•  879
    Physicists in Conflict. Neil A. Porter
    Isis 92 (2): 369-370. 2001.
    Review of work on several debates, including Galileo vs. the Church, Bohr vs Einstein, Hoyle vs. Big Bang theory, Oppenheimer vs. Teller, N-rays, magnetic monopoles.
  •  2
    G. H. von Wright, "Time, Change, and Contradiction"
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 8 (n/a): 152. 1971.
    Discussion of von Wright's account of logic and time in relation to Marxist dialectics.
  •  91
    Brain differences, anthropological stories, and educational implications
    with Christy Hammer
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19 (2): 257-257. 1996.
    Criticism of sex differences in mathematical ability and sex roles in sociobiology and the pernicious influence of these ideas on education.
  •  238
    Philosophy of technology: an introduction (edited book)
    Blackwell. 1993.
    Ideal for undergraduate students in philosophy and science studies, Philosophy of Technology offers an engaging and comprehensive overview of a subject vital to our time. An up-to-date, accessible overview of the philosophy of technology, defining technology and its characteristics. Explores the issues that arise as technology becomes an integral part of our society. In addition to traditional topics in science and technology studies, the volume offers discussion of technocracy, the romantic reb…Read more
  •  81
    Feyerabend and Lakatos were invited to be assistants of the literary Marxists Brecht and Lukács, respectively. In the 1930s Expressionism Debate, Lukács associated artistic expressionism with irrationalism and fascism, while Brecht criticized Lukács' anti-modernism. Lakatos' criti cisms of Kuhn echo Lukács' denunciations of German idealism, and Lukács influenced the terminology and topics in Lakatos' methodol ogy. Lakatos, concerned with progress, and fearful of irrationalism and degeneration, r…Read more
  •  55
    Review of Steve Fuller, The Knowledge Book: Key Concepts in Philosophy (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (7). 2008.
  •  134
    Ihde’s Instrumental Realism and the Marxist Account of Technology in Experimental Science
    Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 12 (2): 105-109. 2008.
    Edgar Zilsel offers a Marxist account of the rise of experimental science avoiding both crude determinism and the anti-scientific bias of much “Western Marxism.” This account supplements Don Ihde’s instrumental realism with a social account of the systematic extension of perception by instrumentation. The social contact of non-literate craftspeople with purely intellectual scholars forged the social basis of what became technoscience.
  •  4
    Sokal and Bricmont in their exposé of allegedly meaningless statements about science by recent French philosophers take errors of particular applications of philosophical ideas to science as refutations of the whole general framework utilized. They also seem to think that taking snippets out of context is sufficient to expose the "fashionable nonsense." In the early twentieth century, British analytic philosophers such as Bertrand Russell and A. N. Whitehead did the same with Hegel on mathematic…Read more