•  1
    Reviews (review)
    with S. S. Schweber, Hugh Lacey, Andy Pickering, John Worrall, David Philip Miller, Jan Edward Garrett, Cathy Legg, Ivan Crozier, David Oldroyd, Rachel A. Ankeny, Sverre Myhra, Phillip Catton, Marilys Guillemin, Graham Holland, Nicolas Rasmussen, Suzanne Uniacke, Libby Robin, and Andrea Bunting
    Metascience 8 (1): 125-195. 1999.
  •  46
    The Philosophical Correspondence of David Armstrong and David Lewis (edited book)
    with A. R. J. Fisher and Stephanie R. Lewis
    Oxford University Press. 2026.
    This volume contains the complete correspondence of two of the leading analytic philosophers of the late twentieth century, David Armstrong and David Lewis. Comprising some 345 letters, including letters to and from third parties, this correspondence is at once a deep philosophical resource shedding new light on the philosophical development of two of the great late twentieth-century philosophers, and a record of the development of a philosophical friendship. The letters are valuable, not only f…Read more
  •  6
    Robert Boyle
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2002.
  •  46
    Bringing together some of the world’s leading philosophers of mind as well as some exciting emerging philosophers, this volume examines origins, impacts, and contemporary relevance of one of the twentieth century’s most important books on the philosophy of mind, D. M. Armstrong’s A Materialist Theory of the Mind, first published in 1968.
  •  42
    Descartes on laws of nature as principles
    Journal of Early Modern Studies 14 (1): 31-59. 2025.
    This paper attempts to advance our understanding of the emergence of the modern notion of physical Laws of Nature by situating the earliest known discussions of laws of nature, those of Descartes, in the context of the theory of principles and the broader neo-Aristotelian theory of knowledge acquisition. It is claimed that together these theories are an important, though hitherto over­looked, seam within the conceptual resources from which Descartes’ distinctive and novel notion of Laws of Natur…Read more
  •  48
    Experimental philosophy, method, and the art of thinking, 1700–1750
    Intellectual History Review 35 (Peter R. Anstey). 2025.
    This paper addresses the question of the nature and extent of the impact that the new experimental natural philosophy that emerged in the second half of the seventeenth century had on the discipline of logic or the art of thinking. It does so through the examination of the writings of three logicians whose works appeared in the first half of the eighteenth century, namely, Jean-Pierre de Crousaz, Isaac Watts, and William Duncan. Through an examination of references to experimental philosophy in …Read more
  •  12
    This chapter examines Stephen Gaukroger’s claim that a new form of natural philosophical explanation, phenomenal explanation, emerged in the experimental practice of Boyle and Newton and was first articulated by Locke. Phenomenal explanation was autonomous in so far as it was independent of underlying foundational theory and, as such, it was a form of horizontal rather than vertical explanation. After setting out the thesis, the chapter proceeds to illustrate the thesis through Boyle’s air-pump …Read more
  •  51
    John Locke (edited book)
    Routledge. 2006.
    Today, John Locke is recognized as one of the most important and formative philosophical influences on the modern world. His imprint is still felt in political and legal thought, in educational theory, moral theory and in the theory of knowledge. Locke’s key works, _Two Treatises of Government_, and the monumental _An Essay Concerning Human Understanding_, provoked lively debate when they were first published in 1690 and remain standard texts in undergraduate philosophy courses throughout the En…Read more
  •  5
    First Published in 2004. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
  •  45
    Clarity, charity and criticism, wit, wisdom and worldliness: Avoiding intellectual impositions (review)
    with Harshi Gunawardena, Jeremy Butterfield, Rachel A. Ankeny, Alan Chalmers, Sungook Hong, Warren Schmaus, Darrin W. Belousek, Nancy Demand, David Oldroyd, John Forge, Ross S. West, Marya Schechtman, Andy J. Miller, Nicolas Rasmussen, Peter Machamer, Hugh LaFollette, Peter G. Brown, Steven French, Nicolaas Rupke, Yvonne Luxford, Alfred I. Tauber, Anna Salleh, Alan Frost, Jean Bricmont, Alan Sokal, Steve Fuller, Val Dusek, Henry Krips, and David Turnbull
    Metascience 9 (3): 347-498. 2000.
  •  1
    Reviews (review)
    with Dianah Leigh Jackson, Bradley Monton, Ina Roy, Stephanie H. Kenen, Jessie Saul, Edward Wisniewski, David Oldroyd, Craig Sean McConnell, Nessy Allen, Christer Nordlund, Nicolas Rasmussen, R. J. Hankinson, Charlotte Bigg, Robert L. Campbell, Mark Parascandola, William Clower, Jonathan Simon, Jan Crosthwaite, Ivan Crozier, Audra J. Wolfe, Alan Chalmers, John Gascoigne, and Jason Owen-Smith
    Metascience 10 (2): 232-319. 2001.
  •  1
    Locke on knowledge
    In Stephen Gaukroger (ed.), Knowledge in Modern Philosophy, Bloomsbury Academic. 2018.
    This chapter provides an overview of John Locke's theory of knowledge.
  • Newton and Locke
    The Oxford Handbook to Newton. 2017.
  • This chapter examines Francis Bacon's influence on Buffon's and Diderot's conceptions of natural history.
  •  187
    Francis Bacon and the Laws of Ramus
    Hopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 5 (1): 1-23. 2015.
    This article assesses the role of the laws of the French logician and educational reformer Petrus Ramus in the writings of Francis Bacon. The laws of Ramus derive from Aristotle’s grounds for necessary propositions. Necessary propositions, according to Aristotle, Ramus, and Bacon, are required for the premises of scientific syllogisms. It is argued that in Bacon’s Advancement of Learning and De augmentis scientiarum the only role for these laws is in the transmission of knowledge that has alread…Read more
  •  124
    Francis Bacon and the Classification of Natural History
    Early Science and Medicine 17 (1): 11-31. 2012.
    This paper analyses the place of natural history within Bacon's divisions of the sciences in The Advancement of Learning and the later De dignitate et augmentis scientiarum. It is shown that at various points in Bacon's divisions, natural history converges or overlaps with natural philosophy, and that, for Bacon, natural history and natural philosophy are not discrete disciplines. Furthermore, it is argued that Bacon's distinction between operative and speculative natural philosophy and the plac…Read more