Skip to content
  • News
  • Blueprints
  • Events
  • Teach
  • Contribute
  • Volunteer
  • Support us
  • About

Diversity Reading List

Expanding the who, the what, and the how of philosophy

Philosophy and the sciences after Kant

Posted on May 20, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: In this article Massimi discusses the important role that history and philosophy of science plays or ought to play within philosophy. The aim of the paper is to offer a historical reconstruction and a possible diagnosis of why the long marriage between philosophy and the sciences was eventually wrong after Kant. Massimi examines Kant’s view on philosophy and the sciences, from his early scientific writings to the development of critical philosophy and the pressing epistemological he felt the need to address in response to the sciences of his time.

Tagged Kant, philosophy of scienceLeave a comment

Philosophy of Science: A very short introduction

Posted on May 20, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Back Matter: What is science? Is there a real difference between science and myth? Is science objective? Can science explain everything? This Very Short Introduction provides a concise overview of the main themes of contemporary philosophy of science. Beginning with a short history of science to set the scene, Samir Okasha goes on to investigate the nature of scientific reasoning, scientific explanation, revolutions in science, and theories such as realism and anti-realism. He also looks at philosophical issues in particular sciences, including the problem of classification in biology, and the nature of space and time in physics. The final chapter touches on the conflicts between science and religion, and explores whether science is ultimately a good thing.

Tagged anti-realism, classification, philosophy of biology, philosophy of physics, philosophy of science, realism, scienceLeave a comment

Models in Physics

Posted on May 20, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: In this article Hesse defends the idea that scientific theories are hypothetico-deductive in form. She examines this hypothetico-deductive method by considering some examples from nineteenth-century mathematical physics. By means of these examples she brings out two points about scientific hypothesis. The first is that mathematical formalisms, when used as hypotheses in the description of physical phenomena, may function like the mechanical models of an earlier stage in physics, without having in themselves any mechanical or other physical interpret. The second point is that most physicists do not regard models as literal descriptions of nature, but as standing in a relation of analogy to nature.

Tagged analogy, models, models in physics, philosophy of scienceLeave a comment

Resisting reality: Social Construction and Social Critique

Posted on May 20, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: Contemporary theorists use the term “social construction” with the aim of exposing how what’s purportedly “natural” is often at least partly social and, more specifically, how this masking of the social is politically significant. In these previously published essays, Sally Haslanger draws on insights from feminist and critical race theory to explore and develop the idea that gender and race are positions within a structure of social relations. On this interpretation, the point of saying that gender and race are socially constructed is not to make a causal claim about the origins of our concepts of gender and race, or to take a stand in the nature/nurture debate, but to locate these categories within a realist social ontology. This is politically important, for by theorizing how gender and race fit within different structures of social relations we are better able to identify and combat forms of systematic injustice.
Although the central essays of the book focus on a critical social realism about gender and race, these accounts function as case studies for a broader critical social realism.

Tagged feminist theory, philosophical method, social construction, social critiqueLeave a comment

Unsimple Truths: Science, Complexity and Policy

Posted on May 20, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: In Unsimple Truths, Sandra Mitchell argues that the long-standing scientific and philosophical deference to reductive explanations founded on simple universal laws, linear causal models, and predict-and-act strategies fails to accommodate the kinds of knowledge that many contemporary sciences are providing about the world. She advocates, instead, for a new understanding that represents the rich, variegated, interdependent fabric of many levels and kinds of explanation that are integrated with one another to ground effective prediction and action. Mitchell draws from diverse fields including psychiatry, social insect biology, and studies of climate change to defend “integrative pluralism” – a theory of scientific practices that makes sense of how many natural and social sciences represent the multi-level, multi-component, dynamic structures they study. She explains how we must, in light of the now-acknowledged complexity and contingency of biological and social systems, revise how we conceptualize the world, how we investigate the world, and how we act in the world.

Tagged complexity, integrative pluralism, law, laws of nature, philosophy of scienceLeave a comment

The Structure of scientific inference

Posted on May 20, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: A danger of a heavily formalist approach to the structure of science is that it may lose sight of the concrete actualities on which scientific inference is exercised. On the other hand, and excessively descriptive and relativist approach fails to achieve a general systematization of models of inference. This book tries to steer a middle course between these extremes. Hesse first discusses some epistemological problems bequeathed by positivists analyses of science and also considers the problem of inductive justification of theories in relation to evidence. Following Keynes and Carnap she argues that the axioms of probability constitute the best postulate system for a logic of confirmation.

Tagged philosophy of science, scientific inference, scientific methodLeave a comment

Can there be a feminist science?

Posted on May 20, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: This paper explores a number of recent proposals regarding “feminist science” and rejects a content-based approach in favor of a process-based approach to characterizing feminist science. Philosophy of science can yield models of scientific reasoning that illuminate the interaction between cultural values and ideology and scientific inquiry. While we can use these models to expose masculine and other forms of bias, we can also use them to defend the introduction of assumptions grounded in feminist political values.

Tagged feminism, philosophy of science, women in scienceLeave a comment

The myth of non-reductive materialism

Posted on May 20, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: This article explores the idea that we can assuage our physicalist qualms by embracing “ontological physicalism”, the claim that all that exists in space-time is physical, but, at the same time, accept “property dualism”, a dualism about psychological and physical attributes, insisting that psychological concepts or properties form an irreducible, autonomous domain. The issue the author explores is whether or not a robust physicalist can, consistently and plausibly, swear off reductionism – that is, whether or not a substantial form of physicalism can be combined with the rejection of psycho-physical reduction. The author argues that a middle-of-the road position of the sort just described is not available. More specifically, he claim that a physicalist has only two genuine options, eliminativism and reductionism.

Tagged dualism, eliminativism, metaphysics, persistence, physicalism, reductionismLeave a comment

Tainted: How Philosophy of Science can expose bad science

Posted on May 20, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Lawyers often work pro bono to liberate death-row inmates from flawed legal verdicts that otherwise would kill them. This is the first book on practical philosophy of science, how to practically evaluate scientific findings with life-and-death consequences. Showing how to uncover scores of scientific flaws – typically used by special interests who try to justify their pollution – this book aims to liberate many potential victims of environmentally induced disease and death.It shows how citizens can help uncover flawed science and thus liberate people from science-related societal harms such as pesticides, waste dumps, and nuclear power. It shows how flawed biology, economics, hydrogeology, physics, statistics, and toxicology are misused in ways that make life-and-death differences for humans. It thus analyzes science at the heart of contemporary controversies – from cell phones, climate change, and contraceptives, to plastic food containers and radioactive waste facilities. It illustrates how to evaluate these scientific findings, instead of merely describing what they are. Practical evaluation of science is important because, at least in the United States, 75 percent of all science is funded by special interests, to achieve specific practical goals, such as developing pharmaceuticals or showing some pollutant causes no harm. Of the remaining 25 percent of US science funding, more than half addresses military goals. This means that less than one-eighth of US science funding is for basic science; roughly seven-eighths is done by special interests, for practical projects from which they hope to profit. The problem, however, is that often this flawed, special-interest science harms the public.

Tagged bias, biostatistics, environment, public health, special-interest scienceLeave a comment

Models, fiction and fictional models

Posted on May 20, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: The use of models to scientifically represent and study reality is widely recognized with good reasons as indispensable for the practice of science. Because models, unlikely pure verbal representation, are justifiably regarded as vehicles of representation that are not truth-apt, philosophical questions are natural raised concerning the nature of such vehicles and how they represent. A sizeable literature generated in recent years explores the possibility that ”scientific models are works of fiction”. Idealization and other similar strategies are often taken to be the means by which models are made. Arguing against this last claim, the thesis of this article is that most models in science are not fictional. The author argues against the idea that idealization is the means by which models of typically unobservable systems or mechanisms are made.

Tagged idealisation, models, philosophy of science, representationLeave a comment

Posts navigation

Older posts
Newer posts

Topics

Aesthetics
(251)
Aesthetic Experience and Judgement
(113)
Aesthetic Normativity and Value
(121)
Artistic Movements
(7)
Artistry and Creativity
(17)
Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics
(108)
Individual Arts and Crafts
(98)
Metaphysics of Aesthetics
(92)
Epistemology
(300)
Applied Epistemology
(63)
Formal Epistemology
(19)
Metaepistemology
(31)
Social Epistemology
(107)
Standpoint Epistemology
(33)
Theoretical Epistemology
(159)
Metaphilosophy
(187)
Ethics and Socio-Politics of Philosophy
(79)
Historiography of Philosophy
(63)
Philosophical Biography
(17)
Philosophical Media and Methodology
(97)
Philosophical Translation and/or Commentary
(21)
Philosophy Education
(10)
The Nature Value and Aims of Philosophy
(30)
Metaphysics
(301)
Causation
(64)
Free Will
(28)
Identity and Change
(57)
Mereology
(7)
Metametaphysics
(7)
Modality
(35)
Ontology Metaontology and Social Ontology
(179)
Properties Propositions and Relations
(24)
Space Time and Space-Time
(27)
Truth and Truthmaking
(24)
Moral Philosophy
(637)
Applied Ethics
(433)
Descriptive Ethics
(6)
Metaethics
(182)
Moral Psychology
(29)
Normative Ethics
(151)
Philosophy of Action
(23)
Philosophy of Language
(156)
Communication
(56)
Ethics and Socio-Politics of Language
(60)
Grammar and Meaning
(88)
Language and Mind
(49)
Linguistics
(7)
Metaphysics of Language
(3)
Philosophy of Mind
(481)
Artificial Intelligence
(8)
Cognitive Science
(25)
Consciousness
(61)
Intentionality
(120)
Metaphysics of Mind and Body
(90)
Neuroscience
(23)
Psychiatry
(19)
Psychology
(47)
States and Processes: Affective Behavioral and Cognitive
(364)
Philosophy of Religion
(115)
Afterlife
(9)
Creation
(6)
Deities and their Attributes
(50)
Divination Faith and Miracles
(8)
Environment
(33)
Ethics and Socio-Politics of Religion
(11)
Religious Development Experience and Personhood
(46)
Theodicy
(14)
Philosophy of the Formal Natural and Social Sciences
(425)
Anthropology
(11)
Archaeology and History
(27)
Economics
(13)
Geography
(2)
Life Sciences and Medicine
(112)
Logic and Mathematics
(184)
Physical Sciences
(107)
Psychology
(21)
Sociology
(18)
Political Philosophy
(477)
Equality
(144)
Forms of Government
(73)
Freedom and Rights
(175)
Justice
(306)
Law and Public Policy
(226)
Political Authority and Legitimacy
(44)
Political Economy
(26)
Political Ideologies
(19)
War and Peace
(19)
Social Philosophy
(808)
Class
(80)
Culture
(528)
Disability
(41)
Education
(45)
Environment and Sustainability
(59)
Gender Sex and Sexuality
(361)
Personal and Social Identity
(189)
Race
(207)
Technology and Material Culture
(21)
Work Labor and Leisure
(52)

Read about our new indexing system

Keywords

abortion African philosophy animal ethics art art classification autonomy causation Chinese philosophy colonialism Confucianism consciousness culture desire disability ecology environment ethics experimental philosophy feminism feminist philosophy fiction gender identity imagination justice Kant knowledge logic methodology mind models nature ontology oppression perception portrait race rationality representation responsibility science sex truth virtue women

Figures

Aristotle bell hooks Charles W. Mills Confucius David Hume David Lewis Delia Graff Fara Elisabeth von Böhmen Emilie Du Châtelet G. E. Anscombe G. W. F. Hegel Gottfried Leibniz Gottlob Frege Immanuel Kant Iris Marion Young Iris Murdoch Jennifer Jackson John Rawls Judith Jarvis Thomson Karl Marx Laozi Ludwig Wittgenstein Margaret Macdonald Maria Lugones Mary Astell Mary Hesse Mary Midgley Maurice Merleau-Ponty Michel Foucault Philippa Foot Plato René Descartes Rudolf Carnap Simone Weil Sophie Bọsẹdé Olúwọlé Soran Reader Susan Hurley Val Plumwood Viola Cordova W. V. O. Quine Wang Yangming Wilma Mankiller Xuanzang Zhuangzi Zhu Xi

Our Sponsors

Arts and Humanities Research Council
American Philosophical Association
British Philosophical Association
Marc Sanders FoundationMarc Sanders Foundation
Society for Applied Philosophy
American Society for Aesthetics
MIND AssociationMIND Association
University of St Andrews
Uehiro Oxford InstituteUehiro Oxford Institute
University of Manchester
University of Sheffield
The University of Leeds
The University of Edinburgh
EIDYN
British Society of Aesthetics
The White Rose College of the Arts & Humanities
  • Creative Commons Attribution license

    Unless otherwise stated, all elements of the Diversity Reading List licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Derivatives 4.0 International License
    Hosted by / Web Design by PathForge gemeinnützige UG • Theme: Avant by Kaira

Theme: Avant by Kaira
This site is registered on Toolset.com as a development site.