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93Remembering the past and imagining the future: A neural model of spatial memory and imageryPsychological Review 114 (2): 340-375. 2007.
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108Statistics as Science: Lonergan, McShane, and PopperJournal of Macrodynamic Analysis 3 55-75. 2003.On this occasion of honouring the achievement of Philip McShane, I would like to recall his earliest and, in my judgment, most important work, Randomness, Statistics and Emergence. In particular, I will recall how that work situated Lonergan’s important breakthrough on statistical method in relation to the major currents of thought on the subject, many of which remain influential still today.
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190Lonergan, Evolutionary Science, and Intelligent DesignRevista Portuguesa de Filosofia 63 (4): 893-918. 2007.This article shows how Bernard Lonergan's philosophy of science can bring resolution to a recent controversy: the controversy that arises from Intelligent Design theorists' and proponents of neo-Darwinian evolution. Intelligent Design theories argue that the complex structures of living organisms cannot be adequately explained by neo-Darwinian theories, especially by its postulate of random variations. Hence, an "intelligent designer" must be postulated in order to fill out scientific explanatio…Read more
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141The Goodness of Being in Lonergan’s InsightAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 81 (1): 43-72. 2007.One of the lesser known features of Bernard Lonergan’s Insight is his theory of the relationship between being and goodness. Central to that theory is his claimthat the totality of being is good. From this central claim, Lonergan worked out an “ontology of the good,” in which the structures of ontological interdependencyare reflected in a theory of the scale of higher and lower values. Unfortunately, Lonergan’s way of supporting his claim in Insight is problematic. This article firstsummarizes L…Read more
Montclair, New Jersey, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Biology |