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147Why a hermeneutical philosophy of the natural sciences?Man and World 30 (3): 271-298. 1997.Why a hermeneutical philosophy of the natural sciences? It is necessary to address the philosophic crisis of realism vs relativism in the natural sciences. This crisis is seen as a part of the cultural crisis that Husserl and Heidegger identified and attributed to the hegemonic role of theoretical and calculative thought in Western societies. The role of theory is addressed using the hermeneutical circle to probe the origin of theoretic meaning in scientific cultural praxes. This is studied in G…Read more
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167Space-Perception And The Philosophy Of ScienceUniversity Of California Press. 1983.00 Drawing on the phenomenological tradition in the philosophy of science and philosophy of nature, Patrick Heelan concludes that perception is a cognitive, ...
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112Hermeneutics of experimental science in the context of the life-worldPhilosophia Mathematica (2): 101-144. 1972.
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60Comments and CritiqueScience in Context 3 (2): 477-488. 1989.The ArgumentIn this rejoinder to Gyorgy Markus, I argue that although there are nonphilosophical hermeneutical studies of communication among scientists from which much can be learned about scientific practices, there is also the philosophical genre of a hermeneutics of natural science, with which this paper is concerned. The former is the nonphilosophical use of hermeneutics in the study of texts and historical sources; the latter is a philosophy pursued within a working canon of philosophical …Read more
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249The role of consciousness as meaning Maker in science, culture, and religionZygon 44 (2): 467-486. 2009.Two hundred years ago, Friedrich Schleiermacher took critical issue with Immanuel Kant's intellectual notion of intuition as applied to human nature (Wellmon 2006). He found it necessary to modify—"hermeneutically," as he said—Kant's notion of anthropology by enabling it to include as human the new and strange human tribes Captain Cook found in the Pacific South Seas. A similar hermeneutic move is necessary if physics is to include the local contextual empirical syntheses of relativity and quant…Read more
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54The lifeworld and scientific interpretationIn S. Kay Toombs (ed.), Handbook of Phenomenology and Medicine, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 47--66. 2001.
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115Interpretation and the structure of space in scientific theory and in perceptionResearch in Phenomenology 16 (1): 187-199. 1986.
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108Comments to heelans thesisJournal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 6 (1): 137-138. 1975.
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35Justus Buchler 1914-1991Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 65 (1). 1991.
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84The new relevance of experiment: A postmodern problemTheoretical and Philosophical Psychology 9 (2): 11-19. 1989.Today when congressional committees are investigating laboratory notebooks, when the media debate the possibility of cold-fusion, and advertising presents drugs as remedies for everything from infertility to hair loss, the stage is set for the postmodern crisis of confidence in science. This crisis was ushered in by F. Nietzsche, and taken up by M. Heidegger, J. Habermas, Critical Theory, the Strong School of the Sociology of Science, by Margaret Thatcher, on the right and by Jacques Derrida, on…Read more
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Husserl's philosophy of scienceIn Jitendranath Mohanty & William R. McKenna (eds.), Husserl's phenomenology: a textbook, University Press of America. pp. 387--428. 1989.
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103Complementarity, context dependence, and quantum logicFoundations of Physics 1 (2): 95-110. 1970.Quantum-mechanical event descriptions are context-dependent descriptions. The role of quantum (nondistributive) logic is in the partial ordering of contexts rather than in the ordering of quantum-mechanical events. Moreover, the kind of quantum logic displayed by quantum mechanics can be easily inferred from the general notion of contextuality used in ordinary language. The formalizable core of Bohr's notion of complementarity is the type of context dependence discussed in this paper
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104The Search for Perfect Science in the WestThought: Fordham University Quarterly 43 (2): 165-186. 1968.
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76The Logic of Framework TranspositionsInternational Philosophical Quarterly 11 (3): 314-334. 1971.
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84Nietzsche e la scienza. Arte, vita, conoscenza (review)New Nietzsche Studies 2 (3-4): 134-135. 1998.
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283Husserl's later philosophy of natural sciencePhilosophy of Science 54 (3): 368-390. 1987.Husserl argues in the Crisis that the prevalent tradition of positive science in his time had a philosophical core, called by him "Galilean science", that mistook the quest for objective theory with the quest for truth. Husserl is here referring to Gottingen science of the Golden Years. For Husserl, theory "grows" out of the "soil" of the prescientific, that is, pretheoretical, life-world. Scientific truth finally is to be sought not in theory but rather in the pragmatic-perceptual praxes of mea…Read more
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171Husserl, Lonergan, and Paradoxes of MeasurementJournal of Macrodynamic Analysis 3 76-96. 2003.My scientific field is theoretical physics. My philosophical orientation is phenomenology, especially hermeneutical phenomenology, as modified and extended under the influence of Bernard Lonergan's cognitional theory. In fact, I was already deeply under the influence of Bernard Lonergan's workbefore I went to Louvain/Leuven to study phenomenology as a propaedeutic to my preparation in the philosophy of science. The specific topic of this paper is one close to the center of Philip's interest, nam…Read more
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An Anti-epistemological or Ontological Interpretation of the Quantum Theory and Theories Like itIn Babette E. Babich, Debra B. Bergoffen & Simon Glynn (eds.), Continental and postmodern perspectives in the philosophy of science, Avebury. pp. 55--68. 1995.
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75The primacy of perception and the cognitive paradigm : Reply to de MeySocial Epistemology 1 (4). 1987.
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101Scientific Objectivity and Framework TranspositionsPhilosophical Studies (Dublin) 19 (n/a): 55-70. 1970.The classical notion of scientific objectivity is a property of propositional truth. It is the property of being open to testing and inspection, in principle, by all men, although in practice perhaps, the testing of a scientific claim is restricted to the members of a community of professional experts. It is, moreover, the property of being stable in time, true eternally as it were; for objective truth is thought to express what is so independently of human interests, initiatives, bias, social c…Read more
Patrick A. Heelan
(1926 - 2015)
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Physical Science |
| General Philosophy of Science |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Cognitive Science |
| Continental Philosophy |