•  40
    Agents and norms in the new economics of science
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 31 (2): 224-238. 2001.
    In this article, the author focuses on Philip Kitcher's and Alvin Goldman's economic models of the social character of scientific knowledge production. After introducing some relevant methodological issues in the social sciences and characterizing Kitcher's and Goldman's models, the author goes on to show that special problems arise directly from the concept of an agent invoked in the models. The author argues that the two distinct concepts of agents, borrowed from economics and cognitive psycho…Read more
  •  724
    Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Aggression
    with Elizabeth Cashdan
    Human Nature 23 (1): 1-4. 2012.
    The papers in this volume present varying approaches to human aggression, each from an evolutionary perspective. The evolutionary studies of aggression collected here all pursue aspects of patterns of response to environmental circumstances and consider explicitly how those circumstances shape the costs and benefits of behaving aggressively. All the authors understand various aspects of aggression as evolved adaptations but none believe that this implies we are doomed to continued violence, but …Read more
  •  23
    Confronting Variation in the Social and Behavioral Sciences
    Philosophy of Science 83 (5): 909-920. 2016.
    I pose problems for the views that human nature should be the object of study in the social and behavioral sciences and that a concept of human nature is needed to guide research in these sciences. I proceed by outlining three research programs in the social sciences, each of which confronts aspects of human variation. Next, I present Elizabeth Cashdan and Grant Ramsey’s related characterizations of human nature. I go on to argue that the research methodologies they each draw on are more product…Read more
  •  258
    Heritability
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2015.