Patrick A. Heelan
(1926 - 2015)

  •  239
    Hermeneutical Philosophy and Pragmatism: A Philosophy of Science (review)
    with Jay Schulkin
    Synthese 115 (3): 269-302. 1998.
    Two philosophical traditions with much in common, (classical) pragmatism and (Heidegger's) hermeneutic philosophy, are here\ncompared with respect to their approach to the philosophy of science. Both emphasize action as a mode of interpreting experience.\nBoth have developed important categories – inquiry, meaning, theory, praxis, coping, historicity, life-world – and each has\noffered an alternative to the more traditional philosophies of science stemming from Descartes, Hume, and Comte. Pragma…Read more
  •  135
    The phenomenological role of consciousness in measurement
    Mind and Matter 2 (1): 61-84. 2004.
    A structural analogy is pointed out between a check hermeneutically developed phenomenological description, based on Husserl, of the process of perceptual cognition on the one hand and quantum mechanical measurement on the other hand. In Husserl's analytic phase of the cognition process, the 'intentionality-structure' of the subject/object union prior to predication of a local object is an entangled symmetry-making state, and this entanglement is broken in the synthetic phase when the particular…Read more
  •  73
    After Experiment: Realism and Research
    American Philosophical Quarterly 26 (4). 1989.
  •  92
    Truth and the Historicity of man
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 43 (n/a): 185-194. 1969.
  •  181
    Phenomenology, Ontology, and Quantum Physics
    Foundations of Science 18 (2): 379-385. 2013.
    This essay is dominated by three themes that recur contrapuntally in Heisenberg’s writings: observation, description, and ontology—prompted always by a concern about the role played by the subjective inquirer in scientific meaning-making, and by the ontology of scientific claims. Among the related themes are; the tension between paradigmatic concerns with structure and philosophical concerns with reality, the possibility of scientific revolutions, such as relativity and quantum mechanics, that c…Read more
  •  48
    Hermeneutics Versus Science? Three German Views
    Review of Metaphysics 42 (3): 615-615. 1989.
    The topic of this excellent little book is the debate about whether the humanities proceed differently from the natural sciences, and in particular, about whether literary interpretations are decidably true or false or whether they are decidable merely in relation to assertability. Decidability and historicity are, as Stegmuller points out, also a problem for the natural sciences, because of the dilemmas of confirmation and of background knowledge. The excellence of this book is in the way Anglo…Read more
  •  100
    Experiment and Theory: Constitution and Reality
    Journal of Philosophy 85 (10): 515-524. 1988.
  •  144
    Why 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
  •  126
    The nature of clinical science
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 2 (1): 20-32. 1977.
  •  163
    Space-Perception And The Philosophy Of Science
    University 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, ...
  •  249
    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
  •  60
    Comments and Critique
    Science 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
  •  139
    Perceived Worlds are Interpreted Worlds
    Journal of Philosophy 81 (11): 707. 1984.
  •  120
    Husserl and the Sciences (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 45 (3): 405-406. 2005.
  •  102
    Comments to heelans thesis
    with Werner Heisenberg
    Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 6 (1): 137-138. 1975.
  •  81
    The new relevance of experiment: A postmodern problem
    Theoretical 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
  •  35
    Justus Buchler 1914-1991
    with Sydney Gelber
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 65 (1). 1991.
  • Space-Perception and the Philosophy of Science
    Erkenntnis 24 (3): 399-402. 1986.
  • Husserl's philosophy of science
    In Jitendranath Mohanty & William R. McKenna (eds.), Husserl's phenomenology: a textbook, University Press of America. pp. 387--428. 1989.
  •  100
    The Search for Perfect Science in the West
    Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 43 (2): 165-186. 1968.
  •  98
    Complementarity, context dependence, and quantum logic
    Foundations 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
  •  72
    The Logic of Framework Transpositions
    International Philosophical Quarterly 11 (3): 314-334. 1971.