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381Reduction and emergence in chemistry—two recent approachesPhilosophy of Science 74 (5): 920-931. 2007.Two articles on the reduction of chemistry are examined. The first, by McLaughlin (1992), claims that chemistry is reduced to physics and that there is no evidence for emergence or for downward causation between the chemical and the physical level. In a more recent article, Le Poidevin (2005) maintains that his combinatorial approach provides grounding for the ontological reduction of chemistry, which also circumvents some limitations in the physicalist program. †To contact the author, please wr…Read more
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143Prediction and the periodic tableStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 32 (3): 407-452. 2001.The debate about the relative epistemic weights carried in favour of a theory by predictions of new phenomena as opposed to accommodations of already known phenomena has a long history. We readdress the issue through a detailed re-examination of a particular historical case that has often been discussed in connection with it—that of Mendeleev and the prediction by his periodic law of the three ‘new’ elements, gallium, scandium and germanium. We find little support for the standard story that the…Read more
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64Correspondence and Reduction in ChemistryIn S. French & H. Kamminga (eds.), Correspondence, Invariance and Heuristics: Essays in Honour of Heinz Post, Reidel. pp. 45--64. 1993.The article discusses some of Heinz Post's views on correspondence and whether revolutions occur in science a la Kuhn. For example Post points out that the periodic table of the chemical elements has withstood any revolutions. Specific issues examined include the Paneth-Fajans controversy, the extent to which quantum mechanics provides an explanation for the periodic table and ab initio calculations in quantum chemistry.
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28Editorial 47Foundations of Chemistry 16 (2): 85-86. 2014.The issue opens with a further paper from Novaro and Ramirez-Solis from Mexico on the vexed question of the placement of helium in the periodic table. In this contribution the authors appeal to some of their more recent, and more accurate, calculations and still conclude that helium should sit at the top of the noble gases rather than above beryllium in group 2.Conal Boyce from Minnesota provides an intriguing article lying at the borders of chemical education and the philosophy of chemistry and…Read more
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156Have orbitals really been observed?Journal of Chemical Education 77 1492-1494. 2000.The article disputes the recent claim featured in "Nature" magazine and many other science magazines to the effect that atomic orbitals have been observed for the first time. The claim is incorrect in view of the unconvincing nature of the evidence adduced and since atomic orbitals are deemed unobservable in principle by quantum mechanics. In addition, the possible educational drawbacks of this incorrect claim are discussed.
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83Philosophy of chemistry: synthesis of a new discipline (edited book)Springer. 2006.This comprehensive volume marks a new standard in scholarship in the still emerging field of the philosophy of chemistry. With selections drawn from a wide range of scholarly disciplines, philosophers, chemists, and historians of science here converge to ask some of the most fundamental questions about the relationship between philosophy and chemistry. What can chemistry teach us about longstanding disputes in the philosophy of science over such issues as reductionism, autonomy, and supervenienc…Read more
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190Response to Vollmer’s Review of Minds and MoleculesPhilosophy of Science 70 (2): 391-398. 2003.I present a response to Vollmer's review of the book Of Minds and Molecules, and especially her comments on my own article therein. This provides an opportunity to discuss two central ideas in the philosophy of chemistry. These are the distinction between elements as simple substances (element-1) and elements as basic substances (element-2) and Paneth's proposed intermediate position for philosophy of chemistry. The response also discusses the question of isotopes in relationship to the nature o…Read more
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142On the continuity of reference of the elements: a response to HendryStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 37 (2): 308-321. 2006.Robin Hendry has recently argued that although the term ‘element’ has traditionally been used in two different senses, there has nonetheless been a continuity of reference. The present article examines this author’s historical and philosophical claims and suggests that he has misdiagnosed the situation in several respects. In particular it is claimed that Hendry’s arguments for the nature of one particular element, oxygen, do not generalize to all elements as he implies. The second main objectio…Read more
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Eric Scerri
UCLA
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UCLADepartment of Chemistry and BiochemistryLecturer