•  5
    Reasoning About Ourselves: Feminist Methodology in the Social Sciences
    In Elizabeth D. Harvey & Kathleen Okruhlik (eds.), Women and Reason, . pp. 225-244. 1992.
  •  202
    Feminist analyses of science have grown dramatically in scope, diversity, and impact in the years since Nancy Tuana edited the two-volume issue of Hypatia on “Feminism and Science” (Fall 1987, Spring 1988). What had begun in the 1960s and 1970s as a “trickle of scholarship on feminism and science” had widened by the mid-1980s “into a continuous stream” (Rosser 1987, 5). Fifteen years later, the stream has become something of a torrent. The essays assembled for this special issue of Hypatia repre…Read more
  •  58
    The Method and Theory of V. Gordon Childe (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 18 (3): 67-69. 1986.
  •  3
    Doing Social Science as a Feminist: The Engendering of Archaeology
    In Angela N. H. Creager, Elizabeth Lunbeck & Londa Schiebinger (eds.), Feminism in Twentieth-Century Science, Technology, and Medicine, University of Chicago Press. pp. 23-45. 2001.
  • Comments on Analogy in Danish Prehistoric Studies
    Norwegian Archaeological Review 26 (2). 1993.
  •  2
    Moderate Relativism/Political Objectivism
    In Ronald F. Williamson & Michael S. Bisson (eds.), The Archaeology of Bruce Trigger: Theoretical Empiricism, Mcgill-queens University Press. pp. 25-35. 2006.
  •  164
    Harding’s aim in Science and Social Inequality is to integrate the insights generated by diverse critiques of conventional ideals of truth, value freedom, and unity in science, and to chart a way forward for the sciences and for science studies. Wylie assesses this synthesis as a genre of social constructionist argument and illustrates its implications for questions of epistemic warrant with reference to transformative research on gender-based discrimination in the workplace environment.
  •  118
  •  1
    An Expanded Behavioral Archaeology: Transformation and Redefinition Twenty Years On
    In James M. Skibo, William H. Walker & Axel E. Nielsen (eds.), Quest for the King, University of Utah Press. pp. 198-209. 1995.
  •  48
    Internal debates over the status and aims of archaeology—between processualists and post or anti-processualists—have been so sharply adversarial, and have generated such sharply polarized positions, that they obscure much common ground. Despite strong rhetorical opposition, in practice, all employ a range of strategies for building and assessing the empirical credibility of their claims that reveals a common commitment to some form of mitigated objectivism. To articulate what this comes to, an a…Read more
  •  43
    Working at Archaeology (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 20 (1): 65-67. 1988.
  •  34
    Epistemological Issues Raised by a Structuralist Archaeology
    In Ian Hodder (ed.), Symbolic and Structural Archaeology, Cambridge University Press. pp. 39-46. 1982.
    Insofar as the material residues of interest to archaeologists are cultural and, as such, have specifically symbolic significance, it is argued that archaeology must employ some form of structuralist analysis (i.e. as specifically concerned with this aspect of the material). Wylie examines the prevalent notion that such analysis is inevitably 'unscientific' because it deals with a dimension of material culture which is inaccessible of any direct, empirical investigation, and argues that this res…Read more
  •  1
    Philosophy of Archaeology
    In Edward Craig (ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Genealogy to Iqbal, Routledge. pp. 354-359. 1996.
  •  143
    The contributions to Testing Scientific Theories are unified by an in-terest in responding to criticisms directed by Glymour against existing models of confirmation—chiefly H-D and Bayesian schemas—and in assessing and correcting the "bootstrap" model of confirmation that he proposed as an alternative in Theory and Evidence (1980). As such, they provide a representative sample of objections to Glymour's model and of the wide range of new initiatives in thinking about scientific confirmation that…Read more
  •  73
    In the last few years, conference programs and publications have begun to appear that reflect a growing interest, among North American archaeologists, in research initiatives that focus on women and gender as subjects of investigation. One of the central questions raised by these developments has to do with their "objectivity" and that of archaeology as a whole. To the extent that they are inspired by or aligned with explicitly political (feminist) commitments, the question arises of whether the…Read more
  •  2707
    In this chapter we explore two important questions that we believe should be central to any discussion of the ethics and politics of cultural heritage: What are the harms associated with appropriation and commodification, specifically where the heritage of Indigenous peoples is concerned? And how can these harms best be avoided? Archaeological concerns animate this discussion; we are ultimately concerned with fostering postcolonial archaeological practices. But we situate these questions in a br…Read more
  •  65
    On Scepticism, Philosophy, and Archaeological Science
    Current Anthropology 33 (2): 209-214. 1992.
  •  45
    Review: Time and Traditions by Bruce G. Trigger (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 11 193-195. 1979.
  •  219
    Critical distance : stabilising evidential claims in archaeology
    In Philip Dawid, William Twining & Mimi Vasilaki (eds.), Evidence, Inference and Enquiry, Oup/british Academy. 2011.
    The vagaries of evidential reasoning in archaeology are notorious: the material traces that comprise the archaeological record are fragmentary and profoundly enigmatic, and the inferential gap that archaeologists must cross to constitute them as evidence of the cultural past is a peren­nial source of epistemic anxiety. And yet we know a great deal about the cultural past, including vast reaches of the past for which this material record is our only source of evidence. The contents of this record…Read more
  •  1814
    Material Evidence (edited book)
    Routledge. 2014.
    How do archaeologists make effective use of physical traces and material culture as repositories of evidence? Material Evidence is a collection of 19 essays that take a resolutely case-based approach to this question, exploring key instances of exemplary practice, instructive failures, and innovative developments in the use of archaeological data as evidence. The goal is to bring to the surface the wisdom of practice, teasing out norms of archaeological reasoning from evidence. -/- Archaeologi…Read more
  •  49
    Rethinking the Quincentennial: Consequences for past and Present
    American Antiquity 57 (4): 591. 1992.
    In organizing a plenary session to mark the Quincentennial at the 1992 Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, our aim was not to provide a summary or review of archaeological research bearing on our understanding of "Columbian consequences." Rather, we sought speakers who could raise forward-looking questions about the sociopolitical entanglements and consequences of archaeology considered as, itself, part of the legacy of contact. The papers that follow, by Vine Deloria, Jalil …Read more
  •  161
    Solomon has made the case, in Social Empicism (2001) for socially naturalized analysis of the dynamics of scientific inquiry that takes seriously two critical insights: that scientific rationality is contingent, disunified, and socially emergent; and that scientific progress is often fostered by factors traditionally regarded as compromising sources of bias. While elements of this framework are widely shared, Solomon intends it to be more resolutely social, more thoroughly naturalizing, and more…Read more
  •  62
    Re-Constructing Archaeology (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 24 (1): 135-136. 1992.
  •  1654
    Archaeology and Critical Feminism of Science: Interview with Alison Wylie
    with Kelly Koide, Marisol Marini, and Marian Toledo
    Scientiae Studia 12 (3): 549-590. 2014.
    In this wide-ranging interview with three members of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Sao Paolo (Brazil) Wylie explains how she came to work on philosophical issues raised in and by archaeology, describes the contextualist challenges to ‘received view’ models of confirmation and explanation in archaeology that inform her work on the status of evidence and contextual ideals of objectivity, and discusses the role of non-cognitive values in science. She also is pressed to explain w…Read more