•  13
    SolarView: Low Distortion Radial Embeddings with a Focus
    with Thom Castermans, Kevin Verbeek, Bettina Speckmann, Michel Westenberg, Rob Koopman, Shenghui Wang, and Hein Van Den Berg
    IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics 25 (10): 2969-2982. 2019.
    We propose a novel type of low distortion radial embedding which focuses on one specific entity and its closest neighbors. Our embedding preserves near-exact distances to the focus entity and aims to minimize distortion between the other entities. We present an interactive exploration tool SolarView which places the focus entity at the center of a "solar system" and embeds its neighbors guided by concentric circles. SolarView provides an implementation of our novel embedding and several state-of…Read more
  •  37
    History of Philosophy in Ones and Zeros
    with Hein Van Den Berg, Yvette Oortwijn, and Caspar Treijtel
    In M. Curtis & Eugen Fischer (eds.), Methodological Advances in Experimental Philosophy, . pp. 295-332. 2019.
    How can we best reconstruct the origin of a notion, its development, and possible spread to multiple fields? We present a pilot study on the spread of the notion of conceptual scheme. Though the notion is philosophically important, its origin, development, and spread are unclear. Several purely qualitative and competing historical hypotheses have been offered, which rely on disconnected disciplinary traditions, and have never been tested all at once in a single comprehensive investigation fittin…Read more
  •  26
    Against Facts
    The MIT Press. 2015.
    An argument that the major metaphysical theories of facts give us no good reason to accept facts in our catalog of the world. In this book Arianna Betti argues that we have no good reason to accept facts in our catalog of the world, at least as they are described by the two major metaphysical theories of facts. She claims that neither of these theories is tenable—neither the theory according to which facts are special structured building blocks of reality nor the theory according to which facts …Read more
  • GlamMap: visualizing library metadata.
    with D. H. P. Gerrits, Bettina Speckmann, and Hein Van Den Berg
    Proceedings of VALA 2014. 2014.
    Libraries provide access to large amounts of library metadata. Unfortunately, many libraries only offer textual interfaces for searching and browsing their holdings. Visualizations provide simpler, faster, and more efficient ways to navigate, search and study large quantities of metadata. This paper presents GlamMap, a visualization tool that displays library metadata on an interactive, computer-generated geographic map. We provide detailed discussion of how GlamMap benefits the work of libraria…Read more
  •  11
    GlamMapping Trove.
    with Thom Castermans, Bettina Speckmann, Hein Van Den Berg, and Kevin Verbeek
    Proceedings of VALA 2016. 2016.
    This paper presents the current state of development of GlamMap, a visualisation tool that displays library metadata on an interactive, computer-generated geographic map. The focus in the paper is on the most crucial improvement achieved in the development of the tool: GlamMapping Trove. The visualisation of Trove’s sixtymillion book records is possible thanks to an improved database structure, more efficient data retrieval, and more scalable visualisation algorithms. The paper analyses problems…Read more
  •  12
    GlamMap: geovisualization for e-humanities
    with Thom Castermans, Bettina Speckmann, Kevin Verbeek, Michel A. Westenberg, and Hein Van Den Berg
    2016 Workshop on Visualization for the Digital Humanities. 2016.
    This paper presents GlamMap, a visualization tool for large, multi-variate georeferenced humanities data sets. Our approach visualizes the data as glyphs on a zoomable geographic map, and performs clustering and data aggregation at each zoom level to avoid clutter and to prevent overlap of symbols. GlamMap was developed for the Galleries, Libraries, Archives, and Museums (GLAM) domain in cooperation with researchers in philosophy. We demonstrate the usefulness of our approach by a case study on …Read more
  •  224
    A philosophical perspective on visualization for digital humanities
    with Hein Van Den Berg, Thom Castermans, Rob Koopman, Bettina Speckmann, K. A. B. Verbeek, Titia Van der Werf, Shenghui Wang, and Michel A. Westenberg
    3Rd Workshop on Visualization for the Digital Humanities. 2018.
    In this position paper, we describe a number of methodological and philosophical challenges that arose within our interdisciplinary Digital Humanities project CatVis, which is a collaboration between applied geometric algorithms and visualization researchers, data scientists working at OCLC, and philosophers who have a strong interest in the methodological foundations of visualization research. The challenges we describe concern aspects of one single epistemic need: that of methodologically secu…Read more
  •  209
    Towards a Computational History of Ideas
    Proceedings of the Third Conference on Digital Humanities in Luxembourg with a Special Focus on Reading Historical Sources in the Digital Age: Luxembourg. Ceur Workshop Proceedings, 1681. 2016.
    The History of Ideas is presently enjoying a certain renaissance after a long period of disrepute. Increasing quantities of digitally available historical texts and the availability of computational tools for the exploration of such masses of sources, it is suggested, can be of invaluable help to historians of ideas. The question is: how exactly? In this paper, we argue that a computational history of ideas is possible if the following two conditions are satisfied: (i) Sound Method . A computati…Read more
  •  2
    @PhilosTEI: Building Corpora for Philosophers
    with Martin Reynaert and Hein Van Den Berg
    In J. Odijk & A. Van Hessen (eds.), Clarin in the Low Countries, . pp. 379-392. 2017.
    The step to e-research in philosophy depends on the availability of high quality, easily and freely accessible corpora in a sustainable format composed from multi-language, multi-script books from different historical periods. Corpora matching these needs are at the moment virtually non-existing. Within @PhilosTei, we have addressed this corpus building problem by developing an open source, web-based, user-friendly workflow from textual images to TEI, based on state-of-the-art open source OCR so…Read more
  •  22
    The Classical Model of Science: a millennia-old model of scientific rationality
    with Willem Jong
    Synthese 174 (2): 185-203. 2010.
    Throughout more than two millennia philosophers adhered massively to ideal standards of scientific rationality going back ultimately to Aristotle’s Analytica posteriora. These standards got progressively shaped by and adapted to new scientific needs and tendencies. Nevertheless, a core of conditions capturing the fundamentals of what a proper science should look like remained remarkably constant all along. Call this cluster of conditions the Classical Model of Science. In this paper we will do t…Read more
  •  15
    Introduction
    with Willem Jong
    Synthese 174 (2): 181-183. 2010.
  •  3
    Introduction
    with Jong W. R. De
  •  36
    Łukasiewicz and Leśniewski on Contradiction
    Reports on Philosophy 127 267-287. 2004.
  •  542
    On Tarski's foundations of the geometry of solids
    with Iris Loeb
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 18 (2): 230-260. 2012.
    The paper [Tarski: Les fondements de la géométrie des corps, Annales de la Société Polonaise de Mathématiques, pp. 29—34, 1929] is in many ways remarkable. We address three historico-philosophical issues that force themselves upon the reader. First we argue that in this paper Tarski did not live up to his own methodological ideals, but displayed instead a much more pragmatic approach. Second we show that Leśniewski's philosophy and systems do not play the significant role that one may be tempted…Read more
  •  22
    Il rasoio di Lesniewski
    Rivista di Filosofia 89 (1): 87-112. 1998.
  •  47
    Bolzano's universe metaphysics, logic, and truth
    In Lila Haaparanta & Heikki Koskinen (eds.), Categories of Being: Essays on Metaphysics and Logic, Oxford University Press, Usa. pp. 167. 2012.
    This chapter has two aims. The first aim is to present an overview of Bolzano's universe from the point of view of his metaphysics and its relationship to logic, relying fundamentally on Bolzano's Wissenschaftslehre. The author's preferred reading of Bolzano is one according to which he is a 'platonistic nominalist': a platonist about propositions and a nominalist about properties. Bolzano's nominalistic tendencies are particularly conspicuous in his mereological analyses, which play a major rol…Read more
  •  125
    In several manuscripts, written between 1894 and 1897, Twardowski developed a new theory of judgement with two types of judgement: existential and relational judgements. In Zur Lehre he tried to stay within a Brentanian framework, although he introduced the distinction between content and object in the theory of judgement. The introduction of this distinction forced Twardowski to revise further Brentano'stheory.His changes concerned judgements about relations and about non-present objects. The l…Read more
  •  23
    Relata-specificity: A Response to Vallicella
    with Jan Willem Wieland
    Dialectica 62 (4): 509-524. 2008.
  •  82
    Lesniewski's Early Liar, Tarski and Natural Language
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 127 (1-3): 267-287. 2004.
    This paper is a contribution to the reconstruction of Tarski’s semantic background in the light of the ideas of his master, Stanislaw Lesniewski. Although in his 1933 monograph Tarski credits Lesniewski with crucial negative results on the semantics of natural language, the conceptual relationship between the two logicians has never been investigated in a thorough manner. This paper shows that it was not Tarski, but Lesniewski who first avowed the impossibility of giving a satisfactory theory of…Read more
  •  53
    Kazimierz Twardowski
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2010.
  •  19
    1.3. Contro i fatti
    Rivista di Estetica 49 55-72. 2012.
    This paper argues that the hypothesis that there are facts is ungrounded. I first introduce a series of important theoretical distinctions to say what facts are not – and to avoid misunderstandings as to what I take to be facts, states of affairs and relations. Then I present the so-called problem of the glue, which is linked to Bradley’s regress. Finally, I propose a stronger version of the problem of the glue, which I call the problem of directional glue, with the aim of giving additional evid…Read more