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Don Howard

University of Notre Dame
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    50
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  •  Events
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 More details
  • University of Notre Dame
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
Homepage
Areas of Specialization
Science, Logic, and Mathematics
History of Western Philosophy
Philosophy, Misc
Areas of Interest
Science, Logic, and Mathematics
History of Western Philosophy
Philosophy, Misc
  • All publications (50)
  •  66
    Introduction
    Perspectives on Science 5 (3). 1997.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  117
    Gesamtausgabe. Volume VIII: Ludwig Boltzmann: Internationale Tagung anlasslich des 75. Jahrestages seines Todes, 1981: Ausgewahlte Abhandlungen. Ludwig Boltzmann, Roman U. Sexl, John Blackmore
    Isis 75 (3): 621-621. 1984.
    History of Physics
  •  70
    Philosophy of Science and the History of Science
    In Steven French & Juha Saatsi (eds.), Continuum Companion to the Philosophy of Science, Continuum. pp. 55. 2011.
    General Philosophy of Science, Miscellaneous
  •  1
    Complementarity and Ontology: Niels Bohr and the problem of scientific realism in quantum physics
    Dissertation, Boston University. 1979.
    History of Quantum Mechanics
  •  168
    Two Left Turns Make a Right: On the Curious Political Career of North American Philosophy of Science at Midcentury
    In Logical Empiricism in North America, University of Minnesota Press. 2003.
    Science and Values
  • A brief on behalf of Bohr
    History of Quantum Mechanics
  •  137
    Einstein's philosophy of science
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.
    History of PhysicsSimplicity and ParsimonyScientific Method, MiscSpace and TimeEmpirically Equivalen…Read more
    History of PhysicsSimplicity and ParsimonyScientific Method, MiscSpace and TimeEmpirically Equivalent Theories
  •  188
    History of logic
    with Alan R. Perreiah
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 20 (1): 101-106. 1982.
    History of Western PhilosophyHistory of Logic, Misc17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  49
    Mach I, Mach II, Einstein und die Relativitatstheorie: Eine Falschung und ihre FolgenGereon Wolters
    Isis 78 (4): 606-607. 1987.
    Ernst MachHistory of PhysicsSpecial Relativity, Misc
  •  179
    Was Einstein Really a Realist?
    Perspectives on Science 1 (2): 204-251. 1993.
    It is widely believed that the development of the general theory of relativity coincided with a shift in Einstein’s philosophy of science from a kind of Machian positivism to a form of scientific realism. This article criticizes that view, arguing that a kind of realism was present from the start but that Einstein was skeptical all along about some of the bolder metaphysical and epistemological claims made on behalf of what we now would call scientific realism. If we read Einstein’s philosophy o…Read more
    It is widely believed that the development of the general theory of relativity coincided with a shift in Einstein’s philosophy of science from a kind of Machian positivism to a form of scientific realism. This article criticizes that view, arguing that a kind of realism was present from the start but that Einstein was skeptical all along about some of the bolder metaphysical and epistemological claims made on behalf of what we now would call scientific realism. If we read Einstein’s philosophy of science in its proper late nineteenth-and early twentieth-century philosophical context, we find that a kind of Duhemian under determinationist holism and conventionalism was more important to Einstein than either positivism or realism. And, reading his philosophy of science in its proper scientific.
    Quantum MechanicsHistory of PhysicsVarieties of Scientific Realism
  •  75
    Einstein and the History of General Relativity (edited book)
    with John Stachel
    Birkhäuser. 1989.
    Based upon the proceedings of the First International Conference on the History of General Relativity, held at Boston University's Osgood Hill Conference Center, North Andover, Massachusetts, 8-11 May 1986, this volume brings together essays by twelve prominent historians and philosophers of science and physicists. The topics range from the development of general relativity (John Norton, John Stachel) and its early reception (Carlo Cattani, Michelangelo De Maria, Anne Kox), through attempts to u…Read more
    Based upon the proceedings of the First International Conference on the History of General Relativity, held at Boston University's Osgood Hill Conference Center, North Andover, Massachusetts, 8-11 May 1986, this volume brings together essays by twelve prominent historians and philosophers of science and physicists. The topics range from the development of general relativity (John Norton, John Stachel) and its early reception (Carlo Cattani, Michelangelo De Maria, Anne Kox), through attempts to understand the physical implications of the theory (Jean Eisenstaedt, Peter Havas) and to quantize it (Peter G. Bergmann), to elaborations of the theory into a unified theory of electromagnetism and gravitation (Vladimir P. Vizgin, Michel Biezunski), and considerations of its cosmological extensions (Pierre Kerszberg, George F.R. Ellis). This is the first volume to survey many of the most important questions in the history of general relativity, with many of the contributions drawing upon such original resources as the Einstein Archive. It is hoped that it will stimulate much-needed further research in this hitherto neglected area.
    General Relativity
  •  506
    Who invented the “copenhagen interpretation”? A study in mythology
    Philosophy of Science 71 (5): 669-682. 2004.
    What is commonly known as the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, regarded as representing a unitary Copenhagen point of view, differs significantly from Bohr's complementarity interpretation, which does not employ wave packet collapse in its account of measurement and does not accord the subjective observer any privileged role in measurement. It is argued that the Copenhagen interpretation is an invention of the mid‐1950s, for which Heisenberg is chiefly responsible, various other p…Read more
    What is commonly known as the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, regarded as representing a unitary Copenhagen point of view, differs significantly from Bohr's complementarity interpretation, which does not employ wave packet collapse in its account of measurement and does not accord the subjective observer any privileged role in measurement. It is argued that the Copenhagen interpretation is an invention of the mid‐1950s, for which Heisenberg is chiefly responsible, various other physicists and philosophers, including Bohm, Feyerabend, Hanson, and Popper, having further promoted the invention in the service of their own philosophical agendas.
    Copenhagen InterpretationHistory of Quantum Mechanics
  • Review of S. French and D. Krause, Identity and individuality in classical and quantum physics (review)
    Metascience. forthcoming.
    Quantum Mechanics, Miscellaneous
  •  205
    Einstein and Duhem
    Synthese 83 (3): 363-384. 1990.
    Pierre Duhem's often unrecognized influence on twentieth-century philosophy of science is illustrated by an analysis of his significant if also largely unrecognized influence on Albert Einstein. Einstein's first acquaintance with Duhem's La Théorie physique, son objet et sa structure around 1909 is strongly suggested by his close personal and professional relationship with Duhem's German translator, Friedrich Adler. The central role of a Duhemian holistic, underdeterminationist variety of conven…Read more
    Pierre Duhem's often unrecognized influence on twentieth-century philosophy of science is illustrated by an analysis of his significant if also largely unrecognized influence on Albert Einstein. Einstein's first acquaintance with Duhem's La Théorie physique, son objet et sa structure around 1909 is strongly suggested by his close personal and professional relationship with Duhem's German translator, Friedrich Adler. The central role of a Duhemian holistic, underdeterminationist variety of conventionalism in Einstein's thought is examined at length, with special emphasis on Einstein's deployment of Duhemian arguments in his debates with neo-Kantian interpreters of relativity and in his critique of the empiricist doctrines of theory testing advanced by Schlick, Reichenbach, and Carnap. Most striking is Einstein's 1949 criticism of the verificationist conception of meaning from a holistic point of view, anticipating by two years the rather similar, but more famous criticism advanced independently by Quine in Two Dogmas of Empiricism
    Pierre DuhemHistory of PhysicsScientific ConventionalismSpace and Time, MiscQuine-Duhem Thesis
  •  60
    Antipositivist Theories of the Sciences
    Review of Metaphysics 39 (2): 377-377. 1985.
    Perhaps without realizing it, Norman Stockman has here written two books, each quite interesting in itself, but the two not wholly compatible when presented as one. The "first book" is a judicious and well-informed comparison of the three principal theories of science which define themselves by their opposition to positivism: critical rationalism, critical theory, and scientific realism. The "second book" is a vigorous defense of critical theory, especially as a theory of the social sciences, ag…Read more
    Perhaps without realizing it, Norman Stockman has here written two books, each quite interesting in itself, but the two not wholly compatible when presented as one. The "first book" is a judicious and well-informed comparison of the three principal theories of science which define themselves by their opposition to positivism: critical rationalism, critical theory, and scientific realism. The "second book" is a vigorous defense of critical theory, especially as a theory of the social sciences, against the claims of the other two pretenders to the antipositivist crown. Let me describe the "two books" separately.
  •  80
    Out of the Labyrinth: Einstein, Hertz and Göttingen Answer to the Hole Argument
    with John D. Norton
    In John Norton (ed.), , . 1982.
    Metaphysics of Spacetime
  •  376
    The physics and metaphysics of identity and individuality: Steven French and Décio Krause: Identity in physics: A historical, philosophical, and formal analysis. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2006, 440 pp, £68.00 HB
    with Bas C. van Fraassen, Otávio Bueno, Elena Castellani, Laura Crosilla, Steven French, and Décio Krause
    Metascience 20 (2): 225-251. 2010.
    The physics and metaphysics of identity and individuality Content Type Journal Article DOI 10.1007/s11016-010-9463-7 Authors Don Howard, Department of Philosophy and Graduate Program in History and Philosophy of Science, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA Bas C. van Fraassen, Philosophy Department, San Francisco State University, 1600 Holloway Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94132, USA Otávio Bueno, Department of Philosophy, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33124, USA Elena Caste…Read more
    The physics and metaphysics of identity and individuality Content Type Journal Article DOI 10.1007/s11016-010-9463-7 Authors Don Howard, Department of Philosophy and Graduate Program in History and Philosophy of Science, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA Bas C. van Fraassen, Philosophy Department, San Francisco State University, 1600 Holloway Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94132, USA Otávio Bueno, Department of Philosophy, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33124, USA Elena Castellani, Department of Philosophy, University of Florence, Via Bolognese 52, 50139 Florence, Italy Laura Crosilla, Department of Pure Mathematics, School of Mathematics, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT UK Steven French, Department of Philosophy, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK Décio Krause, Department of Philosophy, Federal University of Santa Catarina, 88040-900 Campus Trindade, Florianópolis, SC Brazil Journal Metascience Online ISSN 1467-9981 Print ISSN 0815-0796
    Philosophy of Physics, MiscQuantum IndeterminacyPhilosophy of Physics, General Works
  •  42
    Einstein, Albert
    with John D. Norton and Arthur Fine
    In John Norton (ed.), , . 1982.
    Philosophy of Physical Science
  •  269
    What makes a classical concept classical? Toward a reconstruction of Niels Bohr's philosophy of physics
    In Niels Bohr and Contemporary Philosophy, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 201--230. 1994.
    — Niels Bohr, 19231 “There must be quite definite and clear grounds, why you repeatedly declare that one must interpret observations classically, which lie absolute ly in thei r essenc e. . . . It must belong to your deepest conviction—and I cannot understand on what you base it.”.
    Philosophy of Physical Science, MiscellaneousQuantum Mechanics, MiscellaneousHistory of Quantum Mech…Read more
    Philosophy of Physical Science, MiscellaneousQuantum Mechanics, MiscellaneousHistory of Quantum Mechanics
  •  72
    What makes a classical concept classical?
    In Jan Faye & Henry J. Folse (eds.), Niels Bohr and Contemporary Philosophy, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 201--229. 1993.
    Classical Mechanics
  •  1
    Space-time and Separability: Problems of Identity and Individuation in Fundamental Physics
    In Robert Sonné Cohen, Michael Horne & John J. Stachel (eds.), Potentiality, Entanglement, and Passion-at-a-Distance: Quantum Mechanical Studies for Abner Shimony, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 113--142. 1997.
    Quantum Mechanics, Misc
  •  186
    The metaphysics of entanglement and the entanglement of metaphysics
    (STARS Conference, Cancún, January 2007).
  •  99
    Physics as theodicy
    On Saturday, August 26, 1893, thirteen-year-old Edith Low Babson was swimming in her favorite swimming hole on the Annisquam river in her home town of Gloucester, Massachusetts. Though she was a strong swimmer, something went wrong, and she drowned. A tragedy like all such. But this drowning had unusual consequences. Edith’s older brother was Roger W. Babson, who grew up to become one of America’s most prominent businessmen of the early twentieth century. A statistician, prolific author, philant…Read more
    On Saturday, August 26, 1893, thirteen-year-old Edith Low Babson was swimming in her favorite swimming hole on the Annisquam river in her home town of Gloucester, Massachusetts. Though she was a strong swimmer, something went wrong, and she drowned. A tragedy like all such. But this drowning had unusual consequences. Edith’s older brother was Roger W. Babson, who grew up to become one of America’s most prominent businessmen of the early twentieth century. A statistician, prolific author, philanthropist, founder of Babson College, in Wellesley, Massachusetts, and the Prohibition Patry’s Presidential candidate in 1940, Roger Babson was deeply affected by his sister’s death, as he was again many years later, in 1947, by the death of his grandson, Michael, who drowned while saving the life of a companion who had been knocked off of a sailboat in Lake Sunapee, New Hampshire. But Roger Babson was a man of action, not one quietly to acquiesce when confronted by suffering inflicted by a seemingly impersonal and uncaring nature. One year after his grandson’s death, Babson dedicated a significant part of his vast personal wealth to the establishment of the Gravity Research Foundation in New Boston, New Hampshire, which thereafter awarded an annual prize for theoretical research on gravitation, a prize whose winners include the likes of Stephen Hawking. Why? As Babson explained in a pamphlet published by the new foundation, “Gravity: Our Enemy Number One” (Babson 1948), the goal was to alleviate the suffering for which gravity was responsible, the gravity that seized his sister “like a dragon and..
    Quantum MechanicsPhilosophy of Earth SciencesPhilosophy of Physics, MiscellaneousSpace and TimeScien…Read more
    Quantum MechanicsPhilosophy of Earth SciencesPhilosophy of Physics, MiscellaneousSpace and TimeScience and Religion
  • Niels Bohr and Contemporary Philosophy
    Kluwer Academic Publishers. 1994.
    History of Quantum Mechanics
  •  93
    “No crude surfeit”: A critical appreciation of the reign of relativity
    Such are those thick & gloomie shadows dampe Oft seene in charnel vaults, & sepulchers, Lingering, & sitting by a new made grave, As loath to leave the bodie that it lov'd, & link’t it selfe by carnall sensualtie To a degenerate, & degraded state.
    Space and Time
  •  7
    Realism and Conventionalism in Einstein's Philosophy of Science: The Einstein-Schlick Correspondence
    Philosophia Naturalis 21 (2/4): 616. 1984.
    Quantum MechanicsLogical Empiricism
  •  2
    Holism, Separability, and the Metaphysical Implications of the Bell Experiments
    In James T. Cushing & Ernan McMullin (eds.), Philoophical Consequences of Quantum Theory, University of Notre Dame Press. pp. 224--253. 1989.
    Quantum NonlocalityBell's Theorem
  •  440
    Einstein on locality and separability
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 16 (3): 171-201. 1985.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsBell's TheoremHistory of Quantum Mechanics
  •  127
    Einstein and the Development of Twentieth-Century Philosophy of Science
    What is Albert Einstein’s place in the history of twentieth-century philosophy of science? Were one to consult the histories produced at mid-century from within the Vienna Circle and allied movements (e.g., von Mises 1938, 1939, Kraft 1950, Reichenbach 1951), then one would find, for the most part, two points of emphasis. First, Einstein was rightly remembered as the developer of the special and general theories of relativity, theories which, through their challenge to both scientific and philos…Read more
    What is Albert Einstein’s place in the history of twentieth-century philosophy of science? Were one to consult the histories produced at mid-century from within the Vienna Circle and allied movements (e.g., von Mises 1938, 1939, Kraft 1950, Reichenbach 1951), then one would find, for the most part, two points of emphasis. First, Einstein was rightly remembered as the developer of the special and general theories of relativity, theories which, through their challenge to both scientific and philosophical orthodoxy made vivid the need for a new kind of empiricism (Schlick 1921) whereby one could defend the empirical integrity of the theory of relativity against challenges 1 coming mainly from the defenders of Kant. Second, the special and general theories of relativity were wrongly cited as straightforwardly validating central tenets of the logical empiricist program, such as verificationism, and Einstein was wrongly represented as having, himself, explicitly endorsed those same philosophical principles. As we now know, logical empiricism was not the monolithic philosophical movement it was once taken to have been. Those associated with the movement disagreed deeply about fundamental issues concerning the structure and interpretation of scientific theories, as in the protocol sentence debate, and about the overall aims of the movement, as in the debate between the left and right wings 2 of the Vienna Circle over the role of politics in science and philosophy. Along with such differences went subtle differences in the assessment of Einstein’s legacy to logical empiricism. Philipp Frank–himself a dissenter from central points of right-wing Vienna Circle doctrine–deserves..
    Kant: Philosophy of Science
  •  61
    Astride the Divided Line: Platonism, Empiricism, and Einstein's Epistemological Opportunism
    Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 63 143-164. 1998.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsMathematical Platonism
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