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852The Plurality of Explanatory GamesIn Gianluca Manzo (ed.), Theories and Social Mechanisms, The Bardwell Press. pp. 325-335. 2015.
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198Scientific ExplanationIn Scientific Explanation, Elsevier. pp. 302-307. 2015.There are three main approaches to scientific explanation in the philosophical literature. The unification approach claims that science explains by fitting the particular facts and events within a general theoretical framework. The mechanistic approach claims that science explains by identifying mechanisms. According to the manipulationist approach an explanation ought to be such that it can be used to answer a “what-if-things-had-been-different question.” The article examines whether these thre…Read more
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1865Learning, Institutions, and Economic PerformancePerspectives on Politics 2 75-84. 2004.In this article, we provide a broad overview of the interplay among cognition, belief systems, and institutions, and how they affect economic performance. We argue that a deeper understanding of institutions’ emergence, their working properties, and their effect on economic and political outcomes should begin from an analysis of cognitive processes. We explore the nature of individual and collective learning, stressing that the issue is not whether agents are perfectly or boundedly rational, but…Read more
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294IntroductionIn Chrysostomos Mantzavinos (ed.), Philosophy of the social sciences: philosophical theory and scientific practice, Cambridge University Press. 2009.
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860Explanatory GamesJournal of Philosophy 110 (11): 606-632. 2013.A philosophical theory of explanation should provide solutions to a series of problems, both descriptive and normative. The aim of this essay is to establish the claim that this can be best done if one theorizes in terms of explanatory games rather than focusing on the explication of the concept of explanation. The position that is adopted is that of an explanatory pluralism and it is elaborated in terms of the rules that incorporate the normative standards that guide the processes of discovery …Read more
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630Beyond Homo Oeconomicus and Homo SociologicusIn Raymond Boudon Cherkaoui Mohamed (ed.), The European Tradition in Qualitative Research, Sage Publications. pp. 421-426. 2003.
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607The nature of science. A dialogueSynthese 196 (3): 775-793. 2019.In this dialogue the view of Paul Hoyningen-Huene as defended in Systematicity. The Nature of Science is presented and criticized. The approach is developed dialectically by the two interlocutors, a series of critical points are debated and an alternative view is introduced. The dialogical form is intended to honor the general philosophical approach of the author summarized in the last sentence of the book, where he states that he sees philosophy as an ongoing, open-ended dialogue.
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On Don Ross's Defense of Neoclassical EconomicsJournal of Economic Methodology 15 (3): 305-307. 2008.
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624Interpreting the Rules of the GameIn Christoph Engel Firtz Strack (ed.), The Impact of Court Procedure on the Psychology of Judicial Decision-Making, Nomos. pp. 16-30. 2007.After providing a brief overview of the economic theory of judicial decisions this paper presents an argument for why not only the economic theory of judicial decisions, but also the rational approach in general, most often fails in explaining decision-making. Work done within the research program of New Institutionalism is presented as a possible alternative. Within this research program judicial activity is conceptualized as the activity of "interpreting the rules of the game", i.e. the instit…Read more
University Tübingen
PhD, 1992
Areas of Specialization
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
| Value Theory |
| Philosophical Traditions |
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
Areas of Interest
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |