•  1015
    Nature, Nurture, and Politics
    Biology and Philosophy 25 (3): 433-436. 2010.
    Political imputations in science are notoriously a tricky business. I addressed this issue in the context of the nature–nurture debate in the penultimate chapter of my book Making Sense of Heritability (Cambridge U. P. 2005). Although the book mainly dealt with the logic of how one should think about heritability of psychological differences, it also discussed the role of politics in our efforts to understand the dynamics of that controversy. I first argued that if a scholar publicly defends a c…Read more
  •  1366
    From genes to incest taboos
    In W. H. Durham & A. P. Wolf (ed.), Incest, Inbreeding, and the Incest Taboo: The State of Knowledge at the Turn of the Century, Stanford University Press. pp. 109-120. 2004.
  •  71
    This article reviews the book "Modeling Rationality, Morality and Evolution" edited by Peter Danielson.
  •  433
    Women in Philosophy: Problems with the Discrimination Hypothesis
    with Rafael de Clercq
    Academic Questions 27 (4): 461-473. 2014.
    A number of philosophers attribute the underrepresentation of women in philosophy largely to bias against women or some kind of wrongful discrimination. They cite six sources of evidence to support their contention: (1) gender disparities that increase along the path from undergraduate student to full time faculty member; (2) anecdotal accounts of discrimination in philosophy; (3) research on gender bias in the evaluation of manuscripts, grants, and curricula vitae in other academic disciplines;…Read more
  •  63
    Psychology Without Principle of Charity
    Dialectica 40 (3): 229-240. 1986.
    SummaryIn this article I am criticizing Davidson's claim that psychological description and explanation are impossible without a strong assumption of rationality of the subject. I am trying to dispute his thesis that presupposition of coherence between propositional attitudes must be treated as a constitutive principle of psychology which fundamentally differentiates this science from physics and precludes the existence of strict psycho‐physical laws. Philosophical and empirical arguments are br…Read more
  •  700
    Heritability and indirect causation
    Philosophy of Science 70 (5): 1002-1014. 2003.
    Genetic differences can lead to phenotypic differences either directly or indirectly (via causing differences in external environments, which then affect phenotype). This possibility of genetic effects being mediated by environmental influences is often used by scientists and philosophers to argue that heritability is not a very helpful causal or explanatory notion. In this paper it is shown that these criticisms are based on serious misconceptions about methods of behavior genetics.
  •  551
    Egalitarianism and Natural Lottery
    Public Affairs Quarterly 7 (1): 57-69. 1993.
  •  2221
    Sudden Infant Death or Murder? A Royal Confusion About Probabilities
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 58 (2): 299-329. 2007.
    In this article I criticize the recommendations of some prominent statisticians about how to estimate and compare probabilities of the repeated sudden infant death and repeated murder. The issue has drawn considerable public attention in connection with several recent court cases in the UK. I try to show that when the three components of the Bayesian inference are carefully analyzed in this context, the advice of the statisticians turns out to be problematic in each of the steps.
  •  202
    Review of N. Zack, Philosophy of Science and Race
    Philosophy of Science 70 (2): 447-449. 2003.
    Does the concept of “race” find support in contemporary science, particularly in biology? No, says Naomi Zack, together with so many others who nowadays argue that human races lack biological reality. This claim is widely accepted in a number of fields (philosophy, biology, anthropology, and psychology), and Zack’s book represents only the latest defense of social constructivism in this context. There are several reasons why she fails to make a convincing case.
  •  86
    Philosophical Matinée
    Prolegomena 7 (2): 207-222. 2008.
  •  509
    An Explosion without a Bang
    International Journal of Epidemiology 40 (3): 592-596. 2011.
  •  77
    Wittgenstein Without Tears
    Philosophy Now 83 54-54. 2011.