•  2
    The Philosophy of Science: Collected Papers (edited book)
    Routledge. 1999.
    First published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company
  •  59
    Skeptics have cast doubt on the idea that scientific theories give us a true picture of an objective world. Lawrence Sklar examines three kinds of skeptical arguments about scientific truth, and explores the important role they play within foundational science itself. Sklar demonstrates that these kinds of philosophical critique are employed within science, and reveals the clear difference between how they operate in a scientific context and more abstract philosophical contexts. The underlying t…Read more
  •  3
    How Free are Initial Conditions?
    PSA Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1990 (2): 551-564. 1990.
    Some of what is true about the world is thought, by some, to be true of necessity. Other truths about the world are merely contingently true, it is said. Next we get a familiar distinguishing of necessity into its various kinds. Anything whose contrary would contradict the laws of logic is logically necessary. Anything compatible with these laws is logically contingent. There are, of course, grave problems in finding a principled way of discriminating the logical truths from all the others. Some…Read more
  •  4
    The Nature of Scientific Theory (edited book)
    Routledge. 1999.
    First Published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company
  •  17
    The Disorder of Things (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 48 (2): 400-401. 1994.
    This thoughtful and carefully crafted book is a plea for "pluralism" in science. This pluralism includes a tolerance of a wide variety of conceptual classificatory schemes and of a variety of methods for the sciences as well, the varying schemes and methods determined by the specific needs of the specific sciences.
  •  1
    Convention, Role of
    In W. H. Newton‐Smith (ed.), A Companion to the Philosophy of Science, Blackwell. 2017.
    The claim that some assertion is true “as a matter of convention” is likely to arise only in the circumstance that the assertion is allowed to be true, though an account of its believability as being warranted by its conformity to observable facts is taken to be inadequate.
  •  2
    Space, Time, and Relativity
    In W. H. Newton‐Smith (ed.), A Companion to the Philosophy of Science, Blackwell. 2017.
    Given the central role played by space and time both in our ordinary experience and in our attempts to understand the world by means of scientific theory, it is no surprise that attempts to understand space and time form a central locus of the interaction of philosophy and the physical sciences.
  •  20
    The Existence of Space and Time
    with Ian Hinckfuss
    Philosophical Review 87 (1): 123. 1978.
  •  94
    Saving the Noumena
    Philosophical Topics 13 (1): 89-110. 1982.
  •  38
    Saving the Noumena
    Philosophical Topics 13 (1): 89-110. 1982.
  •  18
    Semantic analogy
    Philosophical Studies 38 (3). 1980.
    Peer Reviewed.
  •  195
    Methodological conservatism
    Philosophical Review 84 (3): 374-400. 1975.
  •  38
    Language and Time (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 29 (2): 143-144. 1997.
  •  27
    Do Unborn Hypotheses Have Rights?†
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 62 (1): 17-29. 2017.
    Peer Reviewed.
  •  21
    A Realist Philosophy of Science
    Philosophical Review 95 (3): 444. 1986.
  •  60
    Rationality and truth
    Philosophical Studies 30 (3). 1976.
  •  30
    Philosophers of physics are very familiar with foundational problems in quantum mechanics and in the theory of relativity. In both fields, the puzzles, if not solved, are at least reasonably well formulated and possess well-characterized solution strategies. Sklar’s book Physics and Chance focuses on a pair of theories, thermodynamics and statistical mechanics, for which puzzles and foundational paradoxes abound, but where there is very little agreement upon the means with which they may best be…Read more
  •  99
    Statistical explanation and ergodic theory
    Philosophy of Science 40 (2): 194-212. 1973.
    Some philosphers of science of an empiricist and pragmatist bent have proposed models of statistical explanation, but have then become sceptical of the adequacy of these models. It is argued that general considerations concerning the purpose of function of explanation in science which are usually appealed to by such philosophers show that their scepticism is not well taken; for such considerations provide much the same rationale for the search for statistical explanations, as these philosophers …Read more
  •  18
    Explaining chaos
    Philosophical Review 110 (2): 289-290. 2001.
    Explaining Chaos provides both a succinct and accurate introduction to the physics and mathematics of chaotic dynamical systems along with a number of pertinent philosophical commentaries on the scientific results. The book provides the clearest and most sensible treatment of chaos theory from a philosophical perspective available in the literature.
  • Comments
    PSA Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1978 (2): 186-193. 1978.
  •  2
    Causation in Statistical Mechanics
    In Helen Beebee, Christopher Hitchcock & Peter Menzies (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Causation, Oxford University Press. 2009.
  •  189
    Philosophy of physics
    Westview Press. 1992.
    The study of the physical world had its origins in philosophy, and, two-and-one-half millennia later, the scientific advances of the twentieth century are bringing the two fields closer together again. So argues Lawrence Sklar in this brilliant new text on the philosophy of physics.Aimed at students of both disciplines, Philosophy of Physics is a broad overview of the problems of contemporary philosophy of physics that readers of all levels of sophistication should find accessible and engaging. …Read more
  •  3
    Philosophical Problems of Statistical Inference (review)
    Philosophical Review 90 (2): 295-298. 1981.
  •  12
    Completeness in Science (review)
    Journal of Philosophy 65 (6): 179-183. 1968.
  •  29
    The Matter of Chance (review)
    Journal of Philosophy 71 (13): 418-423. 1974.
  •  30
    Explaining Chaos
    Philosophical Review 110 (2): 289. 2001.
    Explaining Chaos provides both a succinct and accurate introduction to the physics and mathematics of chaotic dynamical systems along with a number of pertinent philosophical commentaries on the scientific results. The book provides the clearest and most sensible treatment of chaos theory from a philosophical perspective available in the literature.
  •  49
    Review: Q uantum Mechanics and Experience (review)
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 56 (4): 973-975. 1996.
  •  3
    Perspectives on Time (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 53 (2): 443-443. 1999.
    This volume contains eighteen papers on various aspects of the philosophy of time. The contributions are supplemented by an editors’ introduction that outlines the history and nature of the problem areas dealt with in the contributed papers, and, in addition, provides capsule summaries of the contents of the contributed items.