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4421Knowledge Based System for Diagnosing Custard Apple Diseases and TreatmentInternational Journal of Academic Engineering Research (IJAER) 6 (5): 41-45. 2022.There is no doubt that custard apple diseases are among the important reasons that destroy the Custard Apple plant and its agricultural crops. This leads to obvious damage to these plants and they become inedible. Discovering these diseases is a good step to provide the appropriate and correct treatment. Determining the treatment with high accuracy depends on the method used to correctly diagnose the disease, expert systems can greatly help in avoiding damage to these plants. The expert system c…Read more
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32Review of From Darwin to Derrida by David Haig: MIT Press 2020. ISBN 9780262043786 (review)Acta Biotheoretica 69 (3): 477-481. 2020.
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161Cancer and the Levels of SelectionBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 75 (3): 537-560. 2024.Cancer is often seen as a case of multilevel selection, in which selfish cancer cells pursue short-term proliferation to the detriment of the collective. Thus cancer cells are described as ‘cheats’, and an analogy is often drawn between the mechanisms by which organisms fight cancer and the mechanisms by which social groups enforce cooperation. Recently, Andy Gardner and Max Shpak and Jie Lu have argued that cancer is not a true case of multilevel selection, that cancer cells should be not regar…Read more
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115Philosophy of Biology: A Very Short IntroductionOxford University Press. 2019.Covering some of science's most divisive topics, such as philosophical issues in genetics and evolution, the philosophy of biology also encompasses more traditional philosophical questions, such as free will, essentialism, and nature vs nurture. Here, Samir Okasha outlines the core issues with which contemporary philosophy of biology is engaged.
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96EPSA Philosophy of Science: Amsterdam 2009 (edited book)Springer. 2011.This is a collection of high-quality research papers in the philosophy of science, deriving from papers presented at the second meeting of the European Philosophy of Science Association in Amsterdam, October 2009.
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123Agents and Goals in EvolutionOxford University Press. 2018.Samir Okasha offers a critical study of agential thinking in biology, where evolved organisms are seen as agents pursuing a goal. He examines the justification for transposing concepts from rational humans to the biological world, and considers whether agential thinking is mere anthropomorphism or plays a more intellectual role in the science.
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262The strategy of endogenization in evolutionary biologySynthese 198 (Suppl 14): 3413-3435. 2018.Evolutionary biology is striking for its ability to explain a large and diverse range of empirical phenomena on the basis of a few general theoretical principles. This article offers a philosophical perspective on the way that evolutionary biology has come to achieve such impressive generality, by focusing on “the strategy of endogenization”. This strategy involves devising evolutionary explanations for biological features that were originally part of the background conditions, or scaffolding, a…Read more
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94On Hamilton’s Rule and Inclusive Fitness Theory with Nonadditive PayoffsPhilosophy of Science 83 (5): 873-883. 2016.Hamilton’s theory of inclusive fitness is a widely used framework for studying the evolution of social behavior, but controversy surrounds its status. Hamilton originally derived his famous rb > c rule for the spread of a social gene by assuming additivity of costs and benefits. However, it has recently been argued that the additivity assumption can be dispensed with, so long as the −c and b terms are suitably defined, as partial regression coefficients. I argue that this way of generalizing Ham…Read more
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1Proceedings of the Second Conference of the European Philosophy of Science Association. (edited book)Springer. 2012.
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72X *—Does Hume’s Argument Against Induction Rest on a Quantifier-Shift Fallacy?Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 105 (1): 237-255. 2005.It is widely agreed that Hume’s description of human inductive reasoning is inadequate. But many philosophers think that this inadequacy in no way affects the force of Hume’s argument for the unjustifiability of inductive reasoning. I argue that this constellation of opinions contains a serious tension, given that Hume was not merely pointing out that induction is fallible. I then explore a recent diagnosis of where Hume’s sceptical argument goes wrong, due to Elliott Sober. Sober argues that Hu…Read more
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434Van Fraassen's Critique Of Inference To The Best ExplanationStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 31 (4): 691-710. 2000.
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2Biological AltruismStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Plato. Stanford. Edu/Entries/Altruism-Biological. forthcoming.
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257Multi-level selection, covariance and contextual analysisBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 55 (3): 481-504. 2004.Two alternative statistical approaches to modelling multi-level selection in nature, both found in the contemporary biological literature, are contrasted. The simple covariance approach partitions the total selection differential on a phenotypic character into within-group and between-group components, and identifies the change due to group selection with the latter. The contextual approach partitions the total selection differential into different components, using multivariate regression analy…Read more
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127Verificationism, realism and scepticismErkenntnis 55 (3): 371-385. 2001.Verificationism has often seemed attractive to philosophers because of its apparent abilityto deliver us from scepticism. However, I argue that purely epistemological considerationsprovide insufficient reason for embracing verificationism over realism. I distinguish twotypes of sceptical problem: those that stem from underdetermination by the actual data,and those that stem from underdetermination by all possible data. Verificationismevades problems of the second sort, but is powerless in the fa…Read more
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84The explanation of scientific belief: Reply to W.e. JonesInternational Studies in the Philosophy of Science 14 (3). 2000.This Article does not have an abstract
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88How to be a selective QuineanDialectica 56 (1). 2002.This paper examines whether one can accept Quine's critique of the analytic/synthetic distinction while rejecting his indeterminacy of translation thesis. I argue that this is possible, appearances to the contrary notwithstanding. Holding that linguistic synonymy is a well‐defined relation, and that translation is thus a determinate matter, does not commit one to the existence of an analytic‐synthetic distinction capable of playing the explanatory role that the traditional distinction was suppos…Read more
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130Replies to my criticsBiology and Philosophy 25 (3): 425-431. 2010.This paper contains replies to the reviews of my book by Steven Downes, Massimo Pigliucci and Deborah Shelton & Rick Michod.
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83Emergent group traits, reproduction, and levels of selectionBehavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (3): 268-269. 2014.
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201Philosophical theories of probability (review)British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 53 (1): 151-156. 2002.
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197Does the concept of “clade selection” make sense?Philosophy of Science 70 (4): 739-751. 2003.The idea that clades might be units of selection, defended by a number of biologists and philosophers of biology, is critically examined. I argue that only entities which reproduce, i.e. leave offspring, can be units of selection, and that a necessary condition of reproduction is that the offspring entity be able, in principle, to outlive its parental entity. Given that clades are monophlyetic by definition, it follows that clades do not reproduce, so it makes no sense to talk about a clade's fi…Read more
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251Optimal Choice in the Face of Risk: Decision Theory Meets EvolutionPhilosophy of Science 78 (1): 83-104. 2011.The problem of how to make optimal choices in the face of risk arises in both economics/decision theory and also evolutionary biology; in the former, ‘optimal’ means utility maximizing, while in the latter it means fitness maximizing. This article explores the links, thematic and formal, between the economic and evolutionary theories of optimal choice in risky situations, with particular reference to the relationship between utility and fitness. It is argued that the link is strongest between ev…Read more
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252Why won't the group selection controversy go away?British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 52 (1): 25-50. 2001.The group selection controversy is about whether natural selection ever operates at the level of groups, rather than at the level of individual organisms. Traditionally, group selection has been invoked to explain the existence of altruistic behaviour in nature. However, most contemporary evolutionary biologists are highly sceptical of the hypothesis of group selection, which they regard as biologically implausible and not needed to explain the evolution of altruism anyway. But in their recent b…Read more
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403Altruism, group selection and correlated interactionBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 56 (4): 703-725. 2005.Group selection is one acknowledged mechanism for the evolution of altruism. It is well known that for altruism to spread by natural selection, interactions must be correlated; that is, altruists must tend to associate with one another. But does group selection itself require correlated interactions? Two possible arguments for answering this question affirmatively are explored. The first is a bad argument, for it rests on a product/process confusion. The second is a more subtle argument, whose v…Read more
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242The Relation between Kin and Multilevel Selection: An Approach Using Causal GraphsBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 67 (2): 435-470. 2016.Kin selection and multilevel selection are alternative approaches for studying the evolution of social behaviour, the relation between which has long been a source of controversy. Many recent theorists regard the two approaches as ultimately equivalent, on the grounds that gene frequency change can be correctly expressed using either. However, this shows only that the two are formally equivalent, not that they offer equally good causal representations of the evolutionary process. This article ar…Read more
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288Social justice, genomic justice and the veil of ignorance: Harsanyi meets MendelEconomics and Philosophy 28 (1): 43-71. 2012.John Harsanyi and John Rawls both used the veil of ignorance thought experiment to study the problem of choosing between alternative social arrangements. With his ‘impartial observer theorem’, Harsanyi tried to show that the veil of ignorance argument leads inevitably to utilitarianism, an argument criticized by Sen, Weymark and others. A quite different use of the veil-of-ignorance concept is found in evolutionary biology. In the cell-division process called meiosis, in which sexually reproduci…Read more
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259Fodor on cognition, modularity, and adaptationismPhilosophy of Science 70 (1): 68-88. 2003.This paper critically examines Jerry Fodor's latest attacks on evolutionary psychology. Contra Leda Cosmides and John Tooby, Fodor argues (i) there is no reason to think that human cognition is a Darwinian adaptation in the first place, and (ii) there is no valid inference from adaptationism about the mind to massive modularity. However, Fodor maintains (iii) that there is a valid inference in the converse direction, from modularity to adaptationism, but (iv) that the language module is an excep…Read more
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170Review. Genetics and reductionism. S SarkarBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 51 (1): 181-185. 2000.
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Biology |
| General Philosophy of Science |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Social Science |
| Philosophy of Probability |