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Underdetermination: A Realist Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics and Bohmian Mechanics Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-04-02 Chunling Yan
It is generally believed that two rival non-relativistic quantum theories, the realist interpretation of quantum mechanics and Bohmian mechanics, are empirically equivalent. In this paper, I use these two quantum theories to show that it is possible to offer a solution to underdetermination in some local cases, by specifying what counts as relevant empirical evidence in empirical equivalence and underdetermination
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Historical geographies of Korea's incorporation: The rise of underdeveloped and modernized colonial port cities Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.571) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Sung Hee Ru
In the century proceeding the Second World War the historical geography of Korea, increasingly influenced by Imperial Japan, experienced rapid change. From a macroscopic perspective, Korean port cities' unprecedented spatial changes were deeply related to Korea's incorporation process into the capitalist world-system and direct Japanese rule from 1910. This study uses two conceptual categories (the
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The instruments of expeditionary science and the reworking of nineteenth-century magnetic experiment Notes and Records (IF 0.826) Pub Date : 2022-03-30 Edward J. Gillin
During the mid-nineteenth century, British naval expeditions navigated the world as part of the most extensive scientific undertaking of the age. Between 1839 and the early 1850s, the British government orchestrated a global surveying of the Earth's magnetic phenomena: this was a philosophical enterprise of unprecedented state support and geographical extent. But to conduct this investigation relied
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Applying the notion of epistemic risk to argumentation in philosophy of science European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-03-29 Jaana Eigi-Watkin
I analyse an empirically informed argument in philosophy of science to show that it faces several varieties of risk commonly discussed as inductive risk. I argue that this is so even though the type of reasoning used in this argument differs from the reasoning in some of the arguments usually discussed in connection with inductive risk. To capture the variety of risks involved, I use the more general
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Foregrounding and backgrounding: a new interpretation of “levels” in science European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-03-29 Eric Hochstein
Talk of “levels” can be found throughout the sciences, from “levels of abstraction”, to “levels of organization”, to “levels of analysis” (among others). This has led to substantial disagreement regarding the ontology of levels, and whether the various senses of levels each have genuine value and utility to scientific practice. In this paper, I propose a unified framework for thinking about levels
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From epistemology to policy: reorienting philosophy courses for science students European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-03-29 Mark Thomas Young
Philosophy of science has traditionally focused on the epistemological dimensions of scientific practice at the expense of the ethical and political questions scientists encounter when addressing questions of policy in advisory contexts. In this article, I will explore how an exclusive focus on epistemology and theoretical reason can function to reinforce common, yet flawed assumptions concerning the
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Incommensurability and the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis: taking Kuhn seriously European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-03-29 Juan Gefaell, Cristian Saborido
In this paper, we analyze the debate between the Modern Synthesis and the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis in light of the concept of incommensurability developed by Thomas Kuhn. In order to do so, first we briefly present both the Modern Synthesis and the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis. Then, we clarify the meaning and interpretations of incommensurability throughout Kuhn’s works, concluding that
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Appropriating disasters. A framework for cultural historical research on catastrophes in Europe, 1500–1900 Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.571) Pub Date : 2022-03-29 Lotte Jensen, Hanneke van Asperen, Adriaan Duiveman, Marieke van Egeraat, Fons Meijer, Lilian Nijhuis
This article argues that ‘appropriation’ is key to understanding how communities respond to disasters, and offers a new methodological approach. It suggests that cultural representations of disasters should be studied through the prism of appropriation. Both in the past and the present, people have crafted specific representations of disasters and used them as identity markers to create a sense of
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British interwar airspace in the Middle East: The forgotten airport of Lydda Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.571) Pub Date : 2022-03-28 Ronen Shamir
Airports provide an essential infrastructure for the production of airspace by facilitating networks of aero mobility. This study considers the case of Lydda airport in Mandatory Palestine. Promoted in the 1930's as a hub for British civil aviation on its India route, Lydda airport is largely absent from the inter-war history of civil aviation although the site would become the location of the present-day
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The ‘Empirical’ in the Empirical Turn: A Critical Analysis Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-03-28 Mariska Thalitha Bosschaert, Vincent Blok
During the second half of the twentieth century, several philosophers of technology argued that their predecessors had reflected too abstractly and pessimistically on technology. In the view of these critics, one should study technologies empirically in order to fully understand them. They developed several strategies to empirically inform the philosophy of technology and called their new approach
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Green Responds to Ham on Christianity and Transhumanism Theology and Science (IF 0.88) Pub Date : 2022-03-28 Brian Patrick Green
ABSTRACT In her 2016 article “Spirituality in Christian Transhumanism: Commentary on Cole-Turner, Green, and Cannon,” Sandra A. Ham misunderstood my 2015 article “Transhumanism and Catholicism: Imagined and Real Tensions.” Here I respond to her criticisms and encourage more people to pursue matters concerning ethics, theology, and technology.
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Foreign Membership of the Royal Society: Schr?dinger and Heisenberg? Notes and Records (IF 0.826) Pub Date : 2022-03-23 David C. Clary
Two pioneers of quantum mechanics, Erwin Schr?dinger and Werner Heisenberg, were both nominated by Paul Dirac for election to the Royal Society in 1945. At first there was considerable opposition to Heisenberg's election from Max Born, Rudolf Peierls and Francis Simon. These three physicists were all refugees from Germany who had reservations about Heisenberg's activities in World War II. Born gave
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Hell and the Cultural Evolution of Christianity Theology and Science (IF 0.88) Pub Date : 2022-03-23 Lari Launonen
ABSTRACT The traditional view of hell as eternal conscious torment is challenged by proponents of universalism and conditional immortality. However, they need to explain why the church has been misled in adopting the traditional view. This paper draws from cognitive and evolutionary science of religion to provide an “error theory” of why eternal hell became the dominant view. Early Christianity grew
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A Jumble of Writings: Commentaries on Aristotle’s De Longitudine et Brevitate Vitae Attributed to Adam of Buckfield Early Science and Medicine (IF 0.756) Pub Date : 2022-03-23 Tilke Nelis
The translatio vetus of Aristotle’s De longitudine et brevitate vitae – a medieval text also known under the title of De morte et vita – was commented upon by the Oxford Master Adam of Buckfield in the thirteenth century. Inventories record two commentaries, which are either anonymous or unclearly ascribed. These writings are usually attributed by modern scholarship to Buckfield, though not always
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The Sciant artifices in the Work of Albert the Great: Towards Two Kinds of Transmutation? Early Science and Medicine (IF 0.756) Pub Date : 2022-03-23 Athanasios Rinotas
A few decades ago, William Newman drew attention to the significance of the medieval alchemical debate over the possibility of transmuting metals, which was closely connected to the Avicennan phrase known as Sciant artifices. Newman pointed to Albert the Great (ca. 1200–1280) as one of the participants in this debate. While Newman has covered Albert’s engagement with this Avicennan dictum only partially
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A Wine a Day …: Medical Experts and Expertise in Plutarch’s Table Talk Early Science and Medicine (IF 0.756) Pub Date : 2022-03-23 Michiel Meeusen
This contribution examines the important role that medical experts and expertise played at convivial networking events in the High Roman Empire, as imagined by a non-specialist in the field, viz. the famous Platonist intellectual Plutarch of Chaeronea (ca. 45–120 CE). An analysis of a number of medical problems discussed in his Table Talk will yield fresh insights into the social and intellectual role
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Christian Ethics in the Context of Social Evolution Theology and Science (IF 0.88) Pub Date : 2022-03-22 Cheng-chih Tsai
ABSTRACT In this paper, we claim that Jesus’ command “Love your enemies” is compatible with the fact that (1) for a group of Cooperators and Defectors repeatedly playing the Prisoner’s Dilemma game with each other, Defection will be the dominant strategy, and (2) the Tit-For-Tat strategy, a variant of the Eye-For-Eye principle that Jesus refuted in his Sermon on the Mount, had won Robert Axelrod’s
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Dirac’s Book The Principles of Quantum Mechanics as an Alternative Way of Organizing a Theory Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-03-22 Antonino Drago
Authoritative appraisals have qualified this book as an “axiomatic” theory. However, given that its essential content is no more than an analogy, its theoretical organization cannot be axiomatic. Indeed, in the first edition Dirac declares that he had avoided an axiomatic presentation. Moreover, I show that the text aims to solve a basic problem (How quantum mechanics is similar to classical mechanics
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Islam and Evolution: Al-Ghazālī and the Modern Evolutionary Paradigm Theology and Science (IF 0.88) Pub Date : 2022-03-21 Muhammad Misbah, Anisah Setyaningrum
(2022). Islam and Evolution: Al-Ghazālī and the Modern Evolutionary Paradigm. Theology and Science. Ahead of Print.
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The evolution of religion, religiosity and theology: a multilevel and multidisciplinary approach Theology and Science (IF 0.88) Pub Date : 2022-03-17 Nancy R. Howell
(2022). The evolution of religion, religiosity and theology: a multilevel and multidisciplinary approach. Theology and Science. Ahead of Print.
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Religion and Science in Context of Islam and Korean Christianity Theology and Science (IF 0.88) Pub Date : 2022-03-17 Sungo Lee
ABSTRACT This article suggests three important conclusions through examining dialogical methods of religion and science as well as religious contexts: Islam and Korean Christianity. Firstly, Ted Peters'hypothetical consonance as well as Zainal Bagir's philosophical and theological appreciation of science could be the appropriate models for a dialogue between science and non-Christian religions. Secondly
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Expanding Ecotheology to Embrace the Earth-Moon System Theology and Science (IF 0.88) Pub Date : 2022-03-17 Margaret Boone Rappaport, Christopher Corbally, Riccardo Campa
ABSTRACT An enlarged purview for amplification of religious doctrine can become necessary for a spacefaring species. Settlement of distant planetary bodies involves both technological and theological issues. The authors apply this notion to environmental preservation of the Earth, Earth's Moon, and cislunar space between Earth and Moon, as a unit. In expanding environmental protection beyond Earth
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The Quaker Experiential Integration of Science and Religion Theology and Science (IF 0.88) Pub Date : 2022-03-17 Laura Rediehs
ABSTRACT We commonly think that the rise of modern science made religious knowledge difficult to justify. There is, however, another way to understand religious thought that not only re-establishes religious knowledge as legitimate but also provides a unique way of integrating science and religion. Once we recognize that religious belief has experiential sources, we see that we can expand empiricism
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émigré neurophysiologists' situated knowledge economies and their roles in forming international cultures of scientific excellence Notes and Records (IF 0.826) Pub Date : 2022-03-16 F. W. Stahnisch
This article investigates the scientific performance and impact of Jewish and politically oppositional émigré German-speaking neurophysiologists from Nazi-occupied Europe since the 1930s. The massive loss of nearly 30% of all academic psychiatrists and neurologists in Germany between 1933 and 1945 also shattered the basis of German-speaking neuroscientific research. A focus will be laid here on the
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Artificial Intelligence and Baptism: Cutting a Gordian Knot Theology and Science (IF 0.88) Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Eugene A. Curry
ABSTRACT While perhaps far off in the future, advances in artificial intelligence make the possibility of AI converts to Christianity a plausible eventuality. Should the Church accept these converts at face-value, offering them baptism? It is unclear whether such converts would be valid candidates for baptism as their status as persons—albeit synthetic persons—would itself be uncertain. In light of
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A Qualification of Methodological Naturalism: Brightman and de Vries Revisited Theology and Science (IF 0.88) Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Junghyung Kim
ABSTRACT In this study I analyze what Edgar Sheffield Brightman and Paul de Vries originally meant by methodological naturalism, when they first invented the term and then argue that both of them proposed a significantly qualified version of scientific naturalism over against the predominance of a reductionist version of scientific naturalism called epistemic reductionism or scientism—that is, an unjustified
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The Powers of Quantum Mechanics: A Metametaphysical Discussion of the “Logos Approach” Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Raoni Wohnrath Arroyo, Jonas R. Becker Arenhart
This paper presents and critically discusses the “logos approach to quantum mechanics” from the point of view of the current debates concerning the relation between metaphysics and science. Due to its alleged direct connection with quantum formalism, the logos approach presents itself as a better alternative for understanding quantum mechanics than other available views. However, we present metaphysical
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A Study of Technological Intentionality in C++ and Generative Adversarial Model: Phenomenological and Postphenomenological Perspectives Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-03-14 Dmytro Mykhailov, Nicola Liberati
This paper aims to highlight the life of computer technologies to understand what kind of ‘technological intentionality’ is present in computers based upon the phenomenological elements constituting the objects in general. Such a study can better explain the effects of new digital technologies on our society and highlight the role of digital technologies by focusing on their activities. Even if Husserlian
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Bayesian Rationality Revisited: Integrating Order Effects Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-03-13 Pierre Uzan
Bayes’ inference cannot reliably account for uncertainty in mental processes. The reason is that Bayes’ inference is based on the assumption that the order in which the relevant features are evaluated is indifferent, which is not the case in most of mental processes. Instead of Bayes’ rule, a more general, probabilistic rule of inference capable of accounting for these order effects is established
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Conceptual Frameworks on the Relationship Between Physics–Mathematics in the Newton Principia Geneva Edition (1822) Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Raffaele Pisano, Paolo Bussotti
The aim of this paper is twofold: (1) to show the principal aspects of the way in which Newton conceived his mathematical concepts and methods and applied them to rational mechanics in his Principia; (2) to explain how the editors of the Geneva Edition interpreted, clarified, and made accessible to a broader public Newton’s perfect but often elliptic proofs. Following this line of inquiry, we will
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Overcoming Frege’s curse: heuristic reasoning as the basis for teaching philosophy of science to scientists European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-03-07 Till Grüne-Yanoff
A lot of philosophy taught to science students consists of scientific methodology. But many philosophy of science textbooks have a fraught relationship with methodology, presenting it either a system of universal principles or entirely permeated by contingent factors not subject to normative assessment. In this paper, I argue for an alternative, heuristic perspective for teaching methodology: as fallible
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Process epistemology in the COVID-19 era: rethinking the research process to avoid dangerous forms of reification European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-03-07 John Dupré, Sabina Leonelli
Whether we live in a world of autonomous things, or a world of interconnected processes in constant flux, is an ancient philosophical debate. Modern biology provides decisive reasons for embracing the latter view. How does one understand the practices and outputs of science in such a dynamic, ever-changing world - and particularly in an emergency situation such as the COVID-19 pandemic, where scientific
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Revisiting abstraction and idealization: how not to criticize mechanistic explanation in molecular biology European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-03-07 Martin Zach
Abstraction and idealization are the two notions that are most often discussed in the context of assumptions employed in the process of model building. These notions are also routinely used in philosophical debates such as that on the mechanistic account of explanation. Indeed, an objection to the mechanistic account has recently been formulated precisely on these grounds: mechanists cannot account
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Displaying encounters: Jaime Cortes?o’s S?o Paulo exhibition and indigenous knowledge in Brazilian history Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.571) Pub Date : 2022-03-05 André Reyes Novaes
The paper explores how indigenous knowledge and hybridity were displayed at the exhibition to celebrate the fourth centennial of S?o Paulo city in 1954. The exhibition was curated by the Portuguese scholar Jaime Cortes?o, who spent seventeen years exiled in Brazil and actively participated in intellectual controversies about territorial exploration and colonial encounters. Considering Cortes?o's mobilities
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On the Ontological Status of Molecular Structure: Is it Possible to Reconcile Molecular Chemistry with Quantum Mechanics? Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-03-03 Sebastian Fortin, Martín Labarca, Olimpia Lombardi
According to classical molecular chemistry, molecules have a structure, that is, they are sets of atoms with a definite arrangements in space and held together by chemical bonds. The concept of molecular structure is central to modern chemical thought given its impressive predictive power. It is also a very useful concept in chemistry education, due to its role in the rationalization and visualization
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Hysteria, head injuries and heredity: ‘shell-shocked’ soldiers of the Royal Edinburgh Asylum, Edinburgh (1914–24) Notes and Records (IF 0.826) Pub Date : 2022-03-02 Joanna Park, Louise Neilson, Andreas K. Demetriades
This project illustrates as-yet-uncharted psychiatric patients from the Royal Edinburgh Asylum (REA) around the time of World War I, predominantly ‘shell-shocked’ soldiers. Primary patient notes help to elucidate definitions, symptoms and perceptions of ‘shell-shock’, in addition to its links with other psychiatric conditions. This includes general paralysis of the insane (GPI), alcohol excess, mania
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Is HPS a valuable component of a STEM education? An empirical study of student interest in HPS courses within an undergraduate science curriculum European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-02-26 Greg Lusk
This paper presents the results of a survey of students majoring in STEM fields whose education contained a significant history, philosophy and sociology (HPS) of science component. The survey was administered to students in a North American public 4-year university just prior to completing their HPS sequence. The survey assessed students’ attitudes towards HPS to gauge how those attitudes changed
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A forgotten chapter in Egyptology: Sir John Gardner Wilkinson's investigations into a dynamic Nile Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.571) Pub Date : 2022-02-26 Robert R. Frost
Recent landscape archaeology projects have assumed that previous generations of Egyptologists eschewed research into environmental change, with the exception of one mid nineteenth century pioneer, Joseph Hekekyan. This article shows that this narrative is mainly a historiographical artefact with little basis in reality: scholars and travellers in Egypt were interested in environmental change, mainly
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Miracles persist: a reply to Sus European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-02-25 Niels Linnemann, James Read
In a recent article in this journal, Sus purports to account for what have been identified as the ‘two miracles’ of general relativity—that (1) the local symmetries of all dynamical equations for matter fields coincide, and (2) the symmetries of the dynamical equations governing matter fields coincide locally with the symmetries of the metric field—by application of the familiar result that every symmetry
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‘Who could have expected such a disaster?’ How responses to the 1892 cyclone determined institutional trajectories of vulnerability in Mauritius Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.571) Pub Date : 2022-02-25 Rory A. Walshe
On the April 29, 1892 an intense cyclone directly struck the island of Mauritius. The resulting devastation was considerable with over 1200 people killed, making it by far the deadliest cyclone in recorded Mauritian history. While this cyclone is commemorated in multiple places, the responses chosen (and rejected) at the time, their long term impacts, and their antecedent factors have never before
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Thomas Sackville's Hall of Fame: displaced, reinvented and preserved at Knole Notes and Records (IF 0.826) Pub Date : 2022-02-23 Olivia Stoddart, Gerry Alabone
Between 1605 and 1608 Knole was transformed into a dazzling Renaissance palace by Thomas Sackville, 1st Earl of Dorset. All around its largest Gallery ran a frieze of nearly fifty oval portraits, of which thirty-eight survive on their original rectangular framed oak panels. In 1702 the paintings were prised from their walls and moved elsewhere in the house. The surviving panels had deteriorated, mostly
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The Ontology of Technology Beyond Anthropocentrism and Determinism: The Role of Technologies in the Constitution of the (post)Anthropocene World Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-02-23 Vincent Blok
Because climate change can be seen as the blind spot of contemporary philosophy of technology, while the destructive side effects of technological progress are no longer deniable, this article reflects on the role of technologies in the constitution of the (post)Anthropocene world. Our first hypothesis is that humanity is not the primary agent involved in world-production, but concrete technologies
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The anecdotal patient: brain injury and the magnitude of harm Notes and Records (IF 0.826) Pub Date : 2022-02-16 Stephen T. Casper
In this study of the history of brain injury, I take up the discursive study of medical cases as a genre for the purposes of illustrating clinically important, philosophically meaningful and socially pertinent elements of medical patients’ lives. My objective is to assert the value of single cases, which derives from the way they allow others insight into significant and otherwise often overlooked
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‘A thankless enterprise’: Lady Mary Wortley Montagu's campaign to establish medical unorthodoxy amongst her female network Notes and Records (IF 0.826) Pub Date : 2022-02-16 Helen Esfandiary
Scholarship on Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and her involvement in the introduction of smallpox inoculation into 1720s English society generally concurs that, were it not for Montagu, inoculation might never, or would have taken significantly longer to, come about. This article argues that whilst Montagu can take the credit for popularizing the notion of inoculating against smallpox, it was not the method
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The Information Encoded in Structures: Theory and Application to Molecular Cybernetics Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-02-16 Andrzej Bielecki, Michael Schmittel
Theoretical frames for analyzing information in biological and molecular multicomponent structures are proposed. The mathematical foundations of the proposal are presented. Both the information encoded in structures is defined and the method of calculating the amount of this information is introduced. The proposed approach is applied to the operation of a molecular multicomponent machine.
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The emergence of the postgenomic gene European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-02-15 Francesca Bellazzi
The identity and the existence of genes has been challenged by postgenomic discoveries. Specifically, the consideration of molecular and cellular phenomena in which genes are embedded has proved relevant for their understanding. In response to these challenges, I will argue that the complexity of genetic phenomena supports the weak emergence of genes from the DNA. In Section 2, I will expose what genes
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Epistemological and educational issues in teaching practice-oriented scientific research: roles for philosophers of science European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-02-10 Mieke Boon, Mariana Orozco, Kishore Sivakumar
The complex societal challenges of the twenty-first Century require scientific researchers and academically educated professionals capable of conducting scientific research in complex problem contexts. Our central claim is that educational approaches inspired by a traditional empiricist epistemology insufficiently foster the required deep conceptual understanding and higher-order thinking skills necessary
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The logic of explanation in molecular biology: historical-processual and logical-procedural aspects European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-02-10 Giovanni Boniolo, Raffaella Campaner
This work addresses biological explanations and aims to provide a philosophical account which brings together logical-procedural and historical-processual aspects when considering molecular pathways. It is argued that, having molecular features as explananda, a particular non-classical logical language – Zsyntax – can be used to formally represent, in terms of logical theorems, types of molecular processes
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Lacan’s Dialectics of Knowledge Production: The Four Discourses as a Detour to Hegel Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-02-10 Hub Zwart
In Seminar XVII, entitled The reverse side of psychoanalysis , Jacques Lacan presents his famous theorem of the four discourses. In this rereading I propose to demonstrate that Lacan’s theorem entails a transferable dialectical method for studying processes of knowledge production, enabling contemporary scholars to develop a diagnostic of the present, notably scholars interested in issues such as the
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‘A man of intrigue’: Giles Rawlins, 1631?–1662 Notes and Records (IF 0.826) Pub Date : 2022-02-09 Benjamin Lomas
No person proposed to the early Royal Society has a less certain biography than Giles Rawlins. A ‘Mr. Rawlins’ was proposed as a candidate for election on 26 December 1660 in a group of seven. The other members of this group were Robert Boyle, Henry Oldenburg, John Denham, Elias Ashmole, John Evelyn and Nathaniel Henshaw. But whereas these six other men are greater or lesser luminaries of the Society
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Gender and botany in early nineteenth-century Portugal: the circle of the Marquise of Alorna Notes and Records (IF 0.826) Pub Date : 2022-02-09 Palmira Fontes da Costa
An ample number of studies have shown that during the late eighteenth century and the first half of the nineteenth century, botany attracted the attention and involvement of women not only as readers of literature on the subject but also as participants in botanical activities and as authors. However, women are still largely absent from the historiography of Portuguese botany in this period. This article
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Elementary Particles: What are they? Substances, Elements and Primary Matter Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 D.-M. Cabaret, T. Grandou, G.-M. Grange, E. Perrier
The extremely successful Standard Model of Particle Physics allows one to define the so-called Elementary Particles. From another point of view, how can we think of them? What kind of a status can be attributed to Elementary Particles and their associated quantised fields? Beyond the unprecedented efficiency and reach of quantum field theories, the current paper attempts at understanding the nature
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Primordial Black Holes from Collapsing Antimatter Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-02-05 Gábor Etesi
In this paper a simple (i.e. free of fine-tuning, etc.) new mechanism for primordial black hole formation based on the collapse of large antimatter systems in the early Universe is introduced. A peculiarity of this process is that, compared to their material counterparts, the collapse of large antimatter systems takes much less time due to the reversed thermodynamics of antimatter, an idea which has
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Proxy measurement in paleoclimatology European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-02-04 Joseph Wilson, F. Garrett Boudinot
In this paper we argue that the difference between standard measurement and proxy measurement in paleoclimatology should not be understood in terms of ‘directness’ (cf. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change). Measurements taken by climatologists to be paradigmatically non-proxy exhibit the kinds of indirectness that are thought to separate them
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Data quality, experimental artifacts, and the reactivity of the psychological subject matter European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-02-03 Uljana Feest
While the term “reactivity” has come to be associated with specific phenomena in the social sciences, having to do with subjects’ awareness of being studied, this paper takes a broader stance on this concept. I argue that reactivity is a ubiquitous feature of the psychological subject matter and that this fact is a precondition of experimental research, while also posing potential problems for the
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Applied versus situated mathematics in ancient Egypt: bridging the gap between theory and practice European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-02-02 Sandra Visokolskis, Héctor Horacio Gerván
This historiographical study aims at introducing the category of “situated mathematics” to the case of Ancient Egypt. However, unlike Situated Learning Theory (Lave,?1988; Greeno et al., 1993), which is based on ethnographic relativity, in this paper, the goal is to analyze a mathematical craft knowledge based on concrete particulars and case studies, which is ubiquitous in all human activity, and
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Books of Essays Philosophia Mathematica (IF 1.276) Pub Date : 2022-01-30
AberdeinA., RittbergC.J, and TanswellF.S., eds. Virtue Theory of Mathematical Practices. Topical collection in two double issues of the journal Synthese?199, 2021.
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Frisch’s Propagation-Impulse Model: A Comprehensive Mathematical Analysis Foundations of Science (IF 1.238) Pub Date : 2022-01-28 Jean-Marc Ginoux, Franck Jovanovic
Frisch’s 1933 macroeconomic model for business cycles has been extensively studied. The present study is the first comprehensive mathematical analysis of Frisch’s model. It provides a detailed reconstruction of how the model was built. We demonstrate the workability of Frisch’s PPIP model without adding hypotheses or changing the value of Frisch’s parameters. We prove that (1) the propagation model
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The Humean pragmatic turn and the case for revisionary best systems accounts European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-01-28 Toby Friend
Lewis’s original Best Systems Account of laws was not motivated much by pragmatics. But recent commentary on his general approach to laws has taken a ‘pragmatic turn’. This was initiated by Hall’s defence against the charge of ‘ratbag idealism’ which maintained that best systems accounts should be admired rather than criticised for the inherent pragmatism behind their choice of desiderata for what
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On entanglement as a relation European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.753) Pub Date : 2022-01-27 Enrico Cinti, Alberto Corti, Marco Sanchioni
This paper aims to characterise properly entanglement as an external relation obtaining between multiple quantum degrees of freedom. In particular, we argue that the entanglement relation is a unique relation fully characterised by mutual information, i.e. a quantity standardly used as a measure of entanglement. This analysis leads us to propose a new metaphysical account of entanglement, which we
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