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Mauricio Suárez, Mauro Dorato and Miklós Rédei
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Front matter
1-12
Naturalism and the Scientific Status of the Social Sciences
13-22
Reconsidering Gilbert’s Account of Social Norms
23-33
Theories for Use: On the Bearing of Basic Science on Practical Problems
35-45
Structural Realism as a Form of Humility
47-62
Approaching the Truth via Belief Change in Propositional Languages
63-72
Can Graphical Causal Inference Be Extended to Nonlinear Settings? An Assessment of Conditional Independence Tests
73-93
Towards a Grammar of Bayesian Confirmation
95-105
Epistemic Accuracy and Subjective Probability
107-117
Interpretation in the Natural Sciences
119-127
Multiple Realizability and Mind-Body Identity
129-138
Why Should Philosophers of Science Pay Attention to the Commercialization of Academic Science?
139-148
Some Consequences of the Pragmatist Approach to Representation Decoupling the Model-Target Dyad and Indirect Reasoning
149-164
The Gray Area for Incorruptible Scientific Research An Exploration Guided by Merton’s Norms Conceived as ‘Default-Norms’
165-175
Epistemic Replacement Relativism Defended
177-187
Models and Truth The Functional Decomposition Approach
189-199
Theory Change, Truthlikeness, and Belief Revision
201-209
Mechanisms: Are Activities up to the Job?
211-220
Why the Model-Theoretic View of Theories Does Not Adequately Depict the Methodology of Theory Application
221-231
A Deflationary, Neo-Mertonian Critique of Academic Patenting
233-244
‘I Want to Look Like a Lady, Not Like a Factory Worker’ Rose Rand, a Woman Philosopher of the Vienna Circle
245-254
Natural Kind Theory as a Tool for Philosophers of Science
255-265
Whence Ontological Structural Realism?
267-278
Local, General and Universal Prediction Methods: A Game-Theoretical Approach to the Problem of Induction
279-288
Multiple Contraction Revisited
289-297
Statistical Inference Without Frequentist Justifications
299-310
Carnap and the Perils of Ramseyfication
311-321
Naturalizing Meaning Through Epistemology: Some Critical Notes
323-332
What Games Do Scientists Play? Rationality and Objectivity in a Game-Theoretic Approach to the Social Construction of Scientific Knowledge
333-341
Back matter
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