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The Urgent Need for Social WisdomIn Robert J. Sternberg & Judith Glück (eds.), The Cambridge Handbook of Wisdom, Cambridge University Press. pp. 754-780. 2019.Two great problems of learning confront humanity: learning about the universe; and learning how to become civilized. The first problem was solved in the 17th century, with the creation of modern science. But the second problem has not yet been solved. That puts us in a situation of great danger. All our current global problems have arisen as a result. We need to learn from our solution to the first problem how to solve the second. This was the basic idea of the 18th century Enlightenment. Unfort…Read more
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We need progress in ideas about how to achieve progressMetascience 27 (2). 2018.Steven Pinker's book Enlightenment NOW is in many ways a terrific book, from which I have learnt much. But it is also deeply flawed. Science and reason are at the heart of the book, but the conceptions that Steven Pinker defends are damagingly irrational. And these defective conceptions of science and reason, as a result of being associated with the Enlightenment Programme for the past two or three centuries, have been responsible, in part, for the genesis of the global problems we now suffer…Read more
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Aim-Oriented Empiricism and the Metaphysics of SciencePhilosophia 48 (1). 2019.Over 40 years ago, I put forward a new philosophy of science based on the argument that physics, in only ever accepting unified theories, thereby makes a substantial metaphysical presupposition about the universe, to the effect it possesses an underlying unity. I argued that a new conception of scientific method is required to subject this problematic presupposition to critical attention so that it may be improved as science proceeds. This view has implications for the study of the metaphysics…Read more
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A New Task for Philosophy of ScienceMetaphilosophy 50 (3): 316-338. 2019.This paper argues that philosophers of science have before them an important new task that they urgently need to take up. It is to convince the scientific community to adopt and implement a new philosophy of science that does better justice to the deeply problematic basic intellectual aims of science than that which we have at present. Problematic aims evolve with evolving knowledge, that part of philosophy of science concerned with aims and methods thus becoming an integral part of science itse…Read more
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The Scandal of the Irrationality of AcademiaPhilosophy and Theory in Higher Education 1 (1). 2019.Academic inquiry, in devoting itself primarily to the pursuit of knowledge, is profoundly and damagingly irrational, in a wholesale, structural fashion, when judged from the standpoint of helping to promote human welfare. Judged from this standpoint, academic inquiry devoted to the pursuit of knowledge violates three of the four most elementary rules of rational problem-solving conceivable. Above all, it fails to give intellectual priority to the tasks of (1) articulating problems of living, i…Read more
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Understanding Scientific Progress: Aim-Oriented EmpiricismParagon House. 2017."Understanding Scientific Progress constitutes a potentially enormous and revolutionary advancement in philosophy of science. It deserves to be read and studied by everyone with any interest in or connection with physics or the theory of science. Maxwell cites the work of Hume, Kant, J.S. Mill, Ludwig Bolzmann, Pierre Duhem, Einstein, Henri Poincaré, C.S. Peirce, Whitehead, Russell, Carnap, A.J. Ayer, Karl Popper, Thomas Kuhn, Imre Lakatos, Paul Feyerabend, Nelson Goodman, Bas van Fraassen, and …Read more
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Karl Popper, Science and EnlightenmentUCL Press. 2017.Karl Popper is famous for having proposed that science advances by a process of conjecture and refutation. He is also famous for defending the open society against what he saw as its arch enemies – Plato and Marx. Popper’s contributions to thought are of profound importance, but they are not the last word on the subject. They need to be improved. My concern in this book is to spell out what is of greatest importance in Popper’s work, what its failings are, how it needs to be improved to overcome…Read more
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This book gives an account of work that I have done over a period of decades that sets out to solve two fundamental problems of philosophy: the mind-body problem and the problem of induction. Remarkably, these revolutionary contributions to philosophy turn out to have dramatic implications for a wide range of issues outside philosophy itself, most notably for the capacity of humanity to resolve current grave global problems and make progress towards a better, wiser world. A key element of …Read more
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Science and Enlightenment: Two Great Problems of LearningSpringer Verlag. 2019.Two great problems of learning confront humanity: learning about the nature of the universe and about ourselves and other living things as a part of the universe, and learning how to become civilized or enlightened. The first problem was solved, in essence, in the 17th century, with the creation of modern science. But the second problem has not yet been solved. Solving the first problem without also solving the second puts us in a situation of great danger. All our current global problems have a…Read more
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Our Fundamental Problem: A Revolutionary Approach to PhilosophyMcGill-Queen's University Press. 2020.How can the world we live in and see, touch, hear, and smell, the world of living things, people, consciousness, free will, meaning, and value - how can all of this exist and flourish embedded as it is in the physical universe, made up of nothing but physical entities such as electrons and quarks? How can anything be of value if everything in the universe is, ultimately, just physics? In Our Fundamental Problem Nicholas Maxwell argues that this problem of reconciling the human and physical world…Read more
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A priori conjectural knowledge in physics: The comprehensibility of the universeIn Michael J. Shaffer & Michael L. Veber (eds.), What Place for the A Priori?, Open Court. pp. 211-240. 2011.In this paper I argue for a priori conjectural scientific knowledge about the world. Physics persistently only accepts unified theories, even though endlessly many empirically more successful disunified rivals are always available. This persistent preference for unified theories, against empirical considerations, means that physics makes a substantial, persistent metaphysical assumption, to the effect that the universe has a (more or less) unified dynamic structure. In order to clarify what this…Read more
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Arthur Pap’s Functional Theory of the A PrioriHopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 1 (2): 273-290. 2011.Arthur Pap was not quite a Logical Empiricist. He wrote his dissertation in philosophy of science under Ernest Nagel, and he published a textbook in the philosophy of science at the end of his tragically short career, but most of his work would be classified as analytic philosophy. More important, he took some stands that went against Logical Empiricist orthodoxy and was a persistent if friendly critic of the movement. Pap diverged most strongly from Logical Empiricism in his theory of a “functi…Read more
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Is science unified or disunified? This collection brings together contributions from prominent scholars in a variety of scientific disciplines to examine this important theoretical question. They examine whether the sciences are, or ever were, unified by a single theoretical view of nature or a methodological foundation and the implications this has for the relationship between scientific disciplines and between science and society.The Disunity of science: boundaries, contexts, and power (edited book)Stanford University Press. 1996. -
In this book, David Stump traces alternative conceptions of the a priori in the philosophy of science and defends a unique position in the current debates over conceptual change and the constitutive elements in science. Stump emphasizes the unique epistemological status of the constitutive elements of scientific theories, constitutive elements being the necessary preconditions that must be assumed in order to conduct a particular scientific inquiry. These constitutive elements, such as logic, ma…Read more
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The context principle and implicit definitions : towards an account of our a priori knowledge of arithmeticDissertation, St. Andrews. 2005.This thesis is concerned with explaining how a subject can acquire a priori knowledge of arithmetic. Every account for arithmetical, and in general mathematical knowledge faces Benacerraf's well-known challenge, i.e. how to reconcile the truths of mathematics with what can be known by ordinary human thinkers. I suggest four requirements that jointly make up this challenge and discuss and reject four distinct solutions to it. This will motivate a broadly Fregean approach to our knowledge of arith…Read more
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Is an Electron a Charge Cloud? A Reexamination of Schrödinger’s Charge Density HypothesisFoundations of Science 23 (1): 145-157. 2018.This article re-examines Schrödinger’s charge density hypothesis, according to which the charge of an electron is distributed in the whole space, and the charge density in each position is proportional to the modulus squared of the wave function of the electron there. It is shown that the charge distribution of a quantum system can be measured by protective measurements as expectation values of certain observables, and the results as predicted by quantum mechanics confirm Schrödinger’s original …Read more
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From Intrinsic Value to the Emotion of WonderEnvironmental Ethics 40 (1): 81-91. 2018.Since environmental ethics research started in China in the 1980s, it has been deeply influenced by environmental ethics theory in the United States. Some Chinese environmental philosophers have adopted the key concept of intrinsic value to construct Chinese environmental ethics. However, in recent decades, the concept of intrinsic value has been criticized by scholars in both the United States and China. Many Chinese have found that environmental ethics in the United States that is founded on t…Read more
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Separate Compilation of Bayesian Networks for Efficient Exact InferenceTransactions of the Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence 33 (6). 2018.
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The measurement problem revisitedSynthese 196 (1): 299-311. 2019.It has been realized that the measurement problem of quantum mechanics is essentially the determinate-experience problem, and in order to solve the problem, the physical state representing the measurement result is required to be also the physical state on which the mental state of an observer supervenes. This necessitates a systematic analysis of the forms of psychophysical connection in the solutions to the measurement problem. In this paper, I propose a new, mentalistic formulation of the mea…Read more
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A collaboration between distinguished physicists and philosophers of physics, this important anthology surveys the deep implications of Bell's nonlocality theorem.Quantum Nonlocality and Reality: 50 Years of Bell's Theorem (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 2016. -
An overview of the collapse theories of quantum mechanics. Written by distinguished physicists and philosophers of physics, it discusses the origin and implications of wave-function collapse, the controversies around collapse models and their ontologies, and new arguments for the reality of wave function collapse.Collapse of the Wave Function: Models, Ontology, Origin, and Implications (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 2018. -
The influential proposal that the analytical component of a theory is captured by its ‘Carnap sentence’ is critically scrutinized. A counterexample which makes the suggestion problematic is presented.On Carnap sentencesAnalysis 71 (2): 245-246. 2011. -
Intuitionistic logic and its philosophyAl-Mukhatabat. A Trilingual Journal For Logic, Epistemology and Analytical Philosophy (6): 114-127. 2013.
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Can The Mental be Causally Efficacious?In Talmont-Kaminski K. Milkowski M. (ed.), Regarding the Mind, Naturally: Naturalist Approaches to the Sciences of the Mental, Cambridge Scholars Press. 2013.
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What Was Analytic Philosophy?Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 2 (1): 11-27. 2013.
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Austrian-born Kurt Gödel is widely considered the greatest logician of modern times. It is above all his celebrated incompleteness theorems—rigorous mathematical results about the necessary limits...Gödel’s Disjunction: The Scope and Limits of Mathematical KnowledgeHistory and Philosophy of Logic 39 (4): 401-403. 2018. -
Realism: Metaphysical, Scientific, and SemanticIn Kenneth R. Westphal (ed.), Realism, Science, and Pragmatism, Routledge. pp. 139-158. 2014.Three influential forms of realism are distinguished and interrelated: realism about the external world, construed as a metaphysical doctrine; scientific realism about non-observable entities postulated in science; and semantic realism as defined by Dummett. Metaphysical realism about everyday physical objects is contrasted with idealism and phenomenalism, and several potent arguments against these latter views are reviewed. Three forms of scientific realism are then distinguished: (i) scientif…Read more
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A critical notice of David J. Chalmers, Constructing the World (Oxford University Press,2012).Chalmers' Blueprint of the WorldInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies 22 (1): 113-128. 2014. -
Neo-Logicism and Its LogicHistory and Philosophy of Logic 41 (1): 82-95. 2020.The rather unrestrained use of second-order logic in the neo-logicist program is critically examined. It is argued in some detail that it brings with it genuine set-theoretical existence assumptions and that the mathematical power that Hume’s Principle seems to provide, in the derivation of Frege’s Theorem, comes largely from the ‘logic’ assumed rather than from Hume’s Principle. It is shown that Hume’s Principle is in reality not stronger than the very weak Robinson Arithmetic Q. Consequently, …Read more
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Explanation and Understanding RevisitedIn Niiniluoto Ilkka & Wallgren Thomas (eds.), On the Human Condition: Philosophical Essays in Honour of the Centennial Anniversary of Georg Henrik von Wright. Acta Philosophica Fennica vol 93., The Philosophical Society of Finland. pp. 339-353. 2017."Explanation and Understanding" (1971) by Georg Henrik von Wright is a modern classic in analytic hermeneutics, and in the philosophy of the social sciences and humanities in general. In this work, von Wright argues against naturalism, or methodological monism, i.e. the idea that both the natural sciences and the social sciences follow broadly the same general scientific approach and aim to achieve causal explanations. Against this view, von Wright contends that the social sciences are qualitati…Read more
Athens, Greece
Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
| History of Western Philosophy |