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Prospects for the elimination of tastes from economics and ethicsIn Ellen Frankel Paul, Jeffrey Paul & Fred Dycus Miller (eds.), Ethics and economics, [published By] B. Blackwell For the Social Philosophy and Policy Center, Bowling Green State University. 1985.
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186The Political Philosophy of Biological Endowments: Some ConsiderationsSocial Philosophy and Policy 5 (1): 1. 1987.Is a government required or permitted to redistribute the gains and losses that differences in biol ogical endowments generate In particular, does the fact that individuals possess different biological endowments lead to unfair advantages within a market economy? These are questions on which so me people are apt to have strong intuitions and ready arguments. Egalitarians may say yes and argu e that as unearned, undeserved advantages and disadvantages, biological endowments are never fai r, and t…Read more
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243The Biological Justification of Ethics: A Best-Case ScenarioSocial Philosophy and Policy 8 (1): 86. 1990.Social and behavioral scientists - that is, students of human nature - nowadays hardly ever use the term ‘human nature’. This reticence reflects both a becoming modesty about the aims of their disciplines and a healthy skepticism about whether there is any one thing really worthy of the label ‘human nature’
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2How physics fakes designIn R. Paul Thompson & Denis Walsh (eds.), Evolutionary biology: conceptual, ethical, and religious issues, Cambridge University Press. 2014.
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11Philosophical challenges for scientism (and how to meet them?)In Jeroen de Ridder, Rik Peels & Rene van Woudenberg (eds.), Scientism: Prospects and Problems, Oxford University Press. pp. 83-105. 2018.Scientism is expounded. Then its two major challenges are stated and responses to them sketched. The first challenge is to its epistemology of mathematics-how we know the necessary truths of mathematics. The second challenge is to the very coherence of its eliminativist account of cognition. The first of these problems is likely to be taken more seriously by philosophers than by other advocates of scientism. It is a problem that has absorbed philosophers since Plato and on which little progress …Read more
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43The philosophy of science: a contemporary introductionRoutledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2020.Any serious student attempting to better understand the nature, methods, and justification of science will value Alex Rosenberg's and Lee McIntyre's updated and substantially revised Fourth Edition of Philosophy of Science: A Contemporary Introduction. Weaving lucid explanations with clear analyses, the volume is as a much-used, thematically-oriented introduction to the field.
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90The Inevitability of a Generalized Darwinian Theory of Behavior, Society, and CultureAmerican Philosophical Quarterly 58 (1): 51-62. 2021.The paper argues that the evident features of all human affairs of interest to the social scientist demand Darwinian explanations. It must however be recognized that the range of regularities, models, theories that a successful Darwinian research program will inspire must be heterogeneous, operate at very different scales, identify a diversity of distinct and often unrepeated processes operating through multifarious instances of blind variation and environmental selection. There will be no canon…Read more
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185Scientism versus the theory of mindThink 19 (56): 59-73. 2020.Many philosophers call themselves ‘naturalists’ because they believe theism is incompatible with science. However, many also hold that science is compatible with many other theistic beliefs about morality, free will, the mind, and the meaning of life. Those naturalists who reject these other beliefs need a different label for their view. This article recommends the term ‘scientism’.
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61Reduction and MechanismCambridge University Press. 2020.Reductionism is a widely endorsed methodology among biologists, a metaphysical theory advanced to vindicate the biologist's methodology, and an epistemic thesis those opposed to reductionism have been eager to refute. While the methodology has gone from strength to strength in its history of achievements, the metaphysical thesis grounding it remained controversial despite its significant changes over the last 75 years of the philosophy of science. Meanwhile, antireductionism about biology, and e…Read more
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89Theory Construction: From Verbal to Mathematical FormulationsPhilosophy of Science 39 (4): 572-573. 1972.
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73History as Applied Science: A Philosophical Study (review)Philosophy of Science 41 (4): 430-431. 1974.
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100How is eliminative materialism possible?In Radu J. Bogdan (ed.), Mind and Common Sense: Philosophical Essays on Common Sense Psychology, Cambridge University Press. 1991.
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120Vaulting Ambition: Sociobiology and the Quest for Human Nature. Philip KitcherPhilosophy of Science 53 (4): 607-608. 1986.
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114Can we make sense of subjective experience in metabolically situated cognitive processes?Biology and Philosophy 33 (1): 13. 2018.In “Mind, matter and metabolism,” Godfrey-Smith’s objective is to “develop a picture” in which, first, the basis of living activity in physical processes “makes sense,” second, the basis of proto-cognitive activity in living activity “makes sense” and third, “the basis of subjective experience in metabolically situated cognitive processes also makes sense.” show that he fails to attain all three of these objectives, largely owing to the nature and modularization of metabolism.
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135Why Social Science is Biological ScienceJournal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 48 (3): 341-369. 2017.The social sciences need to take seriously their status as divisions of biology. As such they need to recognize the central role of Darwinian processes in all the phenomena they seek to explain. An argument for this claim is formulated in terms of a small number of relatively precise premises that focus on the nature of the kinds and taxonomies of all the social sciences. The analytical taxonomies of all the social sciences are shown to require a Darwinian approach to human affairs, though not a…Read more
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123Weintraub's Aims: A Brief RejoinderEconomics and Philosophy 3 (1): 143-144. 1987.Weintraub is not really interested in whether economics is “science” or not. “Economists are not so unsophisticated as to think that calling economics a ‘science’ says anything about what economists do or should do”. But can it really be a matter of indifference to him whether the subject has the character of chemistry as opposed to literary criticism?
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Intentional Psychology and Evolutionary Biology: Part II: The Crucial DisanalogyBehavior and Philosophy 14 (2): 125. 1986.
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The Structure of Biological ScienceBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 38 (1): 119-121. 1987.
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19La Teoría Económica como Filosofía Politica (Economic Theory as Political Philosophy)Theoria: Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia 13 (2): 279-299. 1998.Defiendo la legitimidad de la pregunta acerca de cuál puede ser el estatuto cognitivo de la Teoría Económica, y sostengo que la Teoría se comprende mejor como una rama de la Filosofía Política formal, en concreto, como una especie de contractualismo. Esto parece particularmente adecuado corno explicación de la Teoría deI equilibrio general. Dado el carácter intencional de las variables explicativas de la Teoría Económica y el papel de la información al realizar una elección, se argumenta que es …Read more
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68Is the Theory of Natural Selection a Statistical Theory?Canadian Journal of Philosophy 18 (sup1): 187-207. 1988.In The Structure of Biological Science I argued that the theory of natural selection is a statistical theory for reasons much like those which makes thermodynamics a statistical theory. In particular, the theory claims that fitness differences are large enough and the life span of species long enough for increases in average fitness always to appear in the long run; and this claim, I held, is of the same form as the statistical version of the second law of thermodynamics.For the latter law also …Read more
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100The Structure of Biological ScienceCambridge University Press. 1985.This book provides a comprehensive guide to the conceptual methodological, and epistemological problems of biology, and treats in depth the major developments in molecular biology and evolutionary theory that have transformed both biology and its philosophy in recent decades. At the same time the work is a sustained argument for a particular philosophy of biology that unifies disparate issues and offers a framework for expectations about the future directions of the life sciences. The argument e…Read more
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95Darwinism in Philosophy, Social Science and PolicyCambridge University Press. 2000.A collection of essays by Alexander Rosenberg, the distinguished philosopher of science. The essays cover three broad areas related to Darwinian thought and naturalism: the first deals with the solution of philosophical problems such as reductionism, the second with the development of social theories, and the third with the intersection of evolutionary biology with economics, political philosophy, and public policy. Specific papers deal with naturalistic epistemology, the limits of reductionism,…Read more
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Philosophy of Social Science, coll. « Dimensions of Philosophy »Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 180 (1): 104-105. 1990.
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Intentional Psychology and Evolutionary Biology Part 1: The Uneasy AnalogyBehavior and Philosophy 14 (1): 15. 1986.
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Arizona State UniversityPhilosophy - School of Historical, Philosophical, and Religious StudiesProfessor (Part-time)
Durham, North Carolina, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Biology |
| Philosophy of Social Science |