•  115
    The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of the Social Sciences (edited book)
    with Stephen P. Turner
    Wiley-Blackwell. 2008.
    _The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of the Social Sciences _collects newly commissioned essays that examine fundamental issues in the social sciences.
  •  256
    The purpose of this paper is to argue that the tactic of granting a fetus the legal status of a person will not, contrary to the expectations of opponents of abortion, provide grounds for a general prohibition on abortions. I begin by examining two arguments, one moral (J. J. Thomson's A Defense of Abortion) and the other legal (D. Regan's Rewriting Roe v. Wade), which grant the assumption that a fetus is a person and yet argue to the conclusion that abortion is permissible. However, both Thomso…Read more
  • Can Post-Newtonian Psychologists Find Happiness in a Pre-Paradigm Science?
    Journal of Mind and Behavior 16 (1): 87-98. 1995.
    This paper is a commentary on the essays by Faulconer , Leahey , Rawling , Slife , Vandenberg , and Williams . Whatever the differences among these essays, they nonetheless share a common concern with the image of science which Newton promulgated. What might be termed the Newtonian meta-paradigm is positivistic, in the contemporary sense. This meta-paradigm has survived the demise of the Newtonian paradigm in physics. Each of the authors in this volume, in turn, is concerned with how to expose, …Read more
  •  290
    Testing normative naturalism: The problem of scientific medicine
    with Ronald Munson
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 45 (2): 571-584. 1994.
    Laudan's normative naturalism' claims to account for the success of science by construing theories and other claims as methodological rules interpreted as defeasible hypothetical imperatives for securing cognitive ends. We ask two questions regarding the adequacy for medicine of Laudan's meta- methodology. First, although Laudan denies that general aims can be assigned to a science, we show that this is not the case for medicine. Second, we argue that Laudan's account yields mixed results as a t…Read more
  •  174
    Responses to 'in defense of relativism'
    with Robert Ackermann, Brian Baigrie, Harold I. Brown, Michael Cavanaugh, Paul Fox-Strangways, Gonzalo Munevar, Stephen David Ross, Philip Pettit, Frederick Schmitt, Stephen Turner, and Charles Wallis
    Social Epistemology 2 (3). 1988.
    No abstract.
  •  36
    Meaning and Method in the Social Sciences (review)
    Noûs 27 (4): 530. 1993.
  •  132
    Essentially narrative explanations
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 62 (C): 42-50. 2017.
  •  91
    Symposium: Does Cross-Cultural Philosophy Stand in Need of a Hermeneutic Expansion?
    with Douglas L. Berger, Hans-Georg Moeller, and A. Raghuramaraju
    Journal of World Philosophies 2 (1): 121-143. 2017.
    Does cross-cultural philosophy stand in need of a hermeneutical expansion? In engaging with this question, the symposium focuses upon methodological issues salient to cross-cultural inquiry. Douglas L. Berger lays out the ground for the debate by arguing for a methodological approach, which is able to rectify the discipline’s colonial legacies and bridge the hermeneutical distance with its objects of study. From their own perspectives, Hans-Georg Moeller, Paul Roth and A. Raghuramaraju analyze w…Read more
  •  52
    Searleworld
    History and Theory 51 (1): 123-142. 2012.
    ABSTRACTJohn Searle's most recent effort to account for human social institutions claims to provide a synthesis of the explanatory and the normative while simultaneously dismissing as confused and wrongheaded theorists who held otherwise. Searle, although doubtless alert to the usual considerations for separating the normative and the explanatory projects, announces at the outset that he conceives of matters quite differently. Searle's reason for reconceiving the field rests on his claim that bo…Read more
  • Review (review)
    History and Theory 31 200-208. 1992.
  • Review (review)
    History and Theory 34 231-244. 1995.
  •  123
    Narrative Explanations: The Case of History
    History and Theory 27 (1): 1-13. 1988.
    The very idea of narrative explanation invites two objections: a methodological objection, stating that narrative structure is too far from the form of a scientific explanation to count as an explanation, and a metaphysical objection, stating that narrative structure situates historical practice too close to the writing of fiction. Both of these objections, however, are illfounded. The methodological objection and the dispute regarding the status of historical explanation can be disposed of by r…Read more
  •  112
    Chaos, Clio, and Scientistic Illusions of Understanding
    History and Theory 34 (1): 30-44. 1995.
    A number of authors have recently argued that the mathematical insights of "chaos theory" offer a promising formal model or significant analogy for understanding at least some historical events. We examine a representative claim of each kind regarding the application of chaos theory to problems of historical explanation. We identify two lines of argument. One we term the Causal Thesis, which states that chaos theory may be used to plausibly model, and so explain, historical events. The other we …Read more
  •  121
    Politics and epistemology: Rorty, MacIntyre, and the ends of philosophy
    History of the Human Sciences 2 (2): 171-191. 1989.
    In this paper, I examine how a manifest disagreement between Richard Rorty and Alasdair MacIntyre concerning the history of philosophy is but one of a series of deep and interrelated disagreements concerning, in addition, the history of science, the good life for human beings, and, ultimately, the character of and prospects for humankind as well. I shall argue that at the heart of this series of disagreements rests a dispute with regard to the nature of rationality. And this disagreement concern…Read more
  •  94
    What makes for a good explanation of a person’s actions? Their reasons, or soa natural reply goes. But how do reasons function as part of explanations, that is, within an account of the causes of action? Here philosophers divide concerning the logical relation in which reasons stand to actions. For, tradition holds, reasons evaluatively characterized must be causally inert, inasmuch as the normative features cannot be found in any account of the empirical/descriptive. To countenance reasons as c…Read more
  •  65
    Reconstructing Quine: The troubles with a tradition
    Metaphilosophy 14 (3-4): 249-266. 1983.
  •  204
    Siegel on naturalized epistemology and natural science
    Philosophy of Science 50 (3): 482-493. 1983.
    What is the relation of epistemology, understood as the study of the evaluation of knowledge claims, and empirical psychology, understood as the study of the causal generation of a person's beliefs? Quine maintains that the relation is one of “mutual containment”.Epistemology in its new setting, conversely, is contained in natural science, as a chapter of psychology. … We are studying how the human subject of our study posits bodies and projects his physics from his data, and we appreciate that …Read more
  •  491
    Review of C. Mantzavinos, Naturalistic Hermeneutics (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (2). 2006.
  •  113
  •  96
    Kitcher's two cultures
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 33 (3): 386-405. 2003.
  •  1308
    The silence of the norms: The missing historiography of The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 44 (4): 545-552. 2013.
    History has been disparaged since the late 19th century for not conforming to norms of scientific explanation. Nonetheless, as a matter of fact a work of history upends the regnant philosophical conception of science in the second part of the 20th century. Yet despite its impact, Kuhn’s Structure has failed to motivate philosophers to ponder why works of history should be capable of exerting rational influence on an understanding of philosophy of science. But all this constitutes a great irony a…Read more