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Adrian Currie

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    65
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  • All publications (65)
  •  140
    Review of Evidential Reasoning in Archaeology - Robert Chapman and Alison Wylie, Evidential Reasoning in Archaeology. London: Bloomsbury Academic (2016), 264 pp., $82.00 (cloth)
    Philosophy of Science 84 (4): 782-790. 2017.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsPhilosophy of Archaeology
  •  101
    Creativity and Philosophy
    British Journal of Aesthetics 60 (2): 225-229. 2020.
    Creativity and PhilosophyBerys Gaut and Matthew Kieran Routledge. 2018. pp. 394. £30.99.
    Aesthetics
  •  98
    Existential Risk, Creativity & Well-Adapted Science
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science. forthcoming.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  107
    Creativity Without Agency: Evolutionary Flair & Aesthetic Engagement
    with Derek Turner and Derek Turner*
    Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 10 (n/a). 2023.
    Common philosophical accounts of creativity align creative products and processes with a particular kind of agency: namely, that deserving of praise or blame. Considering evolutionary examples, we explore two ways of denying that creativity requires forms of agency. First, we argue that decoupling creativity from praiseworthiness comes at little cost: accepting that evolutionary processes are non-agential, they nonetheless exhibit many of the same characteristics and value associated with creati…Read more
    Common philosophical accounts of creativity align creative products and processes with a particular kind of agency: namely, that deserving of praise or blame. Considering evolutionary examples, we explore two ways of denying that creativity requires forms of agency. First, we argue that decoupling creativity from praiseworthiness comes at little cost: accepting that evolutionary processes are non-agential, they nonetheless exhibit many of the same characteristics and value associated with creativity. Second, we develop a ‘product-first’ account of creativity by which a process is creative just in case it gives rise to products deserving of certain forms of aesthetic engagement.
    Evolutionary Biology
  •  87
    Forces, friction and fractionation: Denis Walsh’s Organisms, agency, and evolution: 294 pp, Hardcover, ISBN: 1107122104 (review)
    with Andrew Buskell
    Biology and Philosophy 32 (6): 1341-1353. 2017.
    In Denis Walsh’s Organisms, Agency, and Evolution, he argues that new developments in the science of biology motivate a radical change to our metaphysical picture of life: what he calls ‘Situated Darwinism’. The central claim is that we should take the biological world to be at base about organisms, and organisms in a fundamentally teleological sense. We critically examine Walsh’s arguments and suggest further developments.
    Teleology
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