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76Perspectives on TimeReview of Metaphysics 53 (2): 443-443. 1999.This volume contains eighteen papers on various aspects of the philosophy of time. The contributions are supplemented by an editors’ introduction that outlines the history and nature of the problem areas dealt with in the contributed papers, and, in addition, provides capsule summaries of the contents of the contributed items.
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Interpreting Theories: The Case of Statistical MechanicsIn Peter Clark & Katherine Hawley (eds.), Philosophy of science today, Oxford University Press. pp. 276--284. 2003.
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71David Pearce. Roads to commensurability. Synthese library, vol. 187. D. Reidel Publishing Company, Dordrecht etc. 1987, xi + 253 pp (review)Journal of Symbolic Logic 56 (1): 355-356. 1991.
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111Creating Modern Probability: Its Mathematics, Physics and Philosophy in Historical PerspectiveJournal of Philosophy 91 (11): 622. 1994.
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119In the Wake of Chaos: Unpredictable Order in Dynamic Systems. Stephen H. Kellert (review)Philosophy of Science 64 (1): 184-185. 1997.
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41The Genesis and Evolution of Time (review)International Studies in Philosophy 18 (3): 61-62. 1986.
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73John Blackmore, Ludwig Boltzmann: His later life and philosophy, 1900–1906 book one: A documentary history. Book two: The philosopher. Dordrecht, kluwer academic publishers, 1995, cloth bk1 $89.50, bk2 $130.00 630632 (review)British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 47 (4): 630-632. 1996.
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122Interpreting theories: the case of statistical mechanicsBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 51 (4): 729-742. 2000.
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74Idealization and Explanation: A Case Study from Statistical MechanicsMidwest Studies in Philosophy 18 (1): 258-270. 1993.
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12Time, Reality, and RelativityIn R. Healey (ed.), Reduction, Time, and Relativity, Cambridge University Press. 1981.
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205Incongruous counterparts, intrinsic features and the substantiviality of spaceJournal of Philosophy 71 (9): 277-290. 1974.
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347
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1Real quantities and their sensible measuresIn Phillip Bricker & R. I. G. Hughes (eds.), Philosophical Perspectives on Newtonian Science, Mit Press. pp. 57--76. 1990.
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115What Is an Isolated System?The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 10 51-57. 2001.In this paper, I want to focus attention on ways in which the role of idealization in science has been rather neglected by standard methodology, and suggest that this distinct role for idealization is the truly important role it plays in science. Further, I suggest that there are a number of important cases in theoretical science where the issue of idealization is not the issue of misrepresentation in some sense. Rather, the question is which of several alternative idealizations correctly repres…Read more
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155Physics and Chance: Philosophical Issues in the Foundations of Statistical MechanicsCambridge University Press. 1993.Statistical mechanics is one of the crucial fundamental theories of physics, and in his new book Lawrence Sklar, one of the pre-eminent philosophers of physics, offers a comprehensive, non-technical introduction to that theory and to attempts to understand its foundational elements. Among the topics treated in detail are: probability and statistical explanation, the basic issues in both equilibrium and non-equilibrium statistical mechanics, the role of cosmology, the reduction of thermodynamics …Read more
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85Thermodynamics, Statistical Mechanics and the Complexity of ReductionsPSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1974. 1974.
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80Paul Valéry1 Valéry’s “Variation sur Descartes” excellently evokes the vanishing act that has haunted philosophy ever since Darwin overturned the Cartesian tradition. If my body is composed of nothing but a team of a few trillion robotic cells, mindlessly interacting to produce all the large-scale patterns that tradition would attribute to the nonmechanical workings of my mind, there seems to be nothing left over to be me. Lurking in Darwin’s shadow there is a bugbear: the incredible Disappearin…Read more
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89Tim Maudlin, Philosophy of Physics: Space and Time. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press , xiv+183 pp., $29.95 (review)Philosophy of Science 81 (2): 288-292. 2014.
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185The content of science, the methodology of science and Hempel's models of explanation and confirmationPhilosophical Studies 94 (1-2): 21-34. 1999.
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Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Mathematics |
| Philosophy of Physical Science |