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1367Fake News: A DefinitionInformal Logic 38 (1): 84-117. 2018.Despite being a new term, ‘fake news’ has evolved rapidly. This paper argues that it should be reserved for cases of deliberate presentation of false or misleading claims as news, where these are misleading by design. The phrase ‘by design’ here refers to systemic features of the design of the sources and channels by which fake news propagates and, thereby, manipulates the audience’s cognitive processes. This prospective definition is then tested: first, by contrasting fake news with other forms…Read more
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96Philosophical perspectives on synthetic biologyStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 44 (2): 119-121. 2013.Although the emerging field of synthetic biology looks back on barely a decade of development, the stakes are high. It is a multidisciplinary research field that aims at integrating the life sciences with engineering and the physical/chemical sciences. The common goal is to design and construct novel biological components, functions and systems in order to implement, in a controlled way, biological devices and production systems not necessarily found in nature. Among the many potential applicati…Read more
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345Rigorous results, cross-model justification, and the transfer of empirical warrant: the case of many-body models in physicsSynthese 169 (3): 497-519. 2009.This paper argues that a successful philosophical analysis of models and simulations must accommodate an account of mathematically rigorous results. Such rigorous results may be thought of as genuinely model-specific contributions, which can neither be deduced from fundamental theory nor inferred from empirical data. Rigorous results provide new indirect ways of assessing the success of models and simulations and are crucial to understanding the connections between different models. This is most…Read more
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370Kant on testimonyBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 14 (4). 2006.Immanuel Kant is often regarded as an exponent of the ‘individualist’ tradition in epistemology, according to which testimony is not a fundamental source of knowledge. The present paper argues that this view is far from accurate. Kant devotes ample space to discussions of testimony and, in his lectures on logic, arrives at a distinct and stable philosophical position regarding testimony. Important elements of this position consist in (a) acknowledging the ineliminability of testimony; (b) realiz…Read more
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81Richard Foley: Intellectual trust in oneself and others (review)History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 8 (1): 220-227. 2005.In his previous books, The Theory of Epistemic Rationality (1987) and Working Without a Net (1993), Richard Foley presented a highly influential account of what it means for one’s beliefs and belief-forming practices to be rational. Developing a positive new account of epistemic rationality, however, has never been Foley’s sole concern. His project is metaepistemological in character as much as it is epistemological. Put crudely, questions such as ‘What makes some beliefs knowledge?’ are of equa…Read more
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141Observation, Inference, and Imagination: Elements of Edgar Allan Poe’s Philosophy of ScienceScience & Education 23 (3): 589-607. 2014.Edgar Allan Poe’s standing as a literary figure, who drew on (and sometimes dabbled in) the scientific debates of his time, makes him an intriguing character for any exploration of the historical interrelationship between science, literature and philosophy. His sprawling ‘prose-poem’ Eureka (1848), in particular, has sometimes been scrutinized for anticipations of later scientific developments. By contrast, the present paper argues that it should be understood as a contribution to the raging deb…Read more
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105Applicability, Indispensability, and Underdetermination: Puzzling Over Wigner’s ‘Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics’Science & Education 23 (5): 997-1009. 2014.In his influential 1960 paper ‘The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences’, Eugene P. Wigner raises the question of why something that was developed without concern for empirical facts—mathematics—should turn out to be so powerful in explaining facts about the natural world. Recent philosophy of science has developed ‘Wigner’s puzzle’ in two different directions: First, in relation to the supposed indispensability of mathematical facts to particular scientific explanat…Read more
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292Strategies of model-building in condensed matter physics: trade-offs as a demarcation criterion between physics and biology?Synthese 190 (2): 253-272. 2013.This paper contrasts and compares strategies of model-building in condensed matter physics and biology, with respect to their alleged unequal susceptibility to trade-offs between different theoretical desiderata. It challenges the view, often expressed in the philosophical literature on trade-offs in population biology, that the existence of systematic trade-offs is a feature that is specific to biological models, since unlike physics, biology studies evolved systems that exhibit considerable na…Read more
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132Model-based representation in scientific practice: New perspectivesStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 42 (2): 251-252. 2011.Editorial introduction to special issue on 'Model-based representation in scientific practice'.
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252Steps to an Ecology of Knowledge: Continuity and Change in the Genealogy of KnowledgeEpisteme 8 (1): 67-82. 2011.The present paper argues for a more complete integration between recent “genealogical” approaches to the problem of knowledge and evolutionary accounts of the development of human cognitive capacities and practices. A structural tension is pointed out between, on the one hand, the fact that theexplicandumof genealogical stories is a specifically human trait and, on the other hand, the tacit acknowledgment, shared by all contributors to the debate, that human beings have evolved from non-human be…Read more
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321Art history, the problem of style, and Arnold Hauser’s contribution to the history and sociology of knowledgeStudies in East European Thought 64 (1-2): 121-142. 2012.Much of Arnold Hauser’s work on the social history of art and the philosophy of art history is informed by a concern for the cognitive dimension of art. The present paper offers a reconstruction of this aspect of Hauser’s project and identifies areas of overlap with the sociology of knowledge—where the latter is to be understood as both a separate discipline and a going intellectual concern. Following a discussion of Hauser’s personal and intellectual background, as well as of the shifting polit…Read more
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220How to Do Science with Models: A Philosophical PrimerSpringer. 2016.Taking scientific practice as its starting point, this book charts the complex territory of models used in science. It examines what scientific models are and what their function is. Reliance on models is pervasive in science, and scientists often need to construct models in order to explain or predict anything of interest at all. The diversity of kinds of models one finds in science – ranging from toy models and scale models to theoretical and mathematical models – has attracted attention not o…Read more
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306Reconsidering the role of inference to the best explanation in the epistemology of testimonyStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 41 (4): 386-396. 2010.In his work on the epistemology of testimony, Peter Lipton developed an account of testimonial inference that aimed at descriptive adequacy as well as justificatory sophistication. According to ‘testimonial inference to the best explanation’, we accept what a speaker tells us because the truth of her claim figures in the best explanation of the fact that she made it. In this paper, I argue for a modification of this picture. In particular, I argue that IBE plays a dual role in the management and…Read more
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251Mathematical formalisms in scientific practice: From denotation to model-based representationStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 42 (2): 272-286. 2011.The present paper argues that ‘mature mathematical formalisms’ play a central role in achieving representation via scientific models. A close discussion of two contemporary accounts of how mathematical models apply—the DDI account (according to which representation depends on the successful interplay of denotation, demonstration and interpretation) and the ‘matching model’ account—reveals shortcomings of each, which, it is argued, suggests that scientific representation may be ineliminably heter…Read more
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168Climate Scepticism, Epistemic Dissonance, and the Ethics of UncertaintyPhilosophy and Public Issues - Filosofia E Questioni Pubbliche 3 (1): 167-208. 2013.When it comes to the public debate about the challenge of global climate change, moral questions are inextricably intertwined with epistemological ones. This manifests itself in at least two distinct ways. First, for a fixed set of epistemic standards, it may be irresponsible to delay policy-making until everyone agrees that such standards have been met. This has been extensively discussed in the literature on the precautionary principle. Second, key actors in the public debate may – for strateg…Read more
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909Symbol Systems as Collective Representational Resources: Mary Hesse, Nelson Goodman, and the Problem of Scientific RepresentationSocial Epistemology Review and Reply Collective 4 (6): 52-61. 2015.This short paper grew out of an observation—made in the course of a larger research project—of a surprising convergence between, on the one hand, certain themes in the work of Mary Hesse and Nelson Goodman in the 1950/60s and, on the other hand, recent work on the representational resources of science, in particular regarding model-based representation. The convergence between these more recent accounts of representation in science and the earlier proposals by Hesse and Goodman consists in the r…Read more
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109Between Rigor and Reality: Many-Body Models in Condensed Matter PhysicsIn Brigitte Falkenburg & Margaret Morrison (eds.), Why More is Different: Philosophical Issues in Condensed Matter Physics and Complex Systems, Springer. pp. 201-226. 2015.The present paper focuses on a particular class of models intended to describe and explain the physical behaviour of systems that consist of a large number of interacting particles. Such many-body models are characterized by a specific Hamiltonian (energy operator) and are frequently employed in condensed matter physics in order to account for such phenomena as magnetism, superconductivity, and other phase transitions. Because of the dual role of many-body models as models of physical sys-tems (…Read more
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62Testimony, Trust & Authority by Benjamin McMyler, 2011 New York, NY, Oxford University Press viii + 178 pp, $65.00 (hb) (review)Journal of Applied Philosophy 30 (1): 101-103. 2013.
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311Manipulative success and the unrealInternational Studies in the Philosophy of Science 17 (3): 245-263. 2003.In its original form due to Ian Hacking, entity realism postulates a criterion of manipulative success which replaces explanatory virtue as the criterion of justified scientific belief. The article analyses the foundations on which this postulate rests and identifies the conditions on which one can derive a form of entity realism from it. It then develops in detail an extensive class of counterexamples, drawing on the notion of quasi-particles in condensed matter physics. While the phenomena ass…Read more
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246Indefensible middle ground for local reductionism about testimonyRatio 22 (2): 170-190. 2009.Local reductionism purports to defend a middle ground in the debate about the epistemic status of testimony-based beliefs. It does so by acknowledging the practical ineliminability of testimony as a source of knowledge, while insisting that such an acknowledgment need not entail a default-acceptance view, according to which there exists an irreducible warrant for accepting testimony. The present paper argues that local reductionism is unsuccessful in its attempt to steer a middle path between re…Read more
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59Communicability and the Public Misuse of Communication: Kant on the Pathologies of TestimonyIn Stefano Bacin, Alfredo Ferrarin, Claudio La Rocca & Margit Ruffing (eds.), Kant und die Philosophie in weltbürgerlicher Absicht. Akten des XI. Internationalen Kant-Kongresses, De Gruyter. pp. 257-268. 2013.
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704Inner Speech, Natural Language, and the Modularity of the MindKairos 14 (1): 7-29. 2015.Inner speech is a pervasive feature of our conscious mental lives. Yet its function and character remain an issue of philosophical debate. The present paper focuses on the relation between inner speech and natural language and on the cognitive functions that various contributors have ascribed to inner speech. In particular, it is argued that inner speech does not consist of bare, context-free internal presentations of sentential (or subsentential) content, but rather has an ineliminably perspect…Read more
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112Synthetic biology between technoscience and thing knowledgeStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 44 (2): 141-149. 2013.Synthetic biology presents a challenge to traditional accounts of biology: Whereas traditional biology emphasizes the evolvability, variability, and heterogeneity of living organisms, synthetic biology envisions a future of homogeneous, humanly engineered biological systems that may be combined in modular fashion. The present paper approaches this challenge from the perspective of the epistemology of technoscience. In particular, it is argued that synthetic-biological artifacts lend themselves t…Read more
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51Metaphysics meets the sciences: Guay, Alexandre, and Thomas Pradeu : Individuals across the sciences. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 424pp, $74.00 HB (review)Metascience 25 (3): 491-495. 2016.
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284Expertise, Argumentation, and the End of InquiryArgumentation 25 (3): 297-312. 2011.This paper argues that the problem of expertise calls for a rapprochement between social epistemology and argumentation theory. Social epistemology has tended to emphasise the role of expert testimony, neglecting the argumentative function of appeals to expert opinion by non-experts. The first half of the paper discusses parallels and contrasts between the two cases of direct expert testimony and appeals to expert opinion by our epistemic peers, respectively. Importantly, appeals to expert opini…Read more
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598Who is an epistemic peer?Logos and Episteme 2 (4): 507-514. 2011.Contemporary epistemology of peer disagreement has largely focused on our immediate normative response to prima facie instances of disagreement. Whereas some philosophers demand that we should withhold judgment (or moderate our credences) in such cases, others argue that, unless new evidence becomes available, disagreement at best gives us reason to demote our interlocutor from his peer status. But what makes someone an epistemic peer in the first place? This question has not received the attent…Read more
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99Disattendability, Civil Inattention, and the Epistemology of PrivacyPhilosophical Analysis 31 151-181. 2014.The concept of privacy is intimately related to epistemological concepts such as information and knowledge, yet for the longest time had received only scant attention from epistemologists. This has begun to change in recent years, and different philosophical accounts have been proposed. On the liberal model of privacy, what privacy aims at is the protection of individuals from interference in personal matters. On the (more narrowly epistemological) informational model, privacy is a matter of lim…Read more
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1259The ‘extendedness’ of scientific evidencePhilosophical Issues 24 (1): 253-281. 2014.In recent years, the idea has been gaining ground that our traditional conceptions of knowledge and cognition are unduly limiting, in that they privilege what goes on inside the ‘skin and skull’ of an individual reasoner. Instead, it has been argued, knowledge and cognition need to be understood as embodied, situated, and extended. Whether these various interrelations and dependencies are ‘merely’ causal, or are in a more fundamental sense constitutive of knowledge and cognition, is as much a ma…Read more
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117Relying on Others: An Essay in Epistemology, by Sanford C. GoldbergAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 90 (3). 2012.Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Volume 90, Issue 3, Page 616-617, September 2012
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407Kant and the Enlightenment's Contribution to Social EpistemologyEpisteme 7 (1): 79-99. 2010.The present paper argues for the relevance of Immanuel Kant and the German Enlightenment to contemporary social epistemology. Rather than distancing themselves from the alleged ‘individualism’ of Enlightenment philosophers, social epistemologists would be well-advised to look at the substantive discussion of social-epistemological questions in the works of Kant and other Enlightenment figures. After a brief rebuttal of the received view of the Enlightenment as an intrinsically individualist ente…Read more
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Technische Universität BerlinProfessor
Berlin, BE, Germany
Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| General Philosophy of Science |
Areas of Interest
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |