•  120
    Editorial
    Synthese 160 (1): 1-3. 2008.
  • Semantics for epistemology
    In Sven Bernecker & Duncan Pritchard (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Epistemology, Routledge. 2013.
  •  25
    Editorial
    Synthese 160 (1): 1-4. 2008.
  •  107
    Information, representation, and the dynamic systems approach to language
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (5): 640-641. 2002.
    Shanker & King (S&K) provide a criticism of information-theoretic approaches to language, but the real obstacle to their dynamicist approach is the argument that representations are an indispensable part of any cognitive theory. Since the dynamicist approach has a prima facie anti-representationalist bent, the authors must show why dynamicist views can provide adequate explanations of intelligent behavior.
  •  72
    Emergence and reflexive downward causation
    Principia 6 (1): 183-202. 2002.
    This paper responds to Jaegwon Kim's powerful objection to the very possibility of genuinely novel emergent properties. Kim argues that the incoherence of reflexive downward causation means that the causal power of an emergent phenomenon is ultimately reducible to the causal powers of its constituents. I offer a simple argument showing how to characterize emergent properties m terms of the effects of structural relations an the causal powers of that. constituents
  •  167
    A Computational Modeling Strategy for Levels
    Philosophy of Science 75 (5): 608-620. 2008.
    Rather than taking the ontological fundamentality of an ideal microphysics as a starting point, this article sketches an approach to the problem of levels that swaps assumptions about ontology for assumptions about inquiry. These assumptions can be implemented formally via computational modeling techniques that will be described below. It is argued that these models offer a way to save some of our prominent commonsense intuitions concerning levels. This strategy offers a way of exploring the ind…Read more
  •  46
    Formal Philosophy (edited book)
    Automatic Press/VIP. 2005.
    Formal Philosophy is a collection of short interviews based on 5 questions presented tosome of the most influential and prominent scholars in formal philosophy.
  •  78
    The individuality of artifacts and organisms
    History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 32 (2-3). 2010.
  •  20
    Giandomenico Sica’s volume is a collection of eleven papers on category theory by philosophers, mathematicians, and mathematical physicists. In addition to papers of direct interest to philosophers of mathematics, the volume contains some introductory expositions of category theory along with a valuable discussion of the relationship between category theory and physics by Bob Coecke. While there are several technically difficult papers, the volume as a whole is reasonably accessible to those wit…Read more
  •  15
    Functionalism in the philosophy of mind rests on the claim that mental states are multiply realizable; mental states can be realized by or instantiated in a variety of distinct physical structures. To see them as multiply realizable we take mental states as causal roles rather than particular physical structures. As such, functionalism can be contrasted with metaphysical accounts which treat mental states as instances of a mental substance. Instead of puzzling over the relationship between menta…Read more
  •  383
    Computational Models of Emergent Properties
    Minds and Machines 18 (4): 475-491. 2008.
    Computational modeling plays an increasingly important explanatory role in cases where we investigate systems or problems that exceed our native epistemic capacities. One clear case where technological enhancement is indispensable involves the study of complex systems.1 However, even in contexts where the number of parameters and interactions that define a problem is small, simple systems sometimes exhibit non-linear features which computational models can illustrate and track. In recent decades…Read more
  •  70
    Reply to Angius and Primiero on Software Intensive Science
    with Jack Horner
    Philosophy and Technology 27 (3): 491-494. 2014.
    This paper provides a reply to articles by Nicola Angius and Guiseppe Primiero responding to our paper “Software Intensive Science”