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500Scientific representation: A long journey from pragmatics to pragmatics Content Type Journal Article DOI 10.1007/s11016-010-9465-5 Authors James Ladyman, Department of Philosophy, University of Bristol, 9 Woodland Rd, Bristol, BS8 1TB UK Otávio Bueno, Department of Philosophy, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33124, USA Mauricio Suárez, Department of Logic and Philosophy of Science, Complutense University of Madrid, 28040 Madrid, Spain Bas C. van Fraassen, Philosophy Department, San Francis…Read more
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386A Defence of Van Fraassen’s Critique of Abductive Inference: Reply to PsillosPhilosophical Quarterly 47 (188). 1997.Psillos has recently argued that van Fraassen’s arguments against abduction fail. Moreover, he claimed that, if successful, these arguments would equally undermine van Fraassen’s own constructive empiricism, for, Psillos thinks, it is only by appeal to abduction that constructive empiricism can be saved from issuing in a bald scepticism. We show that Psillos’ criticisms are misguided, and that they are mostly based on misinterpretations of van Fraassen’s arguments. Furthermore, we argue that Psi…Read more
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169Rational Belief and Probability KinematicsPhilosophy of Science 47 (2): 165-187. 1980.A general form is proposed for epistemological theories, the relevant factors being: the family of epistemic judgments, the epistemic state, the epistemic commitment, and the family of possible epistemic inputs. First a simple theory is examined in which the states are probability functions, and the subject of probability kinematics introduced by Richard Jeffrey is explored. Then a second theory is examined in which the state has as constituents a body of information and a recipe that determines…Read more
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131Precis of Scientific representation: paradoxes of perspective (review)Philosophical Studies 150 (3). 2010.
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68On Free Description TheoryZeitschrift fur mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik 13 (15): 225-240. 1967.
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40Frequency and the myth of probabilityIn Hans Poser & Ulrich Dirks (eds.), Hans Reichenbach, Philosophie im Umkreis der Physik, De Gruyter. pp. 55-68. 1998.
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45Die Pragmatik des Erklärens: Warum-Fragen und ihre AntwortenIn G. Schurz (ed.), Erklären und Verstehen in der Wissenschaft, Vittorio Klostermann. pp. 31-90. 1990.
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27Über die Erweiterung der Beth-Semantik für physikalische TheorienIn Wolfgang Balzer & Michael Heidelberger (eds.), Zur Logik empirischer Theorien, De Gruyter. pp. 97-116. 1983.
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161Quantum mechanics: an empiricist viewOxford University Press. 1991.The author argues that quantum theory admits a plurality of interpretations, each aiding further understanding of the theory, but also advocating specifically the Copenhagen Variant of the Modal Interpretation. That variant is applied to topics like the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox and the problem of 'identical' particles.
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1Arguments concerning scientific realism"In Jeffrey Foss (ed.), Science and the World: Philosophical Approaches, Broadview Press. 2013.
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144Reflection and conditionalization: Comments on Michael RescorlaNoûs 57 (3): 539-552. 2023.Rescorla explores the relation between Reflection, Conditionalization, and Dutch book arguments in the presence of a weakened concept of sure loss and weakened conditions of self‐transparency for doxastic agents. The literature about Reflection and about Dutch Book arguments, though overlapping, are distinct, and its history illuminates the import of Rescorla's investigation. With examples from a previous debate in the 70s and results about Reflection and Conditionalization in the 80s, I propose…Read more
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80A Landscape of Logics beyond the Deduction TheoremPrincipia: An International Journal of Epistemology 26 (1): 25-38. 2022.Philosophical issues often turn into logic. That is certainly true of Moore’s Paradox, which tends to appear and reappear in many philosophical contexts. There is no doubt that its study belongs to pragmatics rather than semantics or syntax. But it is also true that issues in pragmatics can often be studied fruitfully by attending to their projection, so to speak, onto the levels of semantics or syntax — just in the way that problems in spherical geometry are often illuminated by the study of pr…Read more
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582Time in physical and narrative structureIn John Bender & David Wellbery (eds.), Chronotypes: the construction of time, Stanford University Press. pp. 19-37. 1991.When the reader turns to a text, he conceives of the narrated events as ordered in time. When the natural philosopher turns to the world, he also conceives of its events as ordered in time—or lately, in space-time. But each has the task of constituting this order on the basis of clues present in what is to be ordered. Interrogating the parallels to be found in their problems and methods, I shall argue that in both cases the definiteness of the relation between the order and what is ordered resid…Read more
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50The Experimental Side of Modeling (edited book)Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science. 2018.An innovative, multifaceted approach to scientific experiments as designed by and shaped through interaction with the modeling process The role of scientific modeling in mediation between theories and phenomena is a critical topic within the philosophy of science, touching on issues from climate modeling to synthetic models in biology, high energy particle physics, and cognitive sciences. Offering a radically new conception of the role of data in the scientific modeling process as well as a new …Read more
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264What is Scientific Realism?Spontaneous Generations 9 (1): 12-25. 2018.Decades of debate about scientific realism notwithstanding, we find ourselves bemused by what different philosophers appear to think it is, exactly. Does it require any sort of belief in relation to scientific theories and, if so, what sort? Is it rather typified by a certain understanding of the rationality of such beliefs? In the following dialogue we explore these questions in hopes of clarifying some convictions about what scientific realism is, and what it could or should be. En route, we e…Read more
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89Updating Probability: Tracking Statistics as CriterionBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 68 (3): 725-743. 2017.For changing opinion, represented by an assignment of probabilities to propositions, the criterion proposed is motivated by the requirement that the assignment should have, and maintain, the possibility of matching in some appropriate sense statistical proportions in a population. This ‘tracking’ criterion implies limitations on policies for updating in response to a wide range of types of new input. Satisfying the criterion is shown equivalent to the principle that the prior must be a convex co…Read more
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214How is Scientific Revolution / Conversion Possible?Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 73 63-80. 1999.
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181The Logical Structure of the World & Pseudo-Problems in Philosophy. Rudolf Carnap, Rolf A. GeorgePhilosophy of Science 35 (3): 298-299. 1968.
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124Thomason’s Paradox for Belief, and Two Consequence RelationsJournal of Philosophical Logic 40 (1). 2011.Thomason (1979/2010)'s argument against competence psychologism in semantics envisages a representation of a subject's competence as follows: he understands his own language in the sense that he can identify the semantic content of each of its sentences, which requires that the relation between expression and content be recursive. Then if the scientist constructs a theory that is meant to represent the body of the subject's beliefs, construed as assent to the content of the pertinent sentences, …Read more
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376The physics and metaphysics of identity and individuality Content Type Journal Article DOI 10.1007/s11016-010-9463-7 Authors Don Howard, Department of Philosophy and Graduate Program in History and Philosophy of Science, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA Bas C. van Fraassen, Philosophy Department, San Francisco State University, 1600 Holloway Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94132, USA Otávio Bueno, Department of Philosophy, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33124, USA Elena Caste…Read more
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86A Social History of Truth: Civility and Science in Seventeenth-Century England by Steven ShapinCommon Knowledge 25 (1-3): 401-402. 2019.
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94Timothy Smiley. Sense without denotation. Analysis , n.s. no. 78 , pp. 125–135Journal of Symbolic Logic 37 (2): 423. 1972.
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Areas of Specialization
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |