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628Life in a Physical World: The Place of the Life SciencesIn Thomas Uebel, Stephan Hartmann, Wenceslao Gonzalez, Marcel Weber, Dennis Dieks & Friedrich Stadler (eds.), The Present Situation in the Philosophy of Science, Springer. pp. 155--168. 2010.
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172Fitness made physical: The supervenience of biological concepts revisitedPhilosophy of Science 63 (3): 411-431. 1996.The supervenience and multiple realizability of biological properties have been invoked to support a disunified picture of the biological sciences. I argue that supervenience does not capture the relation between fitness and an organism's physical properties. The actual relation is one of causal dependence and is, therefore, amenable to causal explanation. A case from optimality theory is presented and interpreted as a microreductive explanation of fitness difference. Such microreductions can ha…Read more
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135Critical Notice: D arwinian ReductionismBiology and Philosophy 23 (1): 143-152. 2008.This notice provides a critical discussion of some of the issues from Alex Rosenberg’s Darwinian Reductionism, in particular proper functions and the relationship of proximate and ultimate biology, developmental programs and genocentrism, biological laws, the principle of natural selection as a fundamental law, genetic determinism, and the definition of “reductionism.”
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1201Philosophie der LebenswissenschaftenInformation Philosophie 4 14-27. 2013.This paper summarizes (in German) recent tendencies in the philosophy of the life sciences.
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296The aim and structure of ecological theoryPhilosophy of Science 66 (1): 71-93. 1999.I present an attempt at an explication of the ecological theory of interspecific competition, including its explanatory role in community ecology and evolutionary biology. The account given is based on the idea that law-like statements play an important role in scientific theories of this kind. I suggest that the principle of competitive exclusion is such a law, and that it is evolutionarily invariant. The principle's empirical status is defended and implications for the ongoing debates on the e…Read more
Genève, GE, Switzerland
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Biology |
| General Philosophy of Science |
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
Areas of Interest
| Epistemology |
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Mind |