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19The advantages of theft over honest toil. A comment on David AtkinsonIn Maria Carla Galavotti (ed.), Observation and Experiment in the Natural and Social Sciences, Springer Verlag. 2003.David Atkinson asks whether nonempirical constructions can lead to genuine knowledge in science, and answers in the negative. Thought experiments, in his view, are to be commended only insofar as they eventually lead to real experiments. The claim does not rely on a general study, conceptual or historical, of thought experiments as such: the range of the paper is at once narrower and broader. Atkinson views thought experiments as commonly understood as just one kind of episode in the development…Read more
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14What role does mathematics play in cognitive science today, what role should mathematics play in cognitive science tomorrow? The cautious short answers are: to the factual question, a rather modest role, except in peripheral areas; to the normative question, a far greater role, as the periphery’s place is reevaluated and as both cognitive science and mathematics grow. This paper aims at providing more detailed, perhaps more contentious answers.
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27Brain, mind, man, and society: Naturalism with a human faceIn D. Andler, M. Okada & I. Watanabe (eds.), Reasoning and Cognition, . pp. 77--84. 2006.When scientists are at work, they are busy ‘naturalizing’ their domain. This applies, without qualification, to natural scientists. In the sciences of man (which I will understand in the broadest sense, as including the social sciences), the issue is moot. This raises a problem for cognitive scientists, a vast majority of whom think of themselves as natural scientists. Yet theirs, to a large extent, is a science of man. Cognitive scientists are, it would seem, in the business of naturalizing man…Read more
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1From paleo to neo connectionismIn G. van der Vijve (ed.), New Perspectives on Cybernetics, . 1992.
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103The Undefinability of Analytic PhilosophyThe Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 6 267-285. 2000.Many attempts have been made to define analytic philosophy in a nonhistorical or otherwise deictic way, and to provide a set of necessary and sufficient conditions for a piece of philosophical work to be part of analytic philosophy. This is more difficult than might appear, for the conditions appealed to are normative and must be claimed by non-analytic philosophers to apply to their production as well. In fact, no such set of conditions has been forthcoming, and it is unlikely that it ever will…Read more
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151Federalism in science — complementarity vs perspectivism: Reply to HarréSynthese 151 (3): 519-522. 2006.
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8The philosophy of cognitive scienceIn Anastasios Brenner & Jean Gayon (eds.), French Studies in the Philosophy of Science: Contemporary Research in France, Springer. 2009.The rise of cognitive science in the last half-century has been accompanied by a considerable amount of philosophical activity. No other area within analytic philosophy in the second half of that period has attracted more attention or produced more publications. Philosophical work relevant to cognitive science has become a sprawling field (extending beyond analytic philosophy) which no one can fully master, although some try and keep abreast of the philosophical literature and of the essential s…Read more
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1124Context, content, and epistemic transparencyMind 119 (476): 1067-1086. 2011.We motivate the idea that presupposition is a transparent attitude. We then explain why epistemic opacity is not a serious problem for Robert Stalnaker's theory of content and conversation. We conclude with critical remarks about John Hawthorne and Ofra Magidor's alternative theory.
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64Is naturalism the unsurpassable philosophy for the sciences of man in the 21st century?In Thomas Uebel, Stephan Hartmann, Wenceslao Gonzalez, Marcel Weber, Dennis Dieks & Friedrich Stadler (eds.), The Present Situation in the Philosophy of Science, Springer. pp. 283--303. 2010.