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125Leaving Academia: PhD Attrition and Unhealthy Research EnvironmentsPLoS ONE 17 (10). 2022.This study investigates PhD candidates’ (N = 391) perceptions about their research environment at a Dutch university in terms of the research climate, (un)ethical supervisory practices, and questionable research practices. We assessed whether their perceptions are related to career considerations. We gathered quantitative self-report estimations of the perceptions of PhD candidates using an online survey tool and then conducted descriptive and within-subject correlation analysis of the results. …Read more
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Technical Functions: On the Design and Use of ArtefactsSpringer. 2010.This book is about the functions of technical artefacts, material objects made to serve practical purposes; objects ranging from tablets of Aspirin to Concorde, from wooden clogs to nuclear submarines. More precisely, the book is about using and designing artefacts, about what it means to ascribe functions to them, and about the relations between using, designing and ascribing functions. In the following pages, we present a detailed account that shows how strong these relations are. Technical fu…Read more
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136The Nature of Technological KnowledgeIn Anthonie Meijers (ed.), Philosophy of Technology and Engineering Sciences, Elsevier/north Holland. pp. 309-350. 2009.A popular strategy for studying technological knowledge and arguing for epistemic emancipation is to contrast science and technology—more specifically: to look at differences between natural and engineering science. The latter is certainly not equivalent to technology. First thing to note is that most authors who develop this strategy also share a key intuition. This intuition—which is not exclusive to the contrastive strategy—is that technology is aimed at practical usefulness. Thus, whether te…Read more
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75A Parting of the Ways: Carnap, Cassirer, and Heidegger (review)Journal of the History of Philosophy 40 (4): 554-555. 2002.Wybo Houkes - A Parting of the Ways: Carnap, Cassirer, and Heidegger - Journal of the History of Philosophy 40:4 Journal of the History of Philosophy 40.4 554-555 Book Review A Parting of the Ways: Carnap, Cassirer, and Heidegger Michael Friedman. A Parting of the Ways: Carnap, Cassirer, and Heidegger. Chicago: Open Court, 2000. Pp. xv + 175. Paper, $24.95. For present-day philosophers, the division between "analytic" and "continental" philosophy is a fact of life. In this elegant little book, M…Read more
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97Functions and the Aesthetics of Technical ArtefactsGrazer Philosophische Studien 96 (1): 37-55. 2019.In this paper, it is examined to what extent functions, as analysed in the philosophy of technical artefacts, can serve a role in explaining the aesthetic appreciation of these objects. The main conclusion is that, despite first appearances, so-called ‘Functional Beauty’ accounts cannot derive strength from analyses of artefact functions; on the contrary, these analyses constrain the possibilities for developing a suitable, function-based account of aesthetic appreciation. The paper follows a co…Read more
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219Actions Versus Functions: A Plea for an Alternative Metaphysics of ArtifactsThe Monist 87 (1): 52-71. 2004.The philosophy of artifacts is as marginal as it is one-sided. The majority of contributions to it are asides in works devoted to other subjects and focus on one characteristic feature: that artifacts are objects with functions. Indeed many artifacts, such as screwdrivers and toasters, come in functional kinds. Perhaps for this reason, philosophers elevated functions to the essences of artifacts or have developed general theories of function to describe artifacts along with their main subject: b…Read more
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210Scientific disagreements and the diagnosticity of evidence: how too much data may lead to polarizationJournal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation (4). forthcoming.Scientific disagreements sometimes persist even if scientists fully share results of their research. In this paper we develop an agent-based model to study the impact of diverging diagnostic values scientists may assign to the evidence, given their different background assumptions, on the emergence of polarization in the scientific community. Scientists are represented as Bayesian updaters for whom the diagnosticity of evidence is given by the Bayes factor. Our results suggest that an initial di…Read more
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139Transfer and templates in scientific modellingStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 77 (C): 93-100. 2019.The notion of template has recently been discussed in relation to cross-disciplinary transfer of modeling efforts and in relation to the representational content of models. We further develop and disambiguate the notion of template and find that, suitably developed, it is useful in distinguishing and analyzing different types of transfer, none of which supports a non-representationalist view of models. We illustrate our main findings with the modeling of technology substitution with Lotka-Volter…Read more
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128Pluralism on Artefact Categories: A Philosophical DefenceReview of Philosophy and Psychology 4 (3): 543-557. 2013.In this paper we use our work in the philosophy of technology to formulate a pluralist view on artefact categories and categorisation principles, as studied in cognitive science. We argue, on the basis of classifications derived by philosophical reconstruction, that artefacts can be clustered in more than one way, and that each clustering may be taken as defining psychological artefact categories. We contrast this pluralism with essentialism and super-minimalism on artefact categories and we arg…Read more
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Darwin voor scherven en schakelingen: een onderzoek naar evolutionaire modellen van artefactenAlgemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 100 (2): 138-147. 2008.
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159Technical functions: a drawbridge between the intentional and structural natures of technical artefactsStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 37 (1): 5-18. 2006.In this paper we present an action-theoretic account of artefact using and designing and describe our ICE-theory of function ascriptions to technical artefacts. By means of this account and theory we analyse the thesis of the dual nature of technical artefacts according to which descriptions of technical artefacts draw on structural and intentional conceptualisations. We show that the ascription of technical functions to technical artefacts can connect the intentional and structural parts of des…Read more
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325Ascribing functions to technical artefacts: A challenge to etiological accounts of functionsBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 54 (2): 261-289. 2003.The aim of this paper is to evaluate etiological accounts of functions for the domain of technical artefacts. Etiological theories ascribe functions to items on the basis of the causal histories of those items; they apply relatively straightforwardly to the biological domain, in which neo-Darwinian evolutionary theory provides a well-developed and generally accepted background for describing the causal histories of biological items. Yet there is no well-developed and generally accepted theory fo…Read more
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224Tales of Tools and Trees: Phylogenetic analysis and explanation in evolutionary archaeologyIn Henk W. De Regt, Stephan Hartmann & Samir Okasha (eds.), EPSA Philosophy of Science: Amsterdam 2009, Springer. pp. 89--100. 2011.In this paper, I study the application of phylogenetic analysis in evolutionary archaeology. I show how transfer of this apparently general analytic tool is affected by salient differences in disciplinary context. One is that archaeologists, unlike many biologists, do not regard cladistics as a tool for classification, but are primarily interested in explanation. The other is that explanation is traditionally sought in terms of individual-level rather than population-level mechanisms. The latter…Read more
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943Robust! -- Handle with carePhilosophy of Science 79 (3): 1-20. 2012.Michael Weisberg has argued that robustness analysis is useful in evaluating both scientific models and their implications and that robustness analysis comes in three types that share their form and aim. We argue for three cautionary claims regarding Weisberg's reconstruction: robustness analysis may be of limited or no value in evaluating models and their implications; the unificatory reconstruction conceals that the three types of robustness differ in form and role; there is no confluence of t…Read more
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119Knowledge of artefact functionsStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 37 (1): 102-113. 2006.I argue that technological functions warrant specific epistemological attention, which they have not received thus far. From a user’s perspective, knowledge about the possible functions of an artefact is not provided exclusively by beliefs about its physical characteristics; it is primarily provided by know-how related to its use. Analysing the latter shows that standards of practical and not just theoretical reasoning are involved. Moreover, knowledge of the function of artefacts is primarily b…Read more
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120What is morally salient about enhancement technologies?Journal of Medical Ethics 37 (2): 84-87. 2011.The human enhancement debate typically centres on moral issues regarding changes in human nature, not on the means for these changes. We argue that one cannot grasp what is morally salient about human enhancement without understanding how technologies affect human action and practical reasoning. We present a minimalist conception of human agents as bounded practical reasoners. Then, we categorise different effects of technologies on our possibilities for action and our evaluation of these possib…Read more
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139Population thinking and natural selection in dual-inheritance theoryBiology and Philosophy 27 (3): 401-417. 2012.A deflationary perspective on theories of cultural evolution, in particular dual-inheritance theory, has recently been proposed by Lewens. On this ‘pop-culture’ analysis, dual-inheritance theorists apply population thinking to cultural phenomena, without claiming that cultural items evolve by natural selection. This paper argues against this pop-culture analysis of dual-inheritance theory. First, it focuses on recent dual-inheritance models of specific patterns of cultural change. These models e…Read more
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31Perovskite Philosophy: A Branch-Formation Model of Application-Oriented ScienceIn Anthonie W. M. Meijers, Peter Kroes, Pieter E. Vermaas & Maarten Franssen (eds.), Philosophy of Technology After the Empirical Turn, Springer Verlag. pp. 195-218. 2016.In this paper, I present a model of application-oriented science, to supplement existing work in science and technology studies on the re-orientation of scientific research. On this “branch-formation” model, research efforts may be guided by non-epistemic values without compromising their epistemic value: they may involve completion of mechanism representations that serve control over these mechanisms while also adding to our understanding of them. I illustrate this model with a case study from …Read more
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69Embedding and customizing templates in cross-disciplinary modelingSynthese 201 (3): 1-16. 2023.In this paper, I develop a template-based analysis to include several elements of _processes_ through which templates are transferred between fields of inquiry. The analysis builds on Justin Price’s identification of the importance of a “landing zone” in the recipient domain, from which “conceptual pressure” may be created. I will argue that conceptual pressure is a characteristic feature of the process of template transfer; that this means that there are costs to the process of transfer as well…Read more
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67A new framework for teaching scientific reasoning to students from application-oriented sciencesEuropean Journal for Philosophy of Science 11 (2): 1-16. 2021.About three decades ago, the late Ronald Giere introduced a new framework for teaching scientific reasoning to science students. Giere’s framework presents a model-based alternative to the traditional statement approach—in which scientific inferences are reconstructed as explicit arguments, composed of (single-sentence) premises and a conclusion. Subsequent research in science education has shown that model-based approaches are particularly effective in teaching science students how to understan…Read more
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57Functions as Epistemic Highlighters: An Engineering Account of Technical, Biological and Other FunctionsIn Philippe Huneman (ed.), Functions: selection and mechanisms, Springer. pp. 213--231. 2013.
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138The ontology of artefacts: the hard problemStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 37 (1): 118-131. 2006.We examine to what extent an adequate ontology of technical artefacts can be based on existing general accounts of the relation between higher-order objects and their material basis. We consider two of these accounts: supervenience and constitution. We take as our starting point the thesis that artefacts have a ‘dual nature’, that is, that they are both material bodies and functional objects. We present two criteria for an adequate ontology of artefacts, ‘Underdetermination’ and ‘Realizability C…Read more
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The open border : Two cases of concept transfer from organisms to artifactsIn Ulrich Krohs & Peter Kroes (eds.), Functions in Biological and Artificial Worlds: Comparative Philosophical Perspectives, Mit Press. 2009.
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36Progress in Application-Oriented ResearchThe Harvard Review of Philosophy 31 59-74. 2024.This paper presents an account of progress in application-oriented research, as found in the engineering and medical sciences. My account builds on work in the philosophy of science. After reviewing the main accounts of scientific progress, I present my variant of a functional, ‘problem-solving’ account for application-oriented research, for which I distinguish various forms of progress. I illustrate this account with a case study of research on nuclear fusion.
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100Dual-Nature and collectivist frameworks for technical artefacts: a constructive comparisonStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 42 (1): 198-205. 2011.This paper systematically compares two frameworks for analysing technical artefacts: the Dual-Nature approach, exemplified by the contributions to Kroes and Meijers , and the collectivist approach advocated by Schyfter , following Kusch . After describing the main tenets of both approaches, we show that there is significant overlap between them: both frameworks analyse the most typical cases of artefact use, albeit in different terms, but to largely the same extent. Then, we describe several kin…Read more
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1482Modelling the truth of scientific beliefs with cultural evolutionary theorySynthese 191 (1). 2014.Evolutionary anthropologists and archaeologists have been considerably successful in modelling the cumulative evolution of culture, of technological skills and knowledge in particular. Recently, one of these models has been introduced in the philosophy of science by De Cruz and De Smedt (Philos Stud 157:411–429, 2012), in an attempt to demonstrate that scientists may collectively come to hold more truth-approximating beliefs, despite the cognitive biases which they individually are known to be s…Read more
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128Review of A Companion to the Philosophy of Technology (review)Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 14 (3): 270-272. 2010.
Eindhoven, North Brabant, Netherlands