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436Reply to Humphreys and Freedman's review of causation, prediction, and searchBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 48 (4): 555-568. 1997.
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179Space-time and synonymyPhilosophy of Science 49 (3): 463-477. 1982.In "The Epistemology of Geometry" Glymour proposed a necessary structural condition for the synonymy of two space-time theories. David Zaret has recently challenged this proposal, by arguing that Newtonian gravitational theory with a flat, non-dynamic connection (FNGT) is intuitively synonymous with versions of the theory using a curved dynamical connection (CNGT), even though these two theories fail to satisfy Glymour's proposed necessary condition for synonymy. Zaret allowed that if FNGT and C…Read more
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35The Berlin Group and the Philosophy of Logical Empiricism, Nickolay Milkov and Volker Peckhous, eds (review)Balkan Journal of Philosophy 6 (1): 72-75. 2014.
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69Causal Modeling, Explanation and Severe TestingIn Deborah G. Mayo & Aris Spanos (eds.), Error and Inference: Recent Exchanges on Experimental Reasoning, Reliability, and the Objectivity and Rationality of Science, Cambridge University Press. pp. 331-375. 2009.
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80Halpern's Actual Causality is an extended development of an account of causal relations among individual events in the tradition that analyzes causation as difference making. The book is notable for its efforts at formal clarity, its exploration of "normality" conditions, and the wealth of examples it uses and whose provenance it traces. Unfortunately, the various normality conditions considered undermine the capacity of the basic theory to plausibly treat various cases Halpern considers, and th…Read more
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111A Photcopy of Thinking Things Through, Princeton Univeresity Press, 1980.
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97The Principle of Total Evidence is many things. We describe some of them.
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272Lost in the tensors: Einstein's struggles with covariance principles 1912–1916Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 9 (4): 251-278. 1978.
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Theories: An Examination of the Logical Empiricist Philosophy of ScienceDissertation, Indiana University. 1969.
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60The second edition of a unique introductory text, offering an account of the logical tradition in philosophy and its influence on contemporary scientific disciplines. Thinking Things Through offers a broad, historical, and rigorous introduction to the logical tradition in philosophy and its contemporary significance. It is unique among introductory philosophy texts in that it considers both the historical development and modern fruition of a few central questions. It traces the influence of phil…Read more
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117Foundations of Space-Time Theories: Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science (edited book)University of Minnesota Press. 1974.Some Philosophical Prehistory of General Relativity As history, my remarks will form rather a medley. If they can claim any sort of unity (apart from a ...
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312What revisions does bootstrap testing need? A replyPhilosophy of Science 55 (2): 260-264. 1988.
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125On Writing the History of Special RelativityPSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1982. 1982.Nearly all accounts of the genesis of special relativity unhesitatingly assume that the theory was worked out in a roughly five week period following the discovery of the relativity of simultaneity. Not only is there no direct evidence for this common presupposition, there are numerous considerations which militate against it. The evidence suggests it is far more reasonable that Einstein was already in possession of the Lorentz and field transformations, that he had applied these to the dynamics…Read more
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346The gravitational red shift as a test of general relativity: History and analysisStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 11 (3): 175-214. 1980.
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189Creative Abduction, Factor Analysis, and the Causes of Liberal DemocracyKriterion - Journal of Philosophy 33 (1): 1-22. 2019.The ultimate focus of the current essay is on methods of “creative abduction” that have some guarantees as reliable guides to the truth, and those that do not. Emphasizing work by Richard Englehart using data from the World Values Survey, Gerhard Schurz has analyzed literature surrounding Samuel Huntington’s well-known claims that civilization is divided into eight contending traditions, some of which resist “modernization” – democracy, civil rights, equality of rights of women and minorities, s…Read more
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421Determinism, ignorance, and quantum mechanicsJournal of Philosophy 68 (21): 744-751. 1971.is every bit as intelligible and philosophically respectable as many other doctrines currently in favor, e.g., the doctrine that mental events are identical with brain events; the attempt to give a linguistic construal of this latter doctrine meets many of the same sorts of difficulties encountered above (see Hempel, op. cit.). Secondly, I think that evidence for universal determinism may not, as a matter of fact, be so hard to come by as one might imagine. It is a striking fact about our world …Read more
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167Kevin T. Kelly and Clark Glymour. Why Bayesian Confirmation Does Not Capture the Logic of Scientific Justification
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157Nancy Cartwright devotes half of her new book, Hunting Causes and Using Them, to critcizing "Bayes Net Methods"--as she calls them--and what she takes to be their assumptions. All of her critical claims are false or at best fractionally true. This paper reviews the literature she addresses but appears not to have met.
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23Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of J STOR’s Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/about/terms.html. J STOR’s Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non—commercial use.
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25We outline a cognitive and computational account of causal learning in children. We propose that children employ specialized cognitive systems that allow them to recover an accurate “causal map” of the world: an abstract, coherent representation of the causal relations among events. This kind of knowledge can be perspicuously represented by the formalism of directed graphical causal models, or “Bayes nets”. Human causal learning and inference may involve computations similar to those for learnig…Read more
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236Jon Williamson bayesian nets and causalityBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 60 (4): 849-855. 2009.
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