In a recent critique of the doctrine of emergentism championed by its classic advocates up to C. D. Broad, Jaegwon Kim (Philosophical
Studies 63:31–47, 1999) challenges their view about its applicability to the sciences and proposes a new account of how the
opposing notion of reduction should be understood. Kim is critical of the classic conception advanced by Nagel and uses his
new account in his criticism of emergentism. I question his claims about the successful reduction achieved in the sciences
and argue that his new account has not improved on Nagel’s and that the critique of emergentism he bases on it is question-begging
in important respects.
Keywords Reduction - Emergence - Temperature - Chemical substances - Duhem - Kim - Nagel