without replicators: the origin of genes, and the replicator/interactor distinction in etiobiologyBiology and Philosophy 27 (2): 215-239. 2012.Genes are thought to have evolved from long-lived and multiply-interactive molecules in the early stages of the origins of life. However, at that stage there were no replicators, and the distinction between interactors and replicators did not yet apply. Nevertheless, the process of evolution that proceeded from initial autocatalytic hypercycles to full organisms was a Darwinian process of selection of favourable variants. We distinguish therefore between Neo-Darwinian evolution and the related W…Read more
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2298Could God create Darwinian accidents?Zygon 47 (1): 30-42. 2012.Abstract Charles Darwin, in his discussions with Asa Gray and in his published works, doubted whether God could so arrange it that exactly the desired contingent events would occur to cause particular outcomes by natural selection. In this paper, I argue that even a limited or neo-Leibnizian deity could have chosen a world that satisfied some arbitrary set of goals or functions in its outcomes and thus answer Darwin's conundrum. In more general terms, this supports the consistency of natural sel…Read more
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8687Essentialism in philosophy is the position that things, especially kinds of things, have essences, or sets of properties, that all members of the kind must have, and the combination of which only members of the kind do, in fact, have. It is usually thought to derive from classical Greek philosophy and in particular from Aristotle’s notion of “what it is to be” something. In biology, it has been claimed that pre-evolutionary views of living kinds, or as they are sometimes called, “natu-ral kinds”…Read more
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155The Nature of Classification: Relationships and kinds in the natural sciencesPalgrave-Macmillan. 2013.The Nature of Classification discusses an old and generally ignored issue in the philosophy of science: natural classification. It argues for classification to be a sometimes theory-free activity in science, and discusses the existence of scientific domains, theory-dependence of observation, the inferential relations of classification and theory, and the nature of the classificatory activity in general. It focuses on biological classification, but extends the discussion to physics, psychiatry, m…Read more
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
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| Philosophy of Biology |
| History |
| Religious Studies |
| Philosophy of Science, Misc |
| General Philosophy of Science |
| Philosophy of Religion |
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