•  23
    We examine considerations that enter into design and evaluation of measures in social science, categorizing them into four drivers: epistemic, ethical, pragmatic, and metrological. We call them drivers to highlight their role in guiding researchers’ decisions without determining them. Through an analysis of the World Inequality Report 2022, we reveal tensions among these drivers, illustrating the complex interplay between the various demands a measure must satisfy. Our analysis highlights the ne…Read more
  •  61
    Measurement requires compromises: the case of economic inequality
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 113 (C): 88-97. 2025.
  •  148
    The Comparison of Inequality Measurements across Countries and Time
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 76 (3): 571-589. 2025.
    Comparing inequality across countries and over time is difficult because national inequality measurements are based on country-specific methods and presuppositions, which also vary over time within the same country. Researchers interested in comparative analysis often rely on harmonized data sets that express heterogeneous measurements in homogeneous terms. Economists, however, have warned against the uncritical employment of harmonized outcomes, by showing that they might bring about misleading…Read more
  •  756
    The article advances a new way of thinking about classifications in general and the classification of mental disorders in particular. By applying insights from measurement practice to the context of classification, I defend a notion of epistemic accuracy that allows one to evaluate and improve classifications by comparing different classifying methods to each other. Progress in classification arises from the mutual development of classification systems and classifying methods. Based on this noti…Read more
  •  127
    The appeal to robustness in measurement practice
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 66 (C): 57-66. 2017.
    This paper distinguishes between two arguments based on measurement robustness and defends the epistemic value of robustness for the assessment of measurement reliability. I argue that the appeal to measurement robustness in the assessment of measurement is based on a different inferential pattern and is not exposed to the same objections as the no-coincidence argument which is commonly associated with the use of robustness to corroborate individual results. This investigation sheds light on the…Read more
  •  1097
    The paper reviews the philosophical literature on the epistemology of modelling in contemporary economics. In particular, it focuses on open questions concerning the epistemic role of models, the validity of inferences from the models to the world, and the legitimacy of their use for purposes of explanation, prediction and intervention.