•  1615
    Counterfactuals and Explanatory Pluralism
    with Gabriel Doble and Jared Millson
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 71 (4): 1439-1460. 2018.
    Recent literature on non-causal explanation raises the question as to whether explanatory monism, the thesis that all explanations submit to the same analysis, is true. The leading monist proposal holds that all explanations support change-relating counterfactuals. We provide several objections to this monist position. 1Introduction 2Change-Relating Monism's Three Problems 3Dependency and Monism: Unhappy Together 4Another Challenge: Counterfactual Incidentalism 4.1High-grade necessity 4.2Unity i…Read more
  •  146
    Critics of the erotetic model of explanation question its ability to discriminate significant from spurious explanations. One response to these criticisms has been to impose contextual restrictions on a case-by-case basis. In this article, the author argues that these approaches have overestimated the role of interests at the expense of other contextual aspects characteristic of social-scientific explanation. For this reason, he shows how procedures of measuring occupational status and social mo…Read more
  •  424
    Social constructivism and the aims of science
    Social Epistemology 24 (1). 2010.
    In this essay, I provide normative guidelines for developing a philosophically interesting and plausible version of social constructivism as a philosophy of science, wherein science aims for social-epistemic values rather than for truth or empirical adequacy. This view is more plausible than the more radical constructivist claim that scientific facts are constructed. It is also more interesting than the modest constructivist claim that representations of such facts emerge in social contexts, as …Read more
  •  160
    Understanding, Explanation, and Scientific Knowledge
    Cambridge University Press. 2017.
    From antiquity to the end of the twentieth century, philosophical discussions of understanding remained undeveloped, guided by a 'received view' that takes understanding to be nothing more than knowledge of an explanation. More recently, however, this received view has been criticized, and bold new philosophical proposals about understanding have emerged in its place. In this book, Kareem Khalifa argues that the received view should be revised but not abandoned. In doing so, he clarifies and ans…Read more