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PATRICK A. HEELAN, S.J.: BIBLIOGRAPHY

2001 Book review of: Science Unfettered, by James E. McGuire and Barbara Tuchanska. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 2000. Review ofMetaphysics, 55 (200 I). Theological and Philosophical Foundations of Modem Science, in Science and Faith: The Problem of the Human Being in Science and Theology. Ed. by Natalia Pecherskaya. St. Petersburg, Russia: St. Petersburg School of Religion and , 2001. Pp. 80-86. Lifeworld and Scientific Interpretation, published on www.georgetown. edulheelan (to be included in the Handbook ofPhenomenology and Medicine, ed. by Kay Toombs). Faith and Reason in the University: Commentary on John Paul Il's Encyclical Fides et Ratio 1998, published on www.georgetown.edu/heelan (to be included in a volume to honor Jean Ladriere, ed. by Jean-Franyois Malherbe).

2000 Bernard J. F. Lonergan as a Contemporary Christian : Lonergan and the Measures of God, in The Questions of Christian . Ed. by Francis Ambrosio. New York: Fordham University Press, 2000. Pp. 165-188. Visual Space as Variable and Task-Oriented: A Study ofVan Gogh's 'Modem; Use of Scientific Perspective, published on www.georgetown.edu/heelan.

1999 Nietzsche's Perspectivalism and the , in Nietzsche, Epistemology, and the Philosophy ofScience, Vol. II. Ed. by Babette E. Babich and RobertS. Cohen. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science, vol. 204. Dordrecht and Boston: Kluwer, 1999. Pp. 193-209. Hermeneutics and Natural Science, in Continental in America. Ed. by James R. Watson. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press 1999. Pp. 64-73.

1998 Scope of Hermeneutics in the Philosophy of Natural Science, Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science, 29 (1998), 273-298. (with Jay Schulkin) Hermeneutical Philosophy and Pragmatism: A Philosophy of Science, , 115 (1998), 269-302. Book Review of: Nietzsche's Philosophy ofScience: Reflecting Science on the Ground ofArt and Life by Babette E. Babich. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 1994. New Nietzsche Studies, 2 (1998), 139-140. The Authority of Science: A Post-Modem Crisis, Studia Culturologica: Divinatio, 6 (1998), 3-17. The Emergence of New Perspective Practice in Vincent Van Gogh, in Acta Polytechnica Scandinavica, Mathematics, Computing, and Management Series # 91. Ed. by George Farre and Tarkko Oksala. Espoo: Finnish Academy of Technology 1998. Pp. 315-124.

461 462 PATRICK A. HEELAN, S.J.

1997 Hermeneutique de Ia Science Experimentale: La Mecanique Quantique et les Sciences Sociales, in Hermeneutique: Sciences et Textes. Ed. by Francois Rastier, Jean-Michel Salanskis, and Ruth Scheps. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, Collection, Philosophie d'Aujourd'hui 1997. Pp. 277-292. Why a Hermeneutical Philosophy of Natural Science? Man and World, 30 (1997), 271-298. Why a Hermeneutical Philosophy of Natural Science? in Hermeneutics and the Natural Sciences. Ed. by Robert Crease. Dordrecht: Kluwer 1997. Pp. 13-40. Context, Hermeneutics, and Ontology in the Experimental Sciences, in Issues and Images in the Philosophy of Science. Ed. by Dimitri Ginev and RobertS. Cohen. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Series, val. 192. Dordrecht: Kluwer 1997. Pp. 107-126.

1995 An Anti-epistemological or Ontological Interpretation of the Quantum Theory and Theories Like it, in Continental and Postmodern Perspectives in the Philosophy of Science. Ed. by Babette E. Babich, Deborah Bergoffen, and Simon Glynn. Aldershot, Brookfield (USA): Avebury Press, 1995. Pp. 55-68. Quantum Mechanics and the Social Sciences: After Hermeneutics, in Science and Education. 4 (1995), 127-136. Issue ed. by Michael R. Matthews. Heidegger's Longest Day: Twenty-Five Years Later, in From Phenomenology to Thought, Errancy, and Desire: In Honor of William J. Richardson, S.J. Ed. by Babette E. Babich. Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1995. Pp. 579-587.

1994 Galileo, Luther, and the Hermeneutics of Natural Science, The Question ofHermeneutics: Festschrift for Joseph Kockelmans. Ed. by Timothy Stapleton. Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1994. Pp. 363-375.

1992 Experiment as Fulfillment of Theory, in Phenomenology and Indian Philosophy. Ed. by D. P. Chattopadhyaya, Lester Embree, and J. N. Mohanty. New Delhi: Council for Philosophical Research, 1992. Pp. 169-184. Remarks on the Rivalry Between Science and Perception, Pratt Journal ofArchitecture, val. 3, On Making. New York: Rizzoli, 1992. Pp. 163-171. Ignatian Discernment, Aesthetic Play, and Scientific Inquiry, in Minding the Time. Ed. by William O'Brien. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 1992. Pp. 3-17. Foreword, to Dante: Summa Medievalis. Ed. by Eugenio Viola and Carlo Franco. Rome: Italian Encyclopedia Institute, 1992. The New Relevance of Experiment: A Postmodem Problem, in Phenomenology ofNatural Science. Ed. by Lee Hardy and Lester Embree. Dordrecht and Boston: Kluwer 1991. Pp. 197-213.

1991 Hermeneutic Phenomenology and the Philosophy of Science, in Gadamer and Hermeneutics: Science, Culture, and Literature, Continental Philosophy. Continental Philosophy IV. Ed. by Hugh Silverman. New York: Routledge, 1991. Pp. 213-228. Hermeneutical Phenomenology and the History of Science, in Nature and Scientific Method: William A. Wallace Festschrift. Ed. by Daniel Dahlstrom. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 1991. Pp. 23-36. Book review of: On the ofthe Social Sciences by Jtirgen Habermas. Translated by S. W. Nicholson and J.A. Stark. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1988. , 82 (1991), 117. Book review of: The Material Realization ofScience: A Philosophical View on the Experimental Natural Sciences. Developed in Discussion with Habermas by Hans Radder. Assen/Maastricht: Van Gorcum, 1988. Isis, 82 (1991), 178-179. Book Review of: Husser/'s Phenomenology and the Foundations of Natural Science by Charles Harvey. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 1989. Husser/ Studies, 8 (1991), 57-61. BIBLIOGRAPHY 463

1990 The Fine and Performing Arts at Stony Brook, Currents, 8 (1990), 2, 21.

1989 Husserl's Philosophy of Science, in Husser/'s Phenomenology: A Textbook. Ed. by J. Mohanty and W. McKenna. Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C.: CARP and University Press of America, 1989. Pp. 387-428. Space Perception and a Hermeneutic Phenomenology of Natural Science, in Phenomenology in America. Ed. by Eugene Kaelin and Carl Schrag. Boston and Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1989. Pp. 216-220. Neo-realism, in the Encyclopedie Philosophique. Ed. by Jean Ladriere. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1989. Book review of: Hermeneutics vs Science. Ed. by John M. Connolly and Thomas Keutner. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1988. Review ofMetaphysics, 43 (1989), 615-616. Philosophy and Synoptic Understanding, The World & I, 4 ( 1989), 450-455. After Experiment: Research and Reality, A mer. Philos. Qrtly., 26 (1989), 297-308. Yes! There is a Hermeneutic Philosophy of Natural Science: Rejoinder to Markus, Science in Context, 3 (1989), 469-480.

1988 Space-Perception and the Philosophy ofScience. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of Press, I 988. Pbk edition. Husser!, Hilbert and the Critique of Galilean Science, in Edmund Husser/ and the Phenomenological Tradition. Ed. by Robert Sokolowski. Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, I988. Pp. I57-173. The Primacy of Perception and The Cognitive Paradigm: Reply to De Mey, Social Epistemology, I (1988), 321-326. A Heideggerian Meditation on Science and Art, in Hermeneutic Phenomenology. Ed. by Joseph J. Kockelmans. Washington, D.C. and Pittsburgh: Univ. Press of America and CARP, I988. Pp. 257-275. Experiment and Theory: Constitution and Reality, Journal ofPhilosophy, 85 ( 1988), 515-524.

1987 Perceived Worlds are Interpreted Worlds, in New Essays in Metaphysics. Ed. by Robert Neville. Albany: SUNY Press I987. Pp. 61-76.

1986 InterpretatiOJ: and the Structure of Space in Scientific Theory and in Perception, in Research in Phenomenology XVI. Ed. by John Sallis. Atlantic Heights, NJ: Humanities Press, I 986. Pp. 187-199. Maschinelle Wahrnehmung, in Technikphilosophie im Zeitalter der Informationstechnik. Ed. by Alois Hiining and Carl Mitcham. Braunschweig/Wiesbaden: Vieweg, 1986. Pp. I29-140. Foreword, in Powers ofImagining: Ignatius ofLoyola, by Antonio de Nicolas. Albany: SUNY Press, 1986. Pp. ix-xiv. Space as God's Presence, The World and I, I (I986), 607-623. Machine Perception, in Philosophy and Technology II: Information Technology and Computers in Theory and Practice. Ed. by Carl Mitcham and Aiois Hiining. Proceedings ofthe International Conference on Information Technology and Computers. Boston Studies in the Philosophy ofScience, vol. 90. Boston andDordrecht: Reidel, 1986. Pp. 131-156.

1985 The Epistemological Contribution ofLudwik Fleck, in Cognition and Fact. Ed. by R. Cohen and T. Schnelle. Proceedings ofthe Fleck Colloquium, University of Hamburg, November, 1982. Boston Studies in the Philosophy ofScience, vol. 87. Dordrecht and Boston: Reidel, 1985. Pp. 287-307. {Also published by Suhrkamp Verlag, 1986). 464 PATRICK A. HEELAN, S.J.

Perception as a Hermeneutical Act, in Hermeneutics and Deconstruction. Ed. by H. Silverman and D. Ihde. Proceedings ofthe Society for Phenomenological and Existential Philosophy, vol. 10. Albany: SUNY Press, 1985. Pp. 43-54. Werner Karl Heisenberg, Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th Edition (revised), Chicago, 1985. P. 746. Space as God's Presence, in Religious Experience and Scientific Paradigms. Stony Brook, NY: Institute for Advanced Studies of World Religions, 1985. Pp. 24-60

1984 Is Visual Space Euclidean? A Study in the Hermeneutics of Perception, in , Language, and Society. Ed. by Otto Neumaier. Vienna: Conceptus-Studien, 1984. Pp. 1-13. Preface, to The New Scientific Spirit, by Gaston Bachelard, trans. by Arthur Goldhammer. Boston: Beacon Press, 1984. Pp. vii-xiii. Perceived Worlds are Interpreted Worlds, (Abstract), Journal ofPhilosophy, 81 (1984), 707-708. Commentary on Milic Capek's 'Particles or Events', in Physical Sciences and History ofPhysics. Ed. by RobertS. Cohen, and Marx Wartofsky. Boston Studies in the Philosophy ofScience, val. 82. Dordrecht and Boston: Reidel, 1984. Pp. 29-34.

1983 Space-Perception and the Philosophy a/Science. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1983. Natural Science as a Hermeneutic oflnstrumentation, Philosophy ofScience, 50 (1983), 181-204. Is Visual Space Euclidean? A Study in the Hermeneutics of Perception, Abstracts ofthe Seventh international Congress on the Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy ofScience, Salzburg, 1983, vol. 5, sect. I 0, 40-43. Perception as a Hermeneutical Act, Review ofMetaphysics, 37 (1983), 61-76. Space as God's Presence, Journal ofDharma, 8 (1983), 63-86. Natural Science and Being-in-the-World, Man and World, 16 (1983), 207-216.

1982 Hermeneutical Realism and Scientific Observation, in PSA 1982. Ed. by Peter Asquith and Ron Giere. Lansing, MI: Philosophy of Science Association, Michigan State University, 1982. Pp. 77-87.

1981 Verbandstheoretische Betrachtung des Erkenntnisfortschritts, in Voraussetzungen und Grenzen der Wissenschafl. Eds. by Gerard Radnitzky and Gunther Andersson, Tiibingen: Mohr, 1981. Pp. 339-346.

1980 Comments on 'A Unified Theory of Biology and Physics' by S. Goldman, Journal ofSocial and Biological Structures, 3 (1980), 361-362. Comments on Alex Comfort's 'Demonic and Historical Models in Biology', Journal ofSocial and Biological Structures, 3 (1980), 217-218.

1979 Purpose in the Universe, in Encyclopedia ofBioethics. Ed. by Warren Reich. Washington, D.C.: Kennedy Institute, 1979. Pp. 1399-1404. Complementarity, Context-Dependence and Quantum Logic, in The Logico-Algebraic Approach to Quantum Mechanics. Ed. by C. Hooker. University of Western Ontario Series, on the Philosophy of Science. Dordrecht: Reidel, 1979. Pp. 161-179. Lattice of Growth in Knowledge, in Structure and Development ofKnowledge. Ed. by Gerard Radnitzky and Gunther Andersson. Boston Studies in the Philosophy ofScience, vol. 59. Dordrecht: Reidel, 1979. Pp. 205-211. Continental Philosophy and the Philosophy of Science, in Current Research in the Philosophy ofScience. Ed. by Peter Asquith and Fred Suppe. East Lansing, MI: Philosophy of Science Assoc., 1979. Pp. 84-93. BIBLIOGRAPHY 465

Music as Basic Metaphor and Deep Structure in Plato and in Ancient Cultures, Journal of Social and Biological Structures, 2 ( 1979), 279-291.

1978 The Search for Perfect Science in the West, Fifty Years of Thought. Ed. by J. O'Neill. New York: Fordham University Press, 1978. Pp. 165-186.

1977 Deep Structures and an Evolutionary Ethic: Commentary, in Knowledge, Value and Belief Ed. by H. Tristram Englehardt, Jr. and Daniel Callahan. Hastings-on-Hudson, NY: Hastings Institute, 1977. Pp. 247-253. Quantum Relativity and the Cosmic Observer, in Cosmology, History and Theology. Ed. by Wolfgang Yourgrau and Andrew Breck. New York: Plenum, 1977. Pp. 29-38. The Nature of Clinical Science, Journal ofMedicine and Philosophy, 2 (1977), 20-32.

1976 Medical Praxis and Manifest Images of Man, in Science, and Medicine. Ed. by H. Tristram Englehardt, Jr. Hastings-on-Hudson, NY: Hastings Institute, 1976. Pp. 218-124. Foreword, in Meditations Through the Rg Veda, by Antonio de Nicolas. York Beach, ME: Nicolas-Hays, 1976. Pp. xiii-xiv. The Myth ofInvariance, by Ernest G. McClain. Edited by Patrick A. Heelan. York Beach, ME: Nicolas• Hays, 1976.

1975 Heisenberg and Radical Theoretic Change, Zeitschrifl for allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie, 6 ( 1975), 113-138. Hermeneutics of Experimental Science in the Context of the Life-World, in Interdisciplinary Phenomenology. Edited by Don Ihde and Richard Zaner. The Hague: Nijhoff 1975. Pp. 7-50. Comments on 'Concepts of Function and Mechanism in Medicine and Medical Science' and 'Organs, Organisms and Disease', in Evaluation and Explanation in the Biomedical Sciences. Ed. by H. Tristram Englehardt, Jr. and Stuart Spieker. The Hague: Reidel, 1975. Pp. 85-93. Hermeneutics and Critical Theory: Discussion, Cultural Hermeneutics, 2 (1975), 367-368.

1974 Quantum Logic and Classical Logic: Their Respective Roles, in Logical and Epistemological Studies in Contemporary Physics. Ed. by RobertS. Cohen and Marx Wartofsky. Boston Studies in the Philosophy ofScience Series, val. 13. The Hague: Reidel, 1974. Pp. 318-349. Diskussion: 'Hermeneutics of Experimental Science in the Context of the Life-World,' Commentary on Professor Theodore Kisiel's Commentary on my Paper, Zeitschriflfiir allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie, 5 (1974), 124, 135-137. Logic of Changing Classificatory Frameworks, in Proceedings of International Conference on the Classification ofKnowledge. Ed. by Joseph Wojciechowski. Munich: Verlag Documentation, 1974. Pp. 260-274. Werner Heisenberg, Encyclopaedia Britannica, 14th Edition, Chicago, 1974, vol. 8. Pp. 745-746.

1973 The Logic of Framework Transpositions, in Language, Truth and Meaning. Ed. by Philip McShane. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 1973. Pp. 93-114.

1972 Nature and its Transformations, Theological Studies, 33 (1972), 486-502 (also translated into Hungarian, Merleg, 3[1974], 243-259). 466 PATRICK A. HEELAN, S.J.

Toward a Hermeneutic of Natural Science, Journal of the British Society of Phenomenology, 3 ( 1972), 252-260. Toward a Hermeneutics of Science, Main Currents, 1972 (28), 85-93. Quantum mechanics and objectivity, in The Problem ofScientific Realism. Ed. by Edward MacKinnon. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1972. Pp. 260-284. Hermeneutics of Experimental Science in the Context of the Life-World, Philosophia Mathematica, 9 ( 1972), 101-144. Atomism, pp. 224-230, Elementary Particles, pp. 127-133, Quantum Mechanics, pp. 125-131 in Marxism, Communism, and Western Society: A Comparative Encyclopedia. New York: Herder, 1972. Towards a New of the Pictorial Space of Vincent van Gogh, Art Bulletin, 54 (1972), 478-492. The Logic of Framework Transpositions, in Language, Truth, and Meaning. Ed. by Philip McShane. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 1972. Pp. 93-114.

1971 The Logic of Framework Transpositions, International Philosophical Quarterly, II (1971), 314-334. The Need for Pluralism, Main Currents, 28 (1971 ), 26-27.

1970 Quantum Logic and Classical Logic: Their Respective Roles, Synthese, 22 (1970), 3-33. Complementarity, Context-Dependence and Quantum Logic, Foundations ofPhysics, I (1970), 95-110. Scientific Objectivity and Framework Transpositions, , 19 (1970), 55-70. Logic, Language and Science, in Philosophical Aspects ofScientific Realism. Ed. by Edward MacKinnon. New York: Appleton, 1970. Pp. 260-284.

1969 The Role of Subjectivity in Natural Science, Proceedings ofthe American Catholic Philosophical Association 1969. Pp. 185-194. 1968

God, the Universe, and the Secular City, in The Sacred and the Secular. Ed. by Michael Taylor. New York: Prentice-Hall, 1968. Pp. 137-153. The Search for Perfect Science in the West, Thought, 43 (1968), 165-186.

1967 Horizon, Objectivity and Reality in the Physical Sciences, International Philosophical Quarterly, 7 (1967), 375-412. Epistemological Realism in Contemporary Physics, Proceedings of 29th Annual Convention of the Jesuit Philosophical Association. Ed. by Walter Stokes, S.J. East Dubuque, IL: Tel Graphics 1967. Pp. 9-66.

1966 The Philosophy of Elementary Particles, New Catholic Encyclopedia, Washington, D.C., 1966. Pp. 261-163. Atomistik, pp. 426-435, Elementarteilchen, pp. 94-103, Quantenmechanik, pp. 414-425 in Sowjetsystem und Demokratische Gesellschafi: eine Enzyk/opiidie. Freiburg: Herder, 1966-1972. Matter in a Contemporary Setting, Studies (Dublin) (1966), 299-311.

1965 Quantum Mechanics and Objectivity: The Physical Philosophy of Werner Heisenberg. The Hague: Nijhoff, 1965.

1964 A Realist Theory of Physical Science, Continuum, 2 (1964), 34-42. BIBLIOGRAPHY 467

1962 The Way of Modem Physics, Studies (Dublin) (1962), 494-507. The Closed View of Classical Physics, Studies (Dublin) (1962)

1961 Book review of: Pierre Teilhard de Chardin: His Life and Spirit, by Nicolas Corte. New York: Macmillan, 1960. Catholic Charities Review (Washington, D.C.) ( 1961 ), 20-21.

1953 Radiation from a Cylindrical Cavity of Finite Length, Geophysics, 18 (1953), 685-696. On the Theory ofHead Waves, Geophysics, 18 (1953), 871-893. NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

DAVID B. ALLISON is Professor of Philosophy at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. He is the author of Reading the New Nietzsche and editor of the pathbreaking anthology, The New Nietzsche and, with Babette E. Babich, co-editor of New Nietzsche Studies. Co-author and -editor of numerous books and essays, including, with Mark Roberts, The Disordered Mother: Miinchhausen By Proxy, as well as on Nietzsche, Derrida, de Sade, Schreber, etc., he has also translated several works by Jacques Derrida including Speech and Phenomenon. THOMAS J. J. ALTIZER is Emeritus Professor of Religious Studies at the State University of New York at Stony Brook and is now working on manuscripts on Godhead and the Nothing and the apocalyptic Trinity. Among other books, he is the author of the New Apocalypse ( 1967); History as Apocalypse (1985); Genesis and Apocalypse (1990); The Genesis of God (1993); and The Contemporary Jesus (1997). BABETTE E. BABICH is Professor of Philosophy at Fordham University and Adjunct Research Professor of Philosophy at Georgetown University. She is author of Nietzsche's Philosophy of Science (1994, Italian translation in 1996) and essays on Nietzsche, Heidegger, Holderlin, with interests ranging from epistemology to including postmodem musicology, etc. The founding editor of the journal, New Nietzsche Studies, which she co-edits with David B. Allison, she has also edited From Phenomenology to Thought, Errancy, and Desire ( 1996) and coedited Continental and Postmodern Currents in the Philosophy ofScience ( 1994 ). Recently she compiled and edited Nietzsche, Theories ofKnowledge, Critical Theory and the Sciences (1999) and Nietzsche, Epistemology and the Philosophy ofScience (1999). DOMINIC BALESTRA is Professor of Philosophy and Chair of the Department at Fordham University, New York. His current interests are in rationality in science and religion and his recent publications include "At the Origins of Modem Science: Demythologizing Pythagoreanism" ( 1999) and "Science and Religion" in Philosophy ofReligion: A Guide to the Subject ( 1998). GARRETT BARDEN is Emeritus Professor ofPhilosophy of University College Cork. He was born in Dublin in 1939 and studied there, in Leuven, in Oxford, and in West Australia. He taught Philosophy for twenty seven years at University College Cork and has held Visiting Professorships in several countries including France, Iceland, and Slovakia. His enduring interest is the epistemology of human action. He now lives in Lismore, Co. Waterford, . D. CYRIL BARRETT, S.J., is Tutor in Philosophy in Campion Hall at the University of Oxford. He has taught philosophy in Jesuit houses and in the University of Warwick from which he has retired. He is a member of the International Art Critics Association and an ongoing contributor to art journals. He has also organized or been involved in international art exhibitions. He edited Wittgenstein's lectures on aesthetics and

469 470 SCIENCE, VAN GOGH, AND GOD

religious belief, has authored a book on Wittgenstein on Ethics and Religious Beliefand has just completed a commentary on Wittgenstein's lectures on religious belief. HEIDI BYRNES is Professor of German/Linguistics at Georgetown University. Her research focus within second language acquisition (SLA) is the advanced instructed Ieamer of German, particularly the learners' acquisition of academic literacy, discourse analysis, and cross-cultural discourse. She has most recently edited a volume entitled Learning Second and Foreign Languages: Perspectives in Research and Scholarship ( 1998) which provides an overview of the field of instructed second language learning by adults. She is currently preparing a book on constructing content-based foreign language curricula. W. NORRIS CLARKE, S.J., received his Ph.D. in philosophy from the Catholic University ofLouvain in 1949, taught philosophy at Fordham University in New York, 1955-1985 and is now Professor Emeritus there. He was Co-Founder and Editor-in• Chief of the International Philosophical Quarterly, 1961-85, also former president of the American Catholic Philosophical Association and of the Metaphysical Society of America. He is the author of some 65 articles and 6 books, including Person and Being (1993), Explorations in Metaphysics (1994), and The One and the Many: A Contemporary Thomistic Metaphysics (2001). JOHN CLEARY, Professor of Philosophy at Boston College and senior lecturer in Philosophy as NUl Maynooth, Ireland. He was director of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy from 1984-1988 and is the founding and general editor for the BACAP Proceedings. He has written extensively on ancient philosophy, including one monograph on Aristotle in the Many Senses ofPriority (1988) and a book on Aristotle and Mathematics (1995). He also engages in research on the history and philosophy of mathematics, , and the philosophy of art. RICHARD COBB-STEVENS is Professor and Chair ofthe Department of Philosophy at Boston College. He has published extensively on American Pragmatism and on Husserl's Phenomenology. His most recent book is Husser! et !a Philosophie Analytique ( 1998). JOHN J. COMPTON is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University. He is author of essays on issues in philosophy of science, philosophy of nature, science and society, science and religion, , and the problem of freedom, as well as on several figures in the phenomenological tradition- centrally, Husser!, Sartre, and Merleau-Ponty. His "Some Contributions of Existential Phenomenology to the Philosophy of Natural Science" appears in Lawrence Hass and Dorothea Olkowsky, eds., Rereading Merleau-Ponty (2000) and "The Persistence of Freedom" will appear in the Review ofMetaphysics (2001). ROBERT P. CREASE is Professor of Philosophy at the State University ofNew York at Stony Brook, and historian at Brookhaven National Laboratory. He is interested in issues of philosophy that are illuminated by the history of science, and issues of history that are illuminated by the philosophy of science. His books in philosophy and history of science include The Play ofNature: Experimentation as Performance ( 1993 ), The Second Creation: Makers of the Revolution in 20th Century Physics (1986; 1996), Making Physics: A Biography ofBrookhaven National Laboratory 1946-1972 (1999). He co-wrote Peace and War: Reminiscences of a Life at the Frontiers of Science NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS 471

(1998), and edited Hermeneutics and the Natural Sciences (1997). He teaches ethics courses for scientists, and writes a monthly column on issues of science and society, "Critical Point," for Physics World. STEVEN CROWELL is Professor of Philosophy and Professor of German and Slavic Studies at Rice University. He is author of Husser!, Heidegger, and the Space of Meaning: Paths Toward Transcendental Philosophy (200 1) and numerous articles in the field of aesthetics, philosophy of history, and continental philosophy. He serves on the Board of Directors of the Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology and currently edits the Series in Continental Thought at Ohio University Press. STEVE FULLER is Professor of Sociology at the University of Warwick, UK. Originally trained in the history and philosophy of science (Ph.D., 1985, University of Pittsburgh), he is the founder of the research program of social epistemology. It is the name of a quarterly journal he founded with Taylor & Francis in 1987 as well as the first of his six books: Social Epistemology (1988); Philosophy of Science and Its Discontents (1993); Philosophy, Rhetoric and the End ofKnowledge (1993), Science (1997); The Governance of Science: Ideology and the Future of the Open Society (2000); Thomas Kuhn: A Philosophical History for Our Times (2000); and Knowledge Management Foundations (2001). RAGNAR FJELLAND is Professor of Philosophy of Science at the Center for the Study of the Sciences and the Humanities and Department of Physics, University of Bergen in Norway. He was director of the Center 1993-95 and 1999-2001. He was a member of the National Research Ethics Committee for Natural Science and Technology, 1991-1999. His current interests include the significance of technology for the acquisition of scientific knowledge, philosophical aspects of chaos theory, fractal geometry and complexity, ethical problems raised by modem science and technology, and the challenge of environmental problems to science. He has published six books (in Norwegian) and a number of articles on the philosophy of science, technology, and ethics. His most recent book is Vitenskap - mel/om sikkerhet og usikkerhet [Science - between certainty and uncertainty] 1999. DIMITRI GINEV is Professor of History of Hermeneutics at the University of Sofia, Bulgaria. Among his books are: Grundriss einer kritischen Wissenschaftstheorie (1989); Dialogues on Scientific Rationality (1989); Essays in Hermeneutic Theory of Culture (1995); A Passage To a Hermeneutic Philosophy ofScience (1997), Critique ofEpistemological Reason (2000). JENNIFER HANSEN is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Gettysburg College. Her book, Mad Women and Wise Men: A Philosophical Analysis of Gender and Melancholia, is forthcoming. She has published several articles as well as a translation of Jacques Taminiaux's "The Interpretation of Aristotle's Notion of Arete in Heidegger's First Courses." She is the executive editor of Studies in Practical Philosophy. ROM HARRE is Emeritus Fellow ofLinacre College, Oxford and currently teaches at Georgetown and American Universities in Washington, DC. His most recent publications include One Thousand Years ofPhilosophy (2000), Positioning Theory (1998) with Luk van Langenhove and The Discursive Mind (1996) with Grant Gillett. 472 SCIENCE, VAN GOGH, AND GOD

His current research interests include the nature of experiments and the role of Artificial Intelligence modeling in cognitive psychology. IRMA B. JAFFE is Emeritus Professor of Art History at Fordham University. She was appointed founder and chair of the Department of Art and Music at Fordham University in 1966. On her retirement from the university in 1987, she became Cultural Consultant for the Italian Encyclopaedia Institute. Her publications include books and articles on American and European art ranging from the eighteenth to the twentieth century. In 1996, the Italian government appointed her cavaliere in the Order ofMerit ofthe Italian Republic. At present, she is at work on a book about sixteenth century Italian women poets. ALLAN JANIK is Research Fellow at the University oflnnsbruck's Brenner Archives Research Institute and Adjunct Professor for the Philosophy of Culture at the University of Vienna. He has held a varied range of visiting appointments at Graz, Innsbruck, Bergen, Stockholm, Mexico City and has lectured extensively in Europe. He is also ChiefDramaturg of the Innsbrucker Kellertheater, for which he has adapted Shakespeare's King Lear. He is co-author, with Stephen Toulmin, of Wittgenstein 's Vienna Revisited; with Hans V eigl, Wittgenstein in Vienna; with Monika Seekircher and Jorg Markowitsch, Die Practik der Physik; Kunskapsbegreppet i praktisk filsofi [The Concept of Knowledge in Practical Philosophy]; Style Politics and the Future of Philosophy; Essays on Wittgenstein and Weininger; How Not to Interpret a Culture; Cordelis Tysnad [Cordelia's Silence]; Niirvarons Dimension [The Dimension of Presence: Essays on Wittgenstein). RICHARD KEARNEY is Professor of Philosophy, Boston College. Author of many essays, and edited and co-edited collections, some of his books include Modern Movements in European Philosophy ( 1995), Postnationalist Ireland (1996), The Wake ofImagination: Toward a Postmodern Culture ( 1998), Poetics ofImagining: Modern to Post-Modern (1999). His newest book is entitled, The God Who May Be: The Hermeneutics ofReligion (2001). THEODORE KISIEL is Presidential Research Professor for Philosophy at Northern Illinois University. He is the author of The Genesis ofHeidegger 's Being and Time (1993), co-translator of Werner Marx's Heidegger and the Tradition, translator of Heidegger's History Of The Concept Of Time, and co-editor of Phenomenology and the Natural Sciences (1970) and Reading Heidegger from the Start (1994). His numerous articles on Heidegger, hermeneutic phenomenology, and a hermeneutics of the natural sciences are currently being gathered together into book form. JOSEPH J. KOCKELMANS is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Philosophy AND Fellow Emeritus, Institute for the Arts and Humanistic Studies at Pennsylvania State University. He has published several books on the of both Husser! and Heidegger. He has also published books and articles on the philosophy of science. One of his latest publications is entitled Ideas for a Hermeneutic Phenomenology ofthe Natural Sciences. A second volume of this work, devoted to methodological issues is currently under review for publication. Over the past years, he has become very interested in the philosophy of music, to which he has devoted several articles. JEAN LADRERE is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the Universite Catholique de Louvain, Belgium. He is the author of Les limitations internes des formalismes: etude NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS 473

sur Ia signification du theoreme de Godel et des theoremes apparentes dans Ia theorie des fondements des mathematiques (2000); L 'ethique dans I 'univers de Ia rationalite (1997); Articulation du sens ( 1984 ); L 'Articulation du sens. Les langages de Ia foi (1984). A study of his thought appeared by Jean Fran9ois Malherbe, Le langage theologique a !'age de Ia science: lecture de Jean Ladriere (1985). JOSEPH MARGOLIS is currently Laura H. Carnell Professor of Philosophy at Temple University. His interests are centered on the theory of history and culture, with emphasis on the formation of the self and our understanding of the arts and sciences. His most recent publications include: What, After All, Is a Work ofArt (1999) and the Philosophy ofInterpretation, co-edited with Tom Rockmore (2000). Forthcoming are Selves and Other Texts and The Quarrel Between Invariance and Flux (200 I), co• authored with Jacques Catudal. He is the co-editor, with Tom Rockmore, of a new series in philosophy, "Philosophy and the Historical Tum," to be published by University of California Press. WOLFE MAYS has been editor of The Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology since 1970. He is currently Visiting Professor of Philosophy at Manchester University in the and was formerly Reader in Philosophy at the University of Manchester and has taught at Edinburgh University as well as Northwestern, Purdue, and Wisconsin Universities. He is a founding member of the International Center for Genetic Epistemology at the University of Geneva, where he collaborated with Jean Piaget. He was also an Emeritus Leverhulme Fellow and Director of the EEC funded Intellectual Skills Project. Among his 140 publications are two books on Whitehead, one on Koestler, and two co-authored books (with Piaget and others). He is at the moment working on artificial intelligence as well as Husserl's theory of a pure logical grammar and he is also preparing a book on Piaget. ERNEST G. McCLAIN is Emeritus Professor of Music at Brooklyn University and author of The Myth oflnvariance (1976) and The Pythagorean Plato (1978; 84). GAYE McCOLLUM-NICKLES currently teaches at Sage Ridge School and was formerly an instructor at the University of Nevada, Reno. She is the author of articles in English literature. ROBERT NEVILLE is Dean of the School of Divinity at Boston University. He writes in the fields of philosophy, religion and theology. Before his appointment to the deanship in 1988, Dean Neville was the Director of the Boston University Division of Religious and Theological Studies and chair of the Religion Department. He was Dean of Humanities and Fine Arts at the State University ofNew York at Stony Brook, and has also taught at Yale, Fordham, and SUNY Purchase. An ordained elder in the Missouri East Conference of the United Methodist Church, Dean Neville has pastored in Missouri and 'New York. He is a prolific author of books including Boston ConfUcianism (2000); The Cosmology ofFreedom (1995); Eternity and Time's Flow (1993); The Highroad around Modernism (1992); Behind the Masks of God (1991); The Tao and the Daimon (1982). TOM NICKLES is Professor and Chair of the Philosophy Department, University of Nevada, Reno. He is editor of Scientific Discovery, Logic, and Rationality (1980) and Scientific Discovery: Case Studies ( 1980) and author of many articles in philosophy of science. He is currently editing a volume on Thomas Kuhn. 474 SCIENCE, VAN GOGH, AND GOD

TONY O'CONNOR lectures in Philosophy at University College, Cork, Ireland. Currently, he is president of the British Society for Phenomenology. He has published articles on various aspects of Continental European Philosophy. He is a member of the international editorial advisory board of the Routledge book series, Continental Philosophy. His current research interests lie in the areas of Philosophy and Culture and Political Philosophy. LEO J. O'DONOVAN, S.J., has served as Georgetown University's 47th president since 1989. Professor of Theology at Georgetown and a past president of the Catholic Theological Society of America, Fr. 0 'Donovan is the editor of five books, has written extensively about the work of the Jesuit theologian Karl Rahner, and has published other articles and essays widely. He is a former associate editor of the Journal ofthe American Academy ofReligion. In recent years, in addition to scholarly writing on Ex corde Ecclesiae, Pope John Paul II's Apostolic Constitution on the nature and role of the Catholic university, and other issues in Catholic and Jesuit higher education, Fr. O'Donovan has published numerous art reviews and essays in The Washingtonian, America, and Commonweal. FRAN<;OIS RAFFOUL is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Louisiana State University. He is the author of Heidegger and the Subject (1999) and co-editor, with David Pettigrew, of two collections: Disseminating Lacan (1996) and Heidegger and Practical Philosophy (200 I). WILLIAM J. RICHARDSON, S.J, is Professor of Philosophy at Boston College. He is the author of Heidegger: Through Phenomenology to Thought (Preface by Martin Heidegger) and co-author, with John P. Muller, of Lacan and Language: A Reader's Guide to the Ecrits and The Purloined Poe: Lacan, Derrida and Psychoanalytic Reading. He has written widely in the fields of philosophy and psychoanalysis and at present is preparing a study on the ethics of psychoanalysis. He maintains a private practice of psychoanalysis in Newton, MA. BARBARA SAUNDERS is Research Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Leuven, Belgium. Her research interests are focussed in the anthropology and historiography of color. ROBERT C. SCHARFF is Professor of Philosophy at the University of New Hampshire. His research includes 19th and 20th Century Continental Philosophy (especially Dilthey, Heidegger, and the hermeneutics of science), the history of positivism (especially Comte and Mill and the connection between classical positivism and post-positivist developments in recent analytic philosophy) and the philosophy of technology. In addition to articles on these figures and topics, he is the author of Comte After Positivism (1995) and editor (with Val Dusek) of the Technological Condition: A Philosophy ofTechnology (2001). Current projects include a book How History Matters to Philosophy and a collection (with Kenneth Westphal), Philosophical Understanding: Reflection and Justification in the Continental Tradition. Since 1995, he has been Editor of Continental Philosophy Review (formerly, Man and World). JAY SCHULKIN is a Research Professor of Physiology and Biophysics at Georgetown University School of Medicine. He has published eight books, one of which is entitled, The Pursuit of Inquiry (1982) and the latest of which is entitled, Roots of Social Sensibility and Neural Function (2000). NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS 475

THOMAS SEEBOHM (Dr. Phil., University ofMainz, 1962, venia legendi, 1969) was Professor of Philosophy at the Pennsylvania State University and later of the University ofMainz and is now Emeritus Professor at the University ofMainz. He has published books and articles in journals and chapters in books on Kant, German Idealism, phenomenology, hermeneutics, and philosophy oflogic. JACQUES TAMINIAUX is Adelmann Professor ofPhilosophy at Boston College and former Director of the Center for Phenomenological Studies at Louvain-la-Neuve. He is the author of numerous monographs in French, including La Nostalgie de Ia Grece a l'aube de l'idealisme allemand. Kant et les Grecs dans l'itineraire de Schiller, de Holder/in, et de Hegel (1967); Le regard et l'excedent (1977) and Le theatre des philosophes. La tragedie, l'etre, /'action (1995). In English, his works include Dialectic and Difference: Finitude in Modern Thought (1985); Heidegger and the Project ofFundamental Ontology ( 1991 ); Poetics, Speculation and Judgment (1993 ); and The Thracian Maid and the Professional Thinker: Arendt and Heidegger (1998). STEPHEN TOULMIN is Henry R. Luce Professor at the University of Southern California. Educated in , initially in physics at Cambridge University, he ultimately studied philosophy under Wittgenstein during his last two years, and took up a position as Lecturer in the philosophy of science at Oxford. He is the recipient of a number of academic honors, including the Ehrenkreuz fiir Wissenschafi und Kunst awarded by the Austrian Government and has held chairs at numerous universities, most recently the University of Chicago and Northwestern University. He is the author or co-author of 18 books, including The Uses of Argument (1958), Foresight and Understanding (1961), Wittgenstein 's Vienna (with A. S. Janik), Knowing and Acting (1976), The Return to Cosmology (1982), Cosmopolis: The Hidden Agenda of Modernity (1989). His most recent book is Return to Reason (2001). JOHN ZIMAN is Emeritus Professor of Physics of the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom. He was brought up in New Zealand, studied at Oxford, and lectured at Cambridge, before becoming Professor of Theoretical Physics at Bristol in 1964. His researches on the theory of the electrical and magnetic properties of solid and liquid metals earned his election to the Royal Society in 1967. Voluntary early retirement from Bristol in 1982 was followed by a period as Visiting Professor at Imperial College, London, and from 1986 to 1991 as founding Director of the Science Policy Support Group. Since 1994 he has been the Convenor of the Epistemology Group, which studies the evolution of knowledge and invention. He was Chairman of the Council for Science and Society from 1976 to 1990, and has written extensively on various aspects of the social relations of science and technology. INDEX OF NAMES

Adams, J., 291, 295, 297. Bazerman, C., 414, 422n. Adorno, T., 68. Beaufret, J., 255, 352, 360n. Alberti, L. B., 234-, 306. Becker, A.L., 421n, 422n. Alexander, 175n. Beckett, S., 280. Allison, D., 19. Beckmann, M., 299. Altizer, T. J. J., 338, 402n. Beethoven, L., 266. Altran, S., 216n. Behe, M., 407. Anaximander, 153. Bell, C., 282-. Annas, J., 176n. Bell, J., 57, 64n. Ape!, K. 0., 25. Beller, M. 54, 64n, 68, 77n. Aquinas, St. Thomas, 35, 389, 392n, Benjamin, W., 306-. 403, 424-, 446. Bergson, H., 391n, 392n. Archimedes, 58, 443. Berkeley, G., 103. Archytas, 435. Bernard, C., 27. Arendt, H., 231, 251-. Bernouilli, J., 103. Aristarchus, 163. Bernstein, R., 329, 333n. Aristotle, 22, 35, 61, 71, 99, 142, 147, Betti, E., 138, 140, 152n. 154, 158, 161n, 163-, 196, 232, 253, Biemel, W., 278n. 280, 305-, 344, 346, 379, 380, 382, Billig, M., 216n. 403,405,424,439n,443-. Birkhoff, G., 37, 447. Arnheim, R., 39. Birt, T., 138. Aronowitz, S., 77n. Boatner, M., 298. Arp, J., 299. Bogden, R. J., 321n, 322n. Atlan, H., 78n. Boden, M.A., 321n. Augustine, St., 213,427. Boeckh, P. A., 138, 141, 143-144, 152n, Austin, J.L., 317, 32ln, 392n. 154. Ayer, A.J., 125n. Boehme, J., 354. Bohm, D., 27. Babich, B., 15n, 17n, 20, 77n, 154, Bohr, N., 6, 27, 29,31-,53-,447. 161n,231,278n,443,457,446. Boltzmann, L., 95n. Bach, J.S., 311. Bonaventure, St., 427. Bacon, F., 180, 182. Boscovich, R., 102. Back, A., 176n. Bourdieu, P., 421n. Bakhtin, M., 411-. Boyle, R., 220. Balestra, D., 337. Brahe, T., 97. Baltas, A. , K. Gavroglu, & V. Kindi, Braque, G., 280, 285, 303. 10, 17n. Brancusi, C., 300, 302-303. Barbour, 1., 382-3. Brann, E., 428n. Barbour, J., 295. Bremer, J., 440n. Barden, G., 337, 391n, 392n. Brentano, F., 321n, 385. Baron-Cohen, S., 216n, 321n. Broglie, L. de, 54. Barnes, J., 164, 176n. Brouwer, L. W., 174, 177. Barrett, C., 232, 389, 390, 390n, 391n, Bruno, G., 354. 392n. Bowie, M., 348n, 349n. Baudrillard, J., 78n. Brunelleschi, 233-. Baxandall, M., 306, 312n. Bryson, N.,164, 241, 247, 249n.

477 478 INDEX OF NAMES

Buber, M., 386n. Copernicus, N., 340. Buchdahl, G., 18n. Copley, J.S., 293. Bunge, M., 53. Cornford, F.M., 61, 65n. Buridan, 58. Costal, A., 312n. Burtt, Sir C., 224. Cotter, H., 304n. Burrt, E., 65n. Cousin, V., 282. Butterfield, H., 15n. Crease, R., 19-20, 40n, 4ln, 44, 52n, 73, Bynum, T.W., 313n. 186n, 448. Byrnes, H., ix, 338. Croce, B., 283. Crombie, A. C., 15n. Calion, M., J. Law, & A. Rip, 217n. Crowe, F. E., 388n. Campbell, D. T., 375n. Crowell, S., 231. Capra, F., 404. Curtius, E. R., 139, 152n. Caputo, J., 351, 359n, 360n. Cziko, G., 374n, 375n. Camap, R., 21, 84, 127, 129, 136n. Cartwright, N., 313n. Dalton, F., 198. Casey, E., 329., 333n. Damasio, A., 202n, 32ln, 322n. Cassirer, E., 93n, 94n, 128. Damisch, H., 237, 238n. Castell, M., 312n. Dante, 400-402. Cavell, M., 349n. Danto, A., 242-243, 246, 249n, 265, Caws, P., 68. 273. Celan, P., 273. Darwin, C., 98, 182, 361-, 404-409. Celsus, 13 7. David, J. L., 288. Cezanne, P., 85, 267, 280, 282, 285, Davidson, D., 70, 73, 323. 394-395. Dawkins, M. S., 202n. Chamberlain, T. C., 376n. Dawkins, R., 375n, 407. Chardin, T. de, 383. Dear, P., 8, 15-16n. Chase, J., 297. Decety, J., 322n. Chaucer, 415. Decety, J., M. Perani, M. Jeannarod, Chomsky, N., 405. 322n. Chopra, D., 404. Deleuze, G., 78n. Christo, 266. Dembski, W., 407. Churchland, P., & P. Churchland, 321n. Democritus, 99, 100, 110,407. Clark, A., 317-318, 32ln, 322n. Dennett, D. C., 216n, 32ln, 374n, 375n, Clark, Sir K., 282, 286n. 376n. Clark, S., 103. Denis, M., 282, 286n. Clarke, W. N., 338. DeQuincey, 282. Cleary, J., 22, 175n. Derain, A., 280. Clement of Alexandria, 356. Derrida, J., 68, 267, 272. Clifford, W. K., 364-365, 374n. Descartes, R., 54, 57, 77, 78n, 100, 103, Cobb-Stevens, R., 21. 156-, 174, 196, 203-206, 249n, 253, Cohen, H., 128. 326,341-, 348n,362,379,447,449. Cohen, H. F., 15n. Dewey, J., 184-185, 196,315-,323-. Cohen, R. S., 94n. Diaghilev, S., 280. Cohen, R. S., & T. Schnelle, 5-. Dickinson, J., 293. Coles, A., 313n. Dilthey, W., 4, 14n, 25, 79, 91, 126n, Collingwood, R. G., 95n, 153, 161n, 138-139, 154, 178, 348n. 385, 390n. Dorment, R., 304n. Compton, J. J., 22, 202n. Domseiff, F., 136n. Comte, A., 21, 117-. Dostoevsky, F., 353. Conant, J. B., 10. Dowling, J., 386, 391n. Constant, B., 281. Drake, S., 65n. INDEX OF NAMES 479

Dretske, F., 322n. Fry, R., 282, 286n. Dreyfus, H., 190, 194n. Fuller, S., 9, 16-17n, 215n, 338. Drury, M., 91, 95n. Funkenstein, A., 362, 373, 373, 371n. Duchamp, M., 280, 283, 285-286. Fuykuyama, D., 15n. Durer, A., 270, 306. Dufrenne, M., 284, 360n. Gaugin, P., 269, 278n, 282. Duhem, P., 15n, 73, 87, 184, 186n, 337, Gauzi, F., 278n. 375-377, 380, 380n. Gadamer, H.-G., 16n, 19, 25-, 45, 79, 95n, 126n, 138, 140-141, 154, 178, Eckhart, [Meister], 348, 356-357, 360n, 277n, 316, 321n,360n,443,446. 396. Ga1ilei, V., 436, 440n. Edgerton, S. Y., 238n. Ga1ileo, G., xx, 44, 54, 57, 59, 100, Einstein, A., 27, 29, 33, 54-, 70, 76, 97, 155-, 163, 182, 198, 334, 362, 377-, 109, 184. 444,453. Einstein, A., & B. Podolsky, N. Rosen, Gallagher, M.P., 39ln. 55-. Gallup, D., 312n. Elster, J., 215n. Garcia, R., 178-. Epicurus, 407, 457. Gauss, 108, 109. Etzioni, A., 215n. Geertz, C., 216n, 410, 421n. Euclid, 26, 29, 157-158, 168,443. Giacometti, A., 277n Eudoxus, 164, 169-170. Gibson, J. J., 202n, 237, 238n, 317, Euler, L., 103. 321n, 322n, 408. Gierre, R., 60, 65n. Fann, K. T., 91, 93n, 95n. Giere, R., & A. Richardson, 15n. Faraday, M., 83, 220. Ginev, D., 20, 52n. Favrholdt, D., 65n. Ginev, D., & R. Cohen, 52n. Feuer, L., 225-226, 229n. Gingrich, 0., 453. Feyerabend, P., 20, 130, 365, 374n, 380, Giotto,235,287-,399,401. 403. Givan, T., 422n. Fichte, G., 139. GOdel, K., 73. Ficker, L. von, 88. Goldhill, S., 312n. Findlay, J. N., 147. Goldstein, S., 64. Fink, B., 347, 348n, 349n, 350n. Golinski, J., 15n. Fink, E., 188, 360n. Gombrich, E., 240-. Finn, G., 78. Gooding, D. G., 228n. Fish, S., 68. Goodman, N., 242. Fjelland, R., 6, 20, 77n. Goodman, R. B., 125n. Flacius, 137. Gordon, C., 429, Flanagan, 0., 202n. Granier, J., 78n. Fleck, L., 2-, 73. Green, J., 312n. Fleming, S., 182. Gregory of Nyssa, 356, 358. Flexner, J. T., 298. Grene, M., 202n. Foucault, M., 22, 187-. Grice, H. P., 321n. Francesca, P. della, 280. Grigg, R., 349n. Franklin, B., 293. Oris, J., 280. Frayn, M., 31, 40n. Grondin, J., 152n. Freeland, C., 313n. Gross, P., & N. Levitt, 53, 69, 217n. Freeman, W. J., 202n. Gruber, H., & J. Voneche, 186n. Frege, G., 2, 87-88, 94n, 174-175, 176n. Griinbaum, A., 403. Freud, S., 86, 333, 339-. Grunewald, H., 299. Friedman, M., 15n, 18n, 136n, 312n. Frith, C. D., & U. Frith, 216n. 480 INDEX OF NAMES

Haas, F. A. J. de, 176n. Hertz, H., 20-21, 79-,97-. Habennas, J., 26, 405. Hesiod, 71. Habgood, J., 216n. Hilbert, D., 89, 448. Hackennan, N., & K. Ashworth, 78n. Hillesum, E., 357, 360n. Hacking, I., 7, 16n, 75, 78n, 366-337, Hirsch, Jr., B.D., 152n. 375n. Hobbes, T., 155. Hadot, P., 312n, 416-417, 422n, 456. Holderlin, F., 352. Hagen, J., 294. Hofstadter, A., 132. Haldane, J. S., 27. Hollinger, D.A., 374n. Halliday, M.A. K., 411-. Holquist, M., 411-. Halliday, M. A. K., & J. Martin, 414, Holton, G., 27, 53, 229n. 42ln, 422n. Honecker, M., 360n. Haller, R., 125n. Hopkins, G. M., 419. Hamilton, K., 94n. Hopkins, S., 297, 298n. Hamsun, K., 269. Hook, R., 103. Hancock, J., 294. Horgan, J., 77n. Hansen, H. P. E., 59. Hoyle, F., 379. Hanson, N. R., 3, 316, 321n. Hume, D., 174, 324, 374, 450. Harding, S., 126n. Husser!, E., 2-, 22, 33, 58-59, 61-63, Harre, R., 6, 15n, 23, 216n, 228n. 68, 126n, 128, 141, 146-147, 152n, Hart, R., 78n. 155-, 178-, 186n, 187-, 196-, 241, Hartshorne, C. & P. Weiss, 323, 333n. 251-, 283-284, 303n, 321n, 324-, Harwood, J., 17n. 444-. Hasan, R., 421n, 422n. Hussey, E., 176n. Hayek, F. von, 405. Huygens, C., 101, 379. Hayles, N. K., 71. Huyssteen, J. W. van, 380n. Hawking, S., 15n, 69,408,456. Hazlitt, W., 239. Idelson, A. Z., 440n. Heath, T. L., 175n. Ignatius of Loyola, St., 416-, 456-457. Hegel, G. W. F., 139, 196, 261, 379. Ihde, D., 71, 126n. Heelan, P. A., xi, 1-, 25-, 31-, 95n, Illich, 1., 312n, 313n. 117, 160, 161n, 198, 202n, 204-206, Indiana, R., 300. 215, 215n, 216n, 217n, 218, 233-, Ingarden, R., 284. 231-232,239-,305-,315-,323-,338, Inhelder, B., & J. Piaget, 186n. 339,383,380n,381,384n,385,387n, lonesco, E., 280. 403-,422n,421-,447-. lrigaray, L., 77n. Heelan, P. A., & J. Schulkin, 40n, 41n, 43-, 64n, 73, 124n, 184, 186n, 216n, J!ihnig, D., 277n. 278n, 316, 321n, 328, 333n, 334n, Jaffe, I. B., 231-232,298,448. 422n, 427-. James, W., 159, 161n, 181, 184, 315-, Heidegger, M., 7, 21-22,33,47-,61-62, 323-, 337, 361-. 73-74, 78n, 79,89,95n, 119,122-124, Jammer, M., 101, 103, 109. 126n, 127-, 138-141, 143, 152n, 178, Janik, A., 20, 95n, 443. 187-, 231, 251-, 265-, 321n, 324-, Janik, A., & C. P. Berger, 94n. 351-, 421n, 444-. Janik, A., & S. Toulmin, 93n. Heinich, N., 451. Jardine, N., 16-17n. Heisenberg, W., xi-, 2-, 26, 29, 31-, Jasanoff, S., G. E. Markle, J.C.Petersen, 53-54, 76, 278n, 447-. & T. J. Pinch, 215n. Helmholtz, H. von, 97, 99, 103-104, Jaspers, K., 316, 321n. 108. Jeannerod, M., 322n. Heraclitus, 255, 257-258, 340-341, Jefferson, T., 295, 295. 343n, 346-347, 352. Jerome, St., 350, 354n. INDEX OF NAMES 481

Joas, H., 206-. Lakoff, M., & G. Johnson, 321n, 322n, Johansen, T., 308, 313n. 422n. John, St., 351. Lakatos, 1., 174, 378-. John Paul II, Pope, 403-,417, 422n. Lamarck, 364. Johns, J., 300-. Lambert, J.H., 26. Johnson, M., 321n, 322n. Langer, S., 388, 392n. Johnson, P., 407. Lask, E., 127-128. Johnson-Laird, P., 216n. Latour, B., 7, 73,407. Jordan, M., 317. Latour, B., & S. Woolgar, 229n. Joyce, J., 280. Latrobe, B., 294. Laudan, L., 5, 13, 15n, 126n, 376. Kaufmann, S. A., 217n. Lavoisier, J., 198. Kant, I., 17n, 25-26, 29, 36, 76, 84, 94n, Lear, J., 174, 176n. 98, 109, 111-112, 127, 155, 177, 252, Lee, J. S., 348n. 281, 306, 309, 324, 328, 360n, 382, Leibniz, G., 102. 446. Lemke, J. L., 422n. Kantorovich, A., 216n. Leupin, A., 349n. Kearney; R., 337, 360n. Levarie, S., 440n. Keill, J., 103. Levi-Strauss, C., 339-. Kelly, E., 231, 299-. Levinas, E., 354-, 390n. Kelvin, W. T., 104, 110. Levitt, N., 63, 65n. Kepler, J., 97, 99, 100, 101, 114, 163, Lewontin, R. C., 18n, 371n. 182, 220, 334, 377. Lichtenberg, G.C., 92. Kerszberg, P., 18n. Locke, J., 174. Kierkegaard, S., 27, 92, 353. Lonergan, B. J. F., 35, 40n, 390n, 392n, Kirchoff, 99-100, 103, 107, 110. 403,446-. Kisiel, T., 21, 132, 136n, 446. Lovejoy, A. 0., 125n. Kitcher, P., 52n. Lucian, 358. Klee, P., 273, 277n, 278n. Lucretius, 407. Klein, Y., 280. Luhmann, N., 217n. Klingsbigl, W., 93n. Liineberg, R., xiii. Knorr, W. R., 175n. Lyotard, J.-F., 71. Knorr-Cetina, K., 229n. Kockelmans, J., 21, 124n, 446. Mach, E., 11, 13, 73, 80, 82, 84, 88, Kolakowski, L., 94n, 391n. 93n, 94n, 103. Kooslyn, S. M., 322n. Macintyre, A., 16, 70, 77n. Komblith, H., 322n. MacQuarrie, J., & E. Robinson, 132- Kosuth, J., 286. 133. Koyre, A., 58, 65n, 334, 444. Madison, J., 291-293. Koza, J., 376n. Mahoney, M., 161n. Krause, K., 92. Malcolm, N., 95n. Krieger, D. J., 215n. Malevich, K., 266,280-282,285. Kristeva, J., 354n. Mandelbrot, B., 62, 65n. Kuhn, T., 5-, 22, 33, 47, 70, 130, 178- Mannetti, A., 234. 179, 365-367, 370, 374n, 378, 385, Mannheim, K., 17n. 403. Margolis, J., 231, 249n, 278. Matisse, 282, 285, 302. LaBerge, D., 202n. Marat, 288. Lacan, J., 337, 339-. Marcel, G., 390n, 391n. Lachterman, D., 156, 161n, 175n. Markus, G., 52n. Ladriere, J., 19, 446. Marr, D., 446. 482 INDEX OF NAMES

Martin, A., 300-301, 304n. Newton, 1., 25-26, 29, 81, 84, 97, 99- Martin, A., 322n. 102, 104, 108, 109-111, 114-115, 163, Marx, K., 405. 180, 182, 220, 362, 377, 379, 407, Maximus the Confessor, 356. 415,449, 454. Maxwell, J. C., 83, 97, 103. Newton-Smith, W., 380, 384n. Maupertuis, 103. Nickles, T., 374n, 375n. Mays, W., 22. Nickles, T., & G. McCollum-Nickles, McClain, E., 338, 439n, 440n. 337. McCleod, F. G., 422n. Nicola, L., 292. McGuiness, B., 93n, 94n. Nicolas, A.T. de 440n. McMullin, E., 4, 382, 384n. Nietzsche, F., 7, 10, 13, 17n, 69, 73, Mead, G. H., 206-, 316, 32ln, 323-. 78n, 185, 256, 258, 271-273, 312n, Merleau-Ponty, M., 22, 33, 39-40, 187-, 406. 197, 231, 244, 249n, 251-, 283, 309, Nijinsky, R., 280. 315-,331,349n,39ln,446,448. Noack, A., 346. Mermin, D., 64n. Nobus D., 349n. Merton, R., 15n, 216n. Nozick, R., 405. Michelangelo, 282. Nussbaum, M., 309n, 407. Mignucci, M., 176n. Mill, J. S., 119, 374n. O'Connor, T., 22. Miller, C. R., 422n. O'Donovan, L. J., 232. Miller, J.P., 16ln. Oppenheimer, J. H., 222. Millikan, R., 215n, 224. Oreseme, N., 58. Minsky, M., 202n. Origen, 356. Mitchell, W. J. T., 242-242, 246-247, Ostwald, W., 84. 249n. Modrak, D., 176n. Pais, A., 64n, 65n. Moghaddam, F. H., 229n. Paley, W., 371. Moloney, R., 392n. Pannenberg, W., 383. Mondrian, P., 280, 282, 285, 300, 303. Panofsky, E., 237, 238n. Monk, R., 93n, 94n. Pareto, 226, 229n. Monod, J., 382. Parmenides, 175n, 330. Monroe, K. R., 216n. Pascal, B., 363-364, 385, 39ln. Monroe, J., 295, 293. Passmore, J., 94n. Morin, E., 78n. Paul, St., 351-. Moukanos, D. D., 175n. Peacocke, A., 383. Muller, M., 360n. Peirce, C. S., 82, 94n, 313-, 323-, 366. Muller, J.P., & W. J. Richardson, 348n. Perett, D., & N.J. Emery, 322n. Murdoch, D., 64. Pevsner, N., 285. Murphy, N., 384n. , 396, 428, 438. Murphy, J.P., 125n. Piaget, J., 177-. Piatelli-Palmarini, M., 186n. Nagel, T., 373n, 374n. Picasso, P., 280, 282, 285, 303. Natorp, P., 128, 136n. Pichler, A., 95n. Nelkin, D., 68, 77n. Pickering, A., 125n, 136n. Netz, R., 176n. Pinker, S., 321n. Neumann, J. von, 31-,447. Pippin, R., 18n. Neurath, 0., 87, 129, 136n. Planck, M., 54. Neville, R. C., 232, 333n, 334n. Plato, 154, 164,271-273,307, 305,309, Newman, J. H., 391n. 330,375n,381,421,427-,443-. INDEX OF NAMES 483

Plotkin, H. C., 216n. Rousseau, J.-J., 182, 288, 291. Plutarch, 438, 440n. Ruse, M., 375n. Poggeler, 0., 273, 277n. Ruskin, J., 231,239-. Poincare, H., 111. Russell, B., 29, 88, 94n, 145, 174, 181, Polanyi, M., 181-182, 186n, 221, 225, 183, 185, 186n. 228n, 365. Polkinghome, J., 383. Sacks, 0., 216n. Pollock, J., 266, 281. Sagan, C., 15n. Popper, K., 5, 131, 136n, 240, 315, Santayana, G., 185. 321n, 337, 378-. Sartre, J.-P., 259. Portman, A., 202n. Saunders, B., 11-12, 232. Premack, D., 321n. Saussure, F. de, 242, 341, 413. Prigogine, 1., 53. Schafer, L., 10. Prigogine, 1., & I. Stengers, 407. Schafer, L., & T, Schnelle, 17n. Principe, L., 12, 15n. Schaffer, S., 15n, 17n. Proctor, R., 41 On. Schama, S., 303, 304n. Protagoras, 171. Schapere, D., 46, 52n. Proust, M., 280. Schapiro, M., 231, 265-272, 277n, Ptolemy, 437, 453. 278n. Pseudo-Alexander, 167-. Scharff, R., 21, 125n, 126n. Pynchon, T., 71. Scheler, M., 333n. Putnam, H., 37, 125, 126n, 198, 202n. Schleiermacher, F., 138-139, 141, 152n. Puttfarken, T., 277. Schlick, M., 89. Schmid, H., 278n. Quine, W.V.O., 73, 87, 323, 380. Schoenberg, A., 279. Schofe1d, M., 175n. Rabelais, F., 411. Schopenhauer, A., 407. Rahner, H., 358, 355n. Schrodinger, E., 26-27, 31-, 55, 445, Rauschenberg, R., 300. 448,450. Ree, J., 410n. Schulkin, J., 232, 321n. Reichenbach, H., 118-. Schutz, A., 321n, 333n. Reinhardt, A., 300. Sdzui, R., 152n. Rhees, R., 385-. Searle, J., 221n, 321n, 322n. Rembrandt, 393-394, 399-400. Seebolun, T., 21, 152n. Richardson, A., 136n, 289. Seigfried, C. H., 125. Richardson, J., 293. Seinfeld, J., 68. Richardson, W. J., 337, 350n, 446. Sellars, W., 316, 317n. Rickert, H., 128. Serres, M., 407. Ricoeur, P., 157, 161n, 357, 446. Seurat, G., 280, 282, 285. Riemann, 158-159,449-. Sextus Empiricus, 152n. Riemenschneider, 306. Silverman, A., 313n. Rizzolatti, G., & M. A. Arbib, 322n. Silverman, H., 446. Robbins, B., & A. Ross, 77n. Singer, P., 406- Robespierre, 288. Sklar, L., 4. Rolls, E. T., & A. Treves, 322n. Shakespeare, W., 77, 94n. Rorty, R., 43, 125n, 126n, 323, 374n. Shapin, S., 11, 15n. Rosen, S., 161n. Shepard, R., 318. Rosenberg, C. F., 77n. Shepard R., & L. A. Cooper, 322n. Ross, A., 6. Sherif, M., 228n. Rouault, G., 280. Signac, 280. Rouse, J., 124, 126n, 180-181, 186n, Simmel, G., 216n, 217n. 370n. Singer, P., 404-. 484 INDEX OF NAMES

Singer, W., 216n. Vico, G. B., 155. Slobin, D. I., 414, 422n. Vieta, S., 155-. Smith, A., 405. Vlaminck, M. de, 280. Snow, C. P., 53. Voltaire, F.M., 407. Snyder, J., 312n. Vygotsky, L., 422n. Socrates, 307. Sokal, A., 6, 53, 67-. Sophocles, 273. Waldman, D., 304n. Sorabji, R., 313n. Walker, B., 297. Sprague, R., 313n. Warren, J., 293-294. Spencer, H., 361-. Washington, Gen. G., 292-292. Spengler, 92. Weber, M., 405-406. Spinoza, B., 362, 397. Weizsiicker, C. F. von, 14n. Stambaugh, J., 132. Weinberg, S., 6, 68, 77n, 78n. Statman, D., 374n. Weininger, 0., 92. Stevens, W., 239, 249n, 250n. Weissman, D., 333n. Stein, G., 283. Wellmer, A., 25. Steiner, G., 392n. Wernham, W., 373n. Stoss, V., 306. West, B., 288-. Stravinsky, I., 280. Wheeler, H., 440n. Stuhr, J. J., 125n. Wheeler, J. A., 35. Sweeney, J. J., 286, 286n. White, J., 238n. Swift, J., 68. White, M., 125n. Swinburne, R., 383. Whitehead, A. N., 196, 322n, 332, 383, Synge, J., I, 445. 403. Syrianus, 175n, 176n. Wians, W., 164, 175n. Wigner, E., xi, 31-,445,447. Taminiaux, J., 231. Wilczek, F., 32, 40n. Tarski, A., 181. Wilde, 0., 425. Taubes, J., 267. Wilkes, K. V., 313n. Tauler, J., 348. Williams, B., 374n Taylor, C., 70, 126n, 405. Willis, E., 68, 78n. Thales, 153. Wilson, E. 0., 378, 384n. Theodote, 307. Windelband, W., 128. Thornton, W., 294. Wittgenstein, L., 8, 20-21, 29, 59, 79, Tolstoi, L., 92. 83-, 125n,284,286n,311,32ln,385, Toulmin, S., 16n, 19, 94n, 130, 378, 386n, 388n. 443. Woolf, V., 280. Trakl, G., 278n, 356. Wright, F. L., 303. Trumbull, J., 231, 287-. Wright, S., 369. Turing, A., 73. Wright, G. H. von, 93n. Turner, F., 239. Xenocrates, 439n. Uexkuell, J. von, 408. Xenophon, 307.

Valery, P., 231,252-254. Youngerman, J., 300. Van Gogh, V., 39, 231, 233-, 247-, 258, 265-, 280, 282, 318, 338, XX 350, Zajicek, G., 18n. 393-,446-,448,450-. Ziman, J., 6, 15n, 23, 215n, 217n. Van Gogh, T., 451. Zimmerman, J., 95n. Varela, F., & E. Thompson, & E. Rosch, 202n, 322n. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

Editor: RobertS. Cohen, Boston University

1. M.W. Wartofsky (ed.): Proceedings of the Boston Colloquium for the Philosophy of Science, 196111962. [Synthese Library 6]1963 ISBN 90-277-0021-4 2. R.S. Cohen and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Proceedings of the Boston Colloquium for the Philo• sophy of Science, 1962/1964. In Honor of P. Frank. [Synthese Library 10] 1965 ISBN 90-277-9004-0 3. R.S. Cohen and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Proceedings of the Boston Colloquium for the Philo• sophy of Science, 1964/1966. In Memory of Norwood Russell Hanson. [Synthese Library 14] 1967 ISBN 90-277-0013-3 4. R.S. Cohen and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Proceedings of the Boston Colloquium for the Philo- sophy of Science, 196611968. [Synthese Library 18] 1969 ISBN 90-277-0014-1 5. R.S. Cohen and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Proceedings of the Boston Colloquium for the Philo- sophy of Science, 196611968. [SyntheseLibrary 19]1969 ISBN90-277-0015-X 6. R.S. Cohen and R.J. Seeger (eds.): Ernst Mach, Physicist and Philosopher. [Synthese Library 27]1970 ISBN 90-277-0016-8 7. M. Capek: Bergson and Modem Physics. A Reinterpretation and Re-evaluation. [Synthese Library 37] 1971 ISBN 90-277-0186-5 8. R.C. Buck and R.S. Cohen (eds.): PSA 1970. Proceedings of the 2nd Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy and Science Association (Boston, Fall 1970). In Memory of Rudolf Camap. [Synthese Library 39]1971 ISBN 90-277-0187-3; Pb 90-277-0309-4 9. A.A. Zinov'ev: Foundations of the Logical Theory of Scientific Knowledge (Complex Logic). Translated from Russian. Revised and enlarged English Edition, with an Appendix by G.A. Srnimov, E.A. Sidorenko, A.M. Fedina and L.A. Bobrova. [Synthese Library 46]1973 ISBN 90-277-0193-8; Pb 90-277-0324-8 10. L. Tondl: Scientific Procedures. A Contribution Concerning the Methodological Problems of Scientific Concepts and Scientific Explanation. Translated from Czech. [Synthese Library 47] 1973 ISBN 90-277-0147-4; Pb 90-277-0323-X 11. R.J. Seeger and R.S. Cohen (eds.): Philosophical Foundations of Science. Proceedings of Section L, 1969, American Association for the Advancement of Science. [Synthese Library 58] 1974 ISBN 90-277-0390-6; Pb 90-277-0376-0 12. A. Griinbaum: Philosophical Problems ofSpace and Times. 2nd enlarged ed. [Synthese Library 55]1973 ISBN 90-277-0357-4; Pb 90-277-0358-2 13. R.S. Cohen and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Logical and Epistemological Studies in Contemporary Physics. Proceedings of the Boston Colloquium for the Philosophy of Science, 1969/72, Part I. [Synthese Library 59]1974 ISBN 90-277-0391-4; Pb 90-277-0377-9 14. R.S. Cohen and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Methodological and Historical Essays in the Natural and Social Sciences. Proceedings of the Boston Colloquium for the Philosophy of Science, 1969/72, Part II. [Synthese Library 60] 1974 ISBN 90-277-0392-2; Pb 90-277-0378-7 15. R.S. Cohen, J.J. Stachel and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): For Dirk Struik. Scientific, Historical and Political Essays in Honor of Dirk J. Stroik. [Synthese Library 61] 1974 ISBN 90-277-0393-0; Pb 90-277-0379-5 16. N. Geschwind: Selected Papers on Language and the Brains. [Synthese Library 68]1974 ISBN 90-277-0262-4; Pb 90-277-0263-2 17. B.G. Kuznetsov: Reason and Being. Translated from Russian. Edited by C.R. Fawcett and R.S. Cohen. 1987 ISBN 90-277-2181-5 Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

18. P. Mittelstaedt: Philosophical Problems of Modern Physics. Translated from the revised 4th German edition by W. Riemer and edited by R.S. Cohen. [Synthese Library 95] 1976 ISBN 90-277-0285-3; Pb 90-277-0506-2 19. H. Mehlberg: Time, Causality, and the Quantum Theory. Studies in the Philosophy of Science. Vol. I: Essay on the Causal Theory of Time. Vol. II: Time in a Quantized Universe. Translated from French. Edited by R.S. Cohen. 1980 Vol. 1: ISBN 90-277-0721-9; Pb 90-277-1074-0 Vol. II: ISBN 90-277-1 075-9; Pb 90-277-1076-7 20. K.F. Schaffner and R.S. Cohen (eds.): PSA 1972. Proceedings of the 3rd Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association (Lansing, Michigan, Fall 1972). [Synthese Library 64] 1974 ISBN 90-277-0408-2; Pb 90-277-0409-0 21. R.S. Cohen and J.J. Stachel (eds.): Selected Papers ofLeon Rosenfeld. [Synthese Library 100] I 979 ISBN 90-277-0651-4; Pb 90-277-0652-2 22. M. Capek (ed.): The Concepts of Space and Time. Their Structure and Their Development. [Synthese Library 74] 1976 ISBN 90-277-0355-8; Pb 90-277-0375-2 23. M. Grene: The Understanding of Nature. Essays in the Philosophy of Biology. [Synthese Library 66] 1974 ISBN 90-277-0462-7; Pb 90-277-0463-5 24. D. Thde: Technics and Praxis. A Philosophy of Technology. [Synthese Library 130] 1979 ISBN 90-277-0953-X; Pb 90-277-0954-8 25. J. Hintikka and U. Remes: The Method of Analysis. Its Geometrical Origin and Its General Significance. [Synthese Library 75] 1974 ISBN 90-277-0532-1; Pb 90-277-0543-7 26. J.E. Murdoch and E.D. Sylla (cds.): The Cultural Context of Medieval Learning. Proceedings of the First International Colloquium on Philosophy, Science, and Theology in the Middle Ages, 1973. [Synthese Library 76] 1975 ISBN 90-277-0560-7; Pb 90-277-0587-9 27. M. Grene and E. Mendelsohn (eds.): Topics in the Philosophy of Biology. [Synthese Library 84] 1976 ISBN 90-277-0595-X; Pb 90-277-0596-8 28. J. Agassi: Science in Flux. [Synthese Library 80] 1975 ISBN 90-277-0584-4; Pb 90-277-0612-3 29. J.J. Wiatr (ed.): Polish Essays in the Methodology of the Social Sciences. [Synthese Library 131] 1979 ISBN 90-277-0723-5; Pb 90-277-0956-4 30. P. Janich: Protophysics ofTime. Constructive Foundation and History of Time Measurement. Translated from German. 1985 ISBN 90-277-0724-3 31. R.S. Cohen and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Language, Logic, and Method. 1983 ISBN 90-277-0725-1 32. R.S. Cohen, C.A. Hooker, A.C. Michalos and J.W. van Evra (eds.): PSA 1974. Proceedings of the 4th Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association. [Synthese Library 101] 1976 ISBN 90-277-0647-6; Pb 90-277-0648-4 33. G. Holton and W.A. Blanpied (eds.): Science and Its Public. The Changing Relationship. [Synthese Library 96] 1976 ISBN 90-277-0657-3; Pb 90-277-0658-1 34. M.D. Grmek, R.S. Cohen and G. Cimino (eds.): On Scientific Discovery. The 1977 Brice Lectures. 1981 ISBN 90-277-1122-4; Pb 90-277-1123-2 35. S. Amsterdamski: Between Experience and Metaphysics. Philosophical Problems of the Evol• ution of Science. Translated from Polish. [Synthese Library 77] 1975 ISBN 90-277-0568-2; Pb 90-277-0580-1 36. M. Markovic and G. Petrovic (eds.): Praxis. Yugoslav Essays in the Philosophy and Method• ology of the Social Sciences. [Synthese Library 134] 1979 ISBN 90-277-0727-8; Pb 90-277-0968-8 Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

37. H. von Helmholtz: Epistemological Writings. The Paul Hertz I Moritz Schlick Centenary Edition of 1921. Translated from German by M.F. Lowe. Edited with an Introduction and Bibliography by R.S. Cohen andY. Elkana. [Synthese Library 79] 1977 ISBN 90-277-0290-X; Pb 90-277-0582-8 38. R.M. Martin: Pragmatics, Truth and Language. 1979 ISBN 90-277-0992-0; Pb 90-277-0993-9 39. R.S. Cohen, P.K. Feyerabend and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Essays in Memory ofImre Lakatos. [Synthese Library 99] 1976 ISBN 90-277-0654-9; Pb 90-277-0655-7 40. Not published. 41. Not published. 42. H.R. Maturana and F.J. Varela: Autopoiesis and Cognition. The Realization of the Living. With a Preface to "Autopoiesis' by S. Beer. 1980 ISBN 90-277-1015-5; Pb 90-277-1016-3 43. A. Kasher (ed.): Language in Focus: Foundations, Methods and Systems. Essays in Memory of Yehoshua Bar-Hillel. [Synthese Library 89] 1976 ISBN 90-277-0644-1; Pb 90-277-0645-X 44. T.D. Thao: Investigations into the Origin ofLanguage and Consciousness. 1984 ISBN 90-277-0827-4 45. F.G.-I. Nagasaka (ed.): Japanese Studies in the Philosophy of Science. 1997 ISBN 0-7923-4781-1 46. P.L. Kapitza: Experiment, Theory, Practice. Articles and Addresses. Edited by R.S. Cohen. 1980 ISBN 90-277-1061-9; Pb 90-277-1062-7 47. M.L. Dalla Chiara (ed.): Italian Studies in the Philosophy of Science. 1981 ISBN 90-277-0735-9; Pb 90-277-1073-2 48. M.W. Wartofsky: Models. Representation and the Scientific Understanding. [Synthese Library 129] 1979 ISBN 90-277-0736-7; Pb 90-277-0947-5 49. T.D. Thao: Phenomenology and Dialectical Materialism. Edited by R.S. Cohen. 1986 ISBN 90-277-0737-5 50. Y. Fried and J. Agassi: Paranoia. A Study in Diagnosis. [Synthese Library 102] 1976 ISBN 90-277-0704-9; Pb 90-277-0705-7 51. K.H. Wolff: Surrender and Cath. Experience and Inquiry Today. [Synthese Library 105] 1976 ISBN 90-277-0758-8; Pb 90-277-0765-0 52. K. Kosik: Dialectics of the Concrete. A Study on Problems of Man and World. 1976 ISBN 90-277-0761-8; Pb 90-277-0764-2 53. N. Goodman: The Structure ofAppearance. [Synthese Library 107] 1977 ISBN 90-277-0773-1; Pb 90-277-0774-X 54. H.A. Simon: Models of Discovery and Other Topics in the Methods of Science. [Synthese Library 114] 1977 ISBN 90-277-0812-6; Pb 90-277-0858-4 55. M. Lazerowitz: The Language ofPhilosophy. Freud and Wittgenstein. [Synthese Library 117] 1977 ISBN 90-277-0826-6; Pb 90-277-0862-2 56. T. Nickles (ed.): Scientific Discovery, Lagic, and Rationality. 1980 ISBN 90-277-1069-4; Pb 90-277-1070-8 57. J. Margolis: Persons and Mind. The Prospects ofNonreductive Materialism. [Synthese Library 121] 1978 ISBN 90-277-0854-1; Pb 90-277-0863-0 58. G. Radnitzky and G. Andersson (eds.): Progress and Rationality in Science. [Synthese Library 125] 1978 ISBN 90-277-0921-1; Pb 90-277-0922-X 59. G. Radnitzky and G. Andersson (eds.): The Structure and Development of Science. [Synthese Library 136] 1979 ISBN90-277-0994-7; Pb90-277-0995-5 Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

60. T. Nickles (ed.): Scientific Discovery. Case Studies. 1980 ISBN 90-277 -1092-9; Pb 90-277-1093-7 61. M.A. Finocchiaro: Galileo and the Art of Reasoning. Rhetorical Foundation of Logic and Scientific Method. 1980 ISBN 90-277-1094-5; Pb 90-277-1095-3 62. W.A. Wallace: Prelude to Galileo. Essays on Medieval and 16th-Century Sources of Galileo's Thought. 1981 ISBN 90-277-1215-8; Pb 90-277-1216-6 63. F. Rapp: Analytical Philosophy of Technology. Translated from German. 1981 ISBN 90-277-1221-2; Pb 90-277-1222-0 64. R.S. Cohen and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Hegel and the Sciences. 1984 ISBN 90-277-0726-X 65. J. Agassi: Science and Society. Studies in the Sociology of Science. 1981 ISBN 90-277-1244-1; Pb 90-277-1245-X 66. L. Tondl: Problems of Semantics. A Contribution to the Analysis of the Language of Science. Translated from Czech. 1981 ISBN 90-277-0148-2; Pb 90-277-0316-7 67. J. Agassi and R.S. Cohen (eds. ): Scientific Philosophy Today. Essays in Honor of Mario Bunge. 1982 ISBN 90-277-1262-X; Pb 90-277-1263-8 68. W. Krajewski (ed.): Polish Essays in the Philosophy of the Natural Sciences. Translated from Polish and edited by R.S. Cohen and C.R. Fawcett. 1982 ISBN 90-277-1286-7; Pb 90-277-1287-5 69. J.H. Fetzer: Scientific Knowledge. Causation, Explanation and Corroboration. 1981 ISBN 90-277-1335-9; Pb 90-277-1336-7 70. S. Grossberg: Studies ofMind and Brain. Neural Principles of Learning, Perception, Develop- ment, Cognition, and Motor Control. 1982 ISBN 90-277-1359-6; Pb 90-277-1360-X 71. R.S. Cohen and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Epistemology, Methodology, and the Social Sciences. 1983. ISBN 90-277-1454-1 72. K. Berka: Measurement. Its Concepts, Theories and Problems. Translated from Czech. 1983 ISBN 90-277-1416-9 73. G.L. Pandit: The Structure and Growth of Scientific Knowledge. A Study in the Methodology of Epistemic Appraisal. 1983 ISBN 90-277-1434-7 74. A.A. Zinov'ev: Logical Physics. Translated from Russian. Edited by R.S. Cohen. 1983 [see also Volume 9] ISBN 90-277-0734-0 75. G-G. Granger: Formal Thought and the Sciences of Man. Translated from French. With and Introduction by A. Rosenberg. 1983 ISBN 90-277-1524-6 76. R.S. Cohen and L. Laudan (eds.): Physics, Philosophy and Psychoanalysis. Essays in Honor of Adolf Griinbaum. 1983 ISBN 90-277-1533-5 77. G. Biihme, W. van den Daele, R. Hohlfeld, W. Krohn and W. Schafer: Finalization in Science. The Social Orientation of Scientific Progress. Translated from German. Edited by W. Schafer. 1983 ISBN 90-277-1549-1 78. D. Shapere: Reason and the Search for Knowledge. Investigations in the Philosophy of Science. 1984 ISBN 90-277-1551-3; Pb 90-277-1641-2 79. G. Andersson (ed.): Rationality in Science and Politics. Translated from German. 1984 ISBN 90-277-1575-0; Pb 90-277-1953-5 80. P.T. Durbin and F. Rapp (eds.): Philosophy and Technology. [Also Philosophy and Technology Series, Vol. 1] 1983 ISBN 90-277-1576-9 81. M. Markovic: Dialectical Theory of Meaning. Translated from Serbo-Croat. 1984 ISBN 90-277-1596-3 82. R.S. Cohen and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Physical Sciences and History of Physics. 1984. ISBN 90-277-1615-3 Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

83. E. Meyerson: The Relativistic Deduction. Epistemological Implications of the Theory of Relativity. Translated from French. With a Review by Albert Einstein and an Introduction by Milic Capek. 1985 ISBN 90-277-1699-4 84. R.S. Cohen and M. W. Wartofsky (eds.): Methodology, Metaphysics and the History ofScience. In Memory of Benjamin Nelson. 1984 ISBN 90-277-1711-7 85. G. Tamas: The Logic of Categories. Translated from Hungarian. Edited by R.S. Cohen. 1986 ISBN 90-277-1742-7 86. S.L. de C. Fernandes: Foundations ofObjective Knowledge. The Relations of Popper's Theory of Knowledge to That of Kant. 1985 ISBN 90-277-1809-1 87. R.S. Cohen and T. Schnelle (eds.): Cognition and Fact. Materials on Ludwik Fleck. 1986 ISBN 90-277-1902-0 88. G. Freudenthal: Atom and Individual in the Age ofNewton. On the Genesis of the Mechanistic World View. Translated from German. 1986 ISBN 90-277-1905-5 89. A. Donagan, A.N. Perovich Jr and M. V. Wedin (eds.): Human Nature and Natural Knowledge. Essays presented to Marjorie Grene on the Occasion of Her 75th Birthday. 1986 ISBN 90-277-1974-8 90. C. Mitcham and A. Running (eds.): Philosophy and Technology II. Information Technology and Computers in Theory and Practice. [Also Philosophy and Technology Series, Vol. 2] 1986 ISBN 90-277-1975-6 91. M. Grene and D. Nails (eds.): Spinoza and the Sciences. 1986 ISBN 90-277-1976-4 92. S.P. Turner: The Search for a Methodology of Social Science. Durkheim, Weber, and the 19th-Century Problem of Cause, Probability, and Action. 1986. ISBN 90-277-2067-3 93. I.C. Jarvie: Thinking about Society. Theory and Practice. 1986 ISBN 90-277-2068-1 94. E. Ullmann-Margalit (ed.): The Kaleidoscope of Science. The Israel Colloquium: Studies in History, Philosophy, and Sociology of Science, Vol. 1. 1986 ISBN 90-277-2158-0; Pb 90-277-2159-9 95. E. Ullmann-Margalit (ed.): The Prism of Science. The Israel Colloquium: Studies in History, Philosophy, and Sociology of Science, Vol. 2. 1986 ISBN 90-277-2160-2; Pb 90-277-2161-0 96. G. Markus: Language and Production. A Critique of the Paradigms. Translated from French. 1986 ISBN 90-277-2169-6 97. F. Amrine, F.J. Zucker and H. Wheeler (eds.): Goethe and the Sciences: A Reappraisal. 1987 ISBN 90-277-2265-X; Pb 90-277-2400-8 98. J.C. Pitt and M. Pera (eds.): Rational Changes in Science. Essays on Scientific Reasoning. Translated from Italian. 1987 ISBN 90-277-2417-2 99. 0. Costa de Beauregard: Time, the Physical Magnitude. 1987 ISBN 90-277-2444-X 100. A. Shimony and D. Nails (eds.): Naturalistic Epistemology. A Symposium of 1\vo Decades. 1987 ISBN 90-277-2337-0 101. N. Rotenstreich: Time and Meaning in History. 1987 ISBN 90-277-2467-9 102. D.B. Zilberman: The Birth ofMeaning in Hindu Thought. Edited by R.S. Cohen. 1988 ISBN 90-277-2497-0 103. T.F. Glick (ed.): The Comparative Reception of Relativity. 1987 ISBN 90-277-2498-9 104. Z. Harris, M. Gottfried, T. Ryckman, P. Mattick Jr, A. Daladier, T.N. Harris and S. Harris: The Form of Information in Science. Analysis of an Immunology Sublanguage. With a Preface by Hilary Putnam. 1989 ISBN 90-277-2516-0 105. F. Burwick (ed.): Approaches to Organic Form. Permutations in Science and Culture. 1987 ISBN 90-277-2541-1 Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

106. M. Almasi: The Philosophy ofAppearances. Translated from Hungarian. 1989 ISBN 90-277-2150-5 107. S. Hook, W.L. O'Neill and R. O'Toole (eds.): Philosophy, History and Social Action. Essays in Honor of Lewis Feuer. With an Autobiographical Essay by L. Feuer. 1988 ISBN 90-277-2644-2 108. I. Hronszky, M. Feher and B. Dajka: Scientific Knowledge Socialized. Selected Proceedings of the 5th Joint International Conference on the History and Philosophy of Science organized by the IUHPS (Veszprem, Hungary, 1984). 1988 ISBN 90-277-2284-6 109. P. Tillers and E. D. Green (eds.): Probability and Inference in the Law of Evidence. The Uses and Limits ofBayesianism. 1988 ISBN 90-277-2689-2 110. E. Ullmann-Margalit (ed.): Science in Reflection. The Israel Colloquium: Studies in History, Philosophy, and Sociology of Science, Vol. 3. 1988 ISBN 90-277-2712-0; Pb 90-277-2713-9 111. K. Gavroglu, Y. Goudaroulis and P. Nicolacopoulos (eds.): Imre Lakatos and Theories of Scientific Change. 1989 ISBN 90-277-2766-X 112. B. Glassner and J.D. Moreno (eds.): The Qualitative-Quantitative Distinction in the Social Sciences. 1989 ISBN 90-277-2829-1 113. K. Arens: Structures of Knowing. Psychologies of the 19th Century. 1989 ISBN 0-7923-0009-2 114. A. Janik: Style, Politics and the Future of Philosophy. 1989 ISBN 0-7923-0056-4 115. F. Amrine (ed.): Literature and Science as Modes of Expression. With an Introduction by S. Weininger. 1989 ISBN 0-7923-0133-1 116. J.R. Brown and J. Mittelstrass (eds.): An Intimate Relation. Studies in the History and Philo• sophy of Science. Presented to Robert E. Butts on His 60th Birthday. 1989 ISBN 0-7923-0169-2 117. F. D' Agostino and I. C. Jarvie (eds.): Freedom and Rationality. Essays in Honor of John Watkins. 1989 ISBN 0-7923-0264-8 118. D. Zolo: Reflexive Epistemology. The Philosophical Legacy of Otto Neurath. 1989 ISBN 0-7923-0320-2 119. M. Kearn, B.S. Philips and R.S. Cohen (eds.): Georg Simmel and Contemporary Sociology. 1989 ISBN 0-7923-0407-1 120. T.H. Levere and W.R. Shea (eds.): Nature, Experiment and the Science. Essays on Galileo and the Nature of Science. In Honour of Stillman Drake. 1989 ISBN 0-7923-0420-9 121. P. Nicolacopoulos (ed.): Greek Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science. 1990 ISBN 0-7923-0717-8 122. R. Cooke and D. Costantini (eds.): Statistics in Science. The Foundations of Statistical Methods in Biology, Physics and Economics. 1990 ISBN 0-7923-0797-6 123. P. Duhem: The Origins of Statics. Translated from French by G.F. Leneaux, V.N. Vagliente and G.H. Wagner. With an Introduction by S.L. Jaki. 1991 ISBN 0-7923-0898-0 124. H. Kamerlingh Onnes: Through Measurement to Knowledge. The Selected Papers, 1853-1926. Edited and with an Introduction by K. Gavroglu andY. Goudaroulis. 1991 ISBN 0-7923-0825-5 125. M. Capek: The New Aspects of Time: Its Continuity and Novelties. Selected Papers in the Philosophy of Science. 1991 ISBN 0-7923-0911-1 126. S. Unguru (ed.): Physics, Cosmology and Astronomy, 1300-1700. Tension and Accommoda- tion. 1991 ISBN 0-7923-1022-5 Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

127. Z. Bechler: Newton's Physics on the Conceptual Structure of the Scientific Revolution. 1991 ISBN 0-7923-1054-3 128. E. Meyerson: Explanation in the Sciences. Translated from French by M-A. Siple and D.A. Siple. 1991 ISBN 0-7923-1129-9 129. A. I. Tauber (ed.): Organism and the Origins of Self 1991 ISBN 0-7923-1185-X 130. F.J. Varela and J-P. Dupuy (eds.): Understanding Origins. Contemporary Views on the Origin of Life, Mind and Society. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1251-1 131. G.L. Pandit: Methodological Variance. Essays in Epistemological Ontology and the Method- ology of Science. 1991 ISBN 0-7923-1263-5 132. G. Munevar (ed.): Beyond Reason. Essays on the Philosophy of Paul Feyerabend. 1991 ISBN 0-7923-1272-4 133. T.E. Uebel (ed.): Rediscovering the Forgotten Vienna Circle. Austrian Studies on Otto Neurath and the Vienna Circle. Partly translated from German. 1991 ISBN 0-7923-1276-7 134. W.R. Woodward and R.S. Cohen (eds.): World Views and Scientific Discipline Formation. Science Studies in the [former] German Democratic Republic. Partly translated from German by W.R. Woodward. 1991 ISBN 0-7923-1286-4 135. P. Zambelli: The Speculum Astronomiae and Its Enigma. Astrology, Theology and Science in Albertus Magnus and His Contemporaries. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1380-1 136. P. Petitjean, C. Jami and A.M. Moulin (eds.): Science and Empires. Historical Studies about Scientific Development and European Expansion. ISBN 0-7923-1518-9 137. W.A. Wallace: Galileo's Logic ofDiscovery and Proof The Background, Content, and Use of His Appropriated Treatises on Aristotle's Posterior Analytics. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1577-4 138. W.A. Wallace: Galileo 's Logical Treatises. A Translation, with Notes and Commentary, of His Appropriated Latin Questions on Aristotle's Posterior Analytics. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1578-2 Set (137 + 138) ISBN 0-7923-1579-0 139. M.J. Nye, J.L. Richards and R.H. Stuewer (eds.): The Invention of Physical Science. Intersec• tions of Mathematics, Theology and Natural Philosophy since the Seventeenth Century. Essays in Honor of Erwin N. Hiebert. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1753-X 140. G. Corsi, M.L. dalla Chiara and G.C. Ghirardi (eds.): Bridging the Gap: Philosophy, Mathem- atics and Physics. Lectures on the Foundations of Science. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1761-0 141. C.-H. Lin and D. Fu (eds.): Philosophy and Conceptual History of Science in Taiwan. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1766-1 142. S. Sarkar (ed.): The Founders of Evolutionary Genetics. A Centenary Reappraisal. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1777-7 143. J. Blackmore (ed.): Ernst Mach -A Deeper Look. Documents and New Perspectives. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1853-6 144. P. Kroes and M. Bakker (eds. ): Technological Development and Science in the Industrial Age. New Perspectives on the Science-Technology Relationship. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1898-6 145. S. Amsterdamski: Between History and Method. Disputes about the Rationality of Science. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1941-9 146. E. Ullmann-Margalit (ed.): The Scientific Enterprise. The Bar-Hillel Colloquium: Studies in History, Philosophy, and Sociology of Science, Volume 4. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-1992-3 147. L. Embree (ed.): Metaarchaeology. Reflections by Archaeologists and Philosophers. 1992 ISBN 0-7923-2023-9 148. S. French and H. Kamminga (eds.): Correspondence, Invariance and Heuristics. Essays in Honour of Heinz Post. 1993 ISBN 0-7923-2085-9 149. M. Bunzl: The Context of Explanation. 1993 ISBN 0-7923-2153-7 Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

150. LB. Cohen (ed.): The Natural Sciences and the Social Sciences. Some Critical and Historical Perspectives. 1994 ISBN 0-7923-2223-1 151. K. Gavroglu, Y. Christianidis and E. Nicolaidis (eds.): Trends in the Historiography ofScience. 1994 ISBN 0-7923-2255-X 152. S. Poggi and M. Bossi (eds.): Romanticism in Science. Science in Europe, 1790-1840. 1994 ISBN 0-7923-2336-X 153. J. Faye and H.J. Folse (eds.): Niels Bohr and Contemporary Philosophy. 1994 ISBN 0-7923-2378-5 154. C. C. Gould and R.S. Cohen (eds.): Artifacts, Representations, and Social Practice. Essays for Marx W. Wartofsky. 1994 ISBN 0-7923-2481-1 155. R.E. Butts: Historical Pragmatics. Philosophical Essays. 1993 ISBN 0-7923-2498-6 156. R. Rashed: The Development ofArabic Mathematics: Between Arithmetic and Algebra. Trans- lated from French by A.F.W. Armstrong. 1994 ISBN 0-7923-2565-6 157. I. Szumilewicz-Lachman (ed.): Zygmunt Zawirski: His Life and Work. With Selected Writings on Time,' Logic and the Methodology of Science. Translations by Feliks Lachman. Ed. by R.S. Cohen, with the assistance of B. Bergo. 1994 ISBN 0-7923-2566-4 158. S.N. Haq: Names, Natures and Things. The Alchemist Jabir ibn Hayylin and His Kitiib al-Ahjiir (Book of Stones). 1994 ISBN 0-7923-2587-7 159. P. Plaass: Kant's Theory ofNatural Science. Translation, Analytic Introduction and Comment- ary by Alfred E. and Maria G. Miller. 1994 ISBN 0-7923-2750-0 160. J. Misiek (ed.): The Problem of Rationality in Science and its Philosophy. On Popper vs. Polanyi. The Polish Conferences 1988-89. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-2925-2 161. I.C. Jarvie and N. Laor (eds.): Critical Rationalism, Metaphysics and Science. Essays for Joseph Agassi, Volume I. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-2960-0 162. I.C. Jarvie and N. Laor (eds.): Critical Rationalism, the Social Sciences and the Humanities. Essays for Joseph Agassi, Volume II. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-2961-9 Set (161-162) ISBN 0-7923-2962-7 163. K. Gavroglu, J. Stachel and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Physics, Philosophy, and the Scientific Community. Essays in the Philosophy and History of the Natural Sciences and Mathematics. In Honor of RobertS. Cohen. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-2988-0 164. K. Gavroglu, J. Stachel and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Science, Politics and Social Practice. Essays on Marxism and Science, Philosophy of Culture and the Social Sciences. In Honor of Robert S. Cohen. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-2989-9 165. K. Gavroglu, J. Stachel and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): Science, Mind and Art. Essays on Science and the Humanistic Understanding in Art, Epistemology, Religion and Ethics. Essays in Honor of RobertS. Cohen. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-2990-2 Set (163-165) ISBN 0-7923-2991-0 166. K.H. Wolff: Transformation in the Writing. A Case of Surrender-and-Catch. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-3178-8 167. A.J. Kox and D.M. Siegel (eds.): No Truth Except in the Details. Essays in Honor of Martin J. Klein. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-3195-8 168. J. Blackmore: Ludwig Boltzmann, His Later Life and Philosophy, 1900--1906. Book One: A Documentary History. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-3231-8 169. R.S. Cohen, R. Hilpinen and R. Qiu (eds.): Realism and Anti-Realism in the Philosophy of Science. Beijing International Conference, 1992. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-3233-4 170. I. Ku~uradi and R.S. Cohen (eds.): The Concept of Knowledge. The Ankara Seminar. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-3241-5 Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

171. M.A. Grodin (ed.): Meta Medical Ethics: The Philosophical Foundations of Bioethics. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-3344-6 172. S. Ramirez and R.S. Cohen (eds.): Mexican Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-3462-0 173. C. Dilworth: The Metaphysics of Science. An Account of Modem Science in Terms of Prin- ciples, Laws and Theories. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-3693-3 174. J. Blackmore: Ludwig Boltzmann, His Later Life and Philosophy, 1900-1906 Book Two: . 1995 ISBN 0-7923-3464-7 175. P. Damerow: Abstraction and Representation. Essays on the Cultural Evolution of Thinking. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-3816-2 176. M.S. Macrakis: Scarcity's Ways: The Origins ofCapital. A Critical Essay on Thermodynamics, Statistical Mechanics and Economics. 1997 ISBN 0-7923-4760-9 177. M. Marion and R.S. Cohen (eds.): Quebec Studies in the Philosophy of Science. Part I: Logic, Mathematics, Physics and History of Science. Essays in Honor ofHugues Leblanc. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-3559-7 178. M. Marion and R.S. Cohen (eds. ): Quebec Studies in the Philosophy ofScience. Part II: Biology, Psychology, Cognitive Science and Economics. Essays in Honor of Hugues Leblanc. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-3560-0 Set (177-178) ISBN 0-7923-3561-9 179. Fan Dainian and R.S. Cohen (eds.): Chinese Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-3463-9 180. P. Forman and J.M. Sanchez-Ron (eds.): National Military Establishments and the Advance• ment of Science and Technology. Studies in 20th Century History. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-3541-4 181. E.J. Post: Quantum Reprogramming. Ensembles and Single Systems: A Two-Tier Approach to Quantum Mechanics. 1995 ISBN 0-7923-3565-1 182. A.I. Tauber (ed.): The Elusive Synthesis: Aesthetics and Science. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-3904-5 183. S. Sarkar (ed. ): The Philosophy and History ofMolecular Biology: New Perspectives. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-3947-9 184. J.T. Cushing, A. Fine and S. Goldstein (eds.): Bohmian Mechanics and Quantum Theory: An Appraisal. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-4028-0 185. K. Michalski: Logic and Time. An Essay on Husserl's Theory of Meaning. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-4082-5 186. G. Munevar (ed.): Spanish Studies in the Philosophy of Science. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-4147-3 187. G. Schubring (ed.): Hermann Giinther Graflmann (1809-1877): Visionary Mathematician, Scientist and Neohumanist Scholar. Papers from a Sesquicentennial Conference. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-4261-5 188. M. Bitbol: Schrodinger's Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-4266-6 189. J. Faye, U. Scheffler and M. Urchs (eds.): Perspectives on Time. 1997 ISBN 0-7923-4330-1 190. K. Lehrer and J.C. Marek (eds.): Austrian Philosophy Past and Present. Essays in Honor of Rudolf Haller. 1996 ISBN 0-7923-4347-6 191. J.L. Lagrange: Analytical Mechanics. Translated and edited by Auguste Boissonade and Victor N. Vagliente. Translated from the Mecanique Analytique, novelle edition of 1811. 1997 ISBN 0-7923-4349-2 192. D. Ginev and R.S. Cohen (eds.): Issues and Images in the Philosophy of Science. Scientific and Philosophical Essays in Honour of Azarya Polikarov. 1997 ISBN 0-7923-4444-8 Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

193. R.S. Cohen, M. Home and J. Stachel (eds.): Experimental Metaphysics. Quantum Mechanical Studies for Abner Shimony, Volume One. 1997 ISBN 0-7923-4452-9 194. R.S. Cohen, M. Home and J. Stachel (eds.): Potentiality, Entanglement and Passion-at-a• Distance. Quantum Mechanical Studies for Abner Shimony, Volume Two. 1997 ISBN 0-7923-4453-7; Set 0-7923-4454-5 195. R.S. Cohen and A.I. Tauber (eds.): Philosophies of Nature: The Human Dimension. 1997 ISBN 0-7923-4579-7 196. M. Otte and M. Panza (eds.): Analysis and Synthesis in Mathematics. History and Philosophy. 1997 ISBN 0-7923-4570-3 197. A. Denkel: The Natural Background ofMeaning. 1999 ISBN 0-7923-5331-5 198. D. Baird, R.I. G. Hughes and A. Nordmann (eds.): Heinrich Hertz: Classical Physicist, Modem Philosopher. 1999 ISBN 0-7923-4653-X 199. A. Franklin: Can That be Right? Essays on Experiment, Evidence, and Science. 1999 ISBN 0-7923-5464-8 200. D. Raven, W. Krohn and R.S. Cohen (eds.): The Social Origins of Modem Science. 2000 ISBN 0-7923-6457-0 201. Reserved 202. Reserved 203. B. Babich and R.S. Cohen (eds.): Nietzsche, Theories of Knowledge, and Critical Theory. Nietzsche and the Sciences I. 1999 ISBN 0-7923-5742-6 204. B. Babich and R.S. Cohen (eds.): Nietzsche, Epistemology, and Philosophy of Science. Nietz- sche and the Science II. 1999 ISBN 0-7923-5743-4 205. R. Hooykaas: Fact, Faith and Fiction in the Development of Science. The Gifford Lectures given in the University of St Andrews 1976. 1999 ISBN 0-7923-5774-4 206. M. Feher, 0. Kiss and L. Ropolyi (eds. ): Hermeneutics and Science. 1999 ISBN 0-7923-5798-1 207. R.M. MacLeod (ed.): Science and the Pacific War. Science and Survival in the Pacific, 1939- 1945. 1999 ISBN0-7923-5851-1 208. I. Hanzel: The Concept of Scientific Law in the Philosophy of Science and Epistemology. A Study of Theoretical Reason. 1999 ISBN 0-7923-5852-X 209. G. Helm; R.J. Deltete (ed./transl.): The Historical Development of Energetics. 1999 ISBN 0-7923-5874-0 210. A. Orenstein and P. Kotatko (eds.): Knowledge, Language and Logic. Questions for Quine. 1999 ISBN 0-7923-5986-0 211. R.S. Cohen and H. Levine (eds.): Maimonides and the Sciences. 2000 ISBN 0-7923-6053-2 212. H. Gourko, D.I. Williamson and A.I. Tauber (eds.): The Evolutionary Biology Papers of Elie Metchnikoff. 2000 ISBN 0-7923-6067-2 213. S. D' Agostino: A History of the Ideas of Theoretical Physics. Essays on the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Physics. 2000 ISBN 0-7923-6094-X 214. S. Lelas: Science and Modernity. Toward An Integral Theory of Science. 2000 ISBN 0-7923-6303-5 215. E. Agazzi and M. Pauri (eds.): The Reality of the Unobservable. Observability, Unobservability and Their Impact on the Issue of Scientific Realism. 2000 ISBN 0-7923-6311-6 216. P. Hoyningen-Huene and H. Sankey (eds.): Incommensurability and Related Matters. 2001 ISBN 0-7923-6989-0 217. A. Nieto-Galan: Colouring Textiles. A History of Natural Dyestuffs in Industrial Europe. 2001 ISBN 0-7923-7022-8 Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

218. J. Blackmore, R. Itagaki and S. Tanaka (eds.): Ernst Mach's Vienna 1895-1930. Or Phenom- enalism as Philosophy of Science. 2001 ISBN 0-7923-7122-4 219. R. Vihalemm (ed.): Estonian Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science. 2001 ISBN 0-7923-7189-5 220. W. Lefevre (ed.): Between Leibniz. Newton, and Kant. Philosophy and Science in the Eighteenth Century. 2001 ISBN 0-7923-7198-4 221. T.F. Glick, M.A. Puig-Samper and R. Ruiz (eds.): The Reception of Darwinism in the Iberian World. Spain, Spanish America and Brazil. 2001 ISBN 1-4020-0082-0 222. U. Klein (ed.): Tools and Modes of Representation in the Laboratory Sciences. 2001 ISBN 1-4020-0100-2 223. P. Duhem: Mixture and Chemical Combination. And Related Essays. Edited and translated, with an introduction, by Paul Needham. 2002 ISBN 1-4020-0232-7 224. J.C. Boudri: What was Mechanical about Mechanics. The Concept of Force Betweem Meta- physics and Mechanics from Newton to Lagrange. 2002 ISBN 1-4020-0233-5 225. B.E. Babich (ed.): Hermeneutic Philosophy of Science, Van Gogh's Eyes, and God. Essays in Honor of Patrick A. Heelan, S.J. 2002 ISBN 1-4020-0234-3

Also of interest: R.S. Cohen and M.W. Wartofsky (eds.): A Portrait of Twenty-Five Years Boston Colloquia for the Philosophy of Science, 1960-1985. 1985 ISBN Pb 90-277-1971-3 Previous volumes are still available.

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