Beebee Et Al
MAKING A DIFFERENCE C
Beebee Et Al
MAKING A DIFFERENCE C
- Gebundenes Buch
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
Ruth ChangMaking Comparisons Count189,99 €
Mrinal MiriGandhi for the 21st Century76,99 €
Complexity, Difference and Identity76,99 €
David Michael LevinThe Body's Recollection of Being179,99 €
Kamini VellodiTintoretto's Difference151,99 €
Kathleen Lennon / Margaret Whitford (eds.)Knowing the Difference218,99 €
David Wasserman / Jerome Bickenbach / Robert Wachbroit (eds.)Quality of Life Human Difference35,99 €-
-
-
Produktdetails
- Verlag: ACADEMIC
- Seitenzahl: 350
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Juni 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 690g
- ISBN-13: 9780198746911
- ISBN-10: 0198746911
- Artikelnr.: 47870858
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Helen Beebee is Samuel Hall Professor of Philosophy at the University of Manchester. Her research focuses on issues surrounding Humeanism and its rivals, especially in connection with causation, laws of nature and freedom of the will. She is the author of Hume on Causation (Routledge 2006) and Free Will: An Introduction (Palgrave 2013), and co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Causation (OUP 2009), with Christopher Hitchcock and Peter Menzies, as well as volumes on natural kinds and truthmakers. Here work has appeared in journals such as The Journal of Philosophy, Mind, Philosophical Review and Noûs. Christopher Hitchcock is the J. O. and Juliette Koepfli Professor of Philosophy at the California Institute of Technology. He has published widely on causation, explanation, and formal epistemology, as well as other topics in the philosophy of science. His work has appeared in journals such as the Journal of Philosophy, the Philosophical Review, Noûs, Philosophy of Science, and the British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. He has also published in the fields of computer science, law, linguistics, and psychology. Three of his papers have been reprinted in the Philosopher's Annual. He is the editor of Contemporary Debates in the Philosophy of Science (Wiley Blackwell 2004); The Oxford Handbook of Causation (Oxford 2009), with Helen Beebee and Peter Menzies; and The Oxford Handbook of Probability and Philosophy (Oxford 2016), with Alan Hájek. Huw Price FBA FAHA is Bertrand Russell Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence at the University of Cambridge. He is a a Fellow of Trinity College. His publications include Facts and the Function of Truth (Blackwell, 1988), Time's Arrow and Archimedes' Point (OUP, 1996), and Naturalism Without Mirrors (OUP, 2011). He is also co-editor (with Richard Corry) of Causation, Physics, and the Constitution of Reality (OUP, 2007) and co-author (with Simon Blackburn, Robert Brandom, Paul Horwich and Michael Williams) of Expressivism, Pragmatism and Representationalism (CUP, 2013).
* 1: Helen Beebee, Christopher Hitchcock and Huw Price: Introduction
* 2: Daniel Nolan: Causal Counterfactuals and Impossible Worlds
* 3: Rachael Briggs: Two Interpretations of the Ramsey Test
* 4: Cei Maslen: Pragmatic Explanations of the Proportionality
Constraint on Causation
* 5: Huw Price: Causation, Intervention, and Agency: Woodward on
Menzies and Price
* 6: David Braddon-Mitchell: The Glue of the Universe
* 7: Christopher Hitchcock: Actual Causation: What's the Use?
* 8: Nancy Cartwright: Can Structural Equations Explain How Mechanisms
Explain?
* 9: Peter Menzies: The Problem of Counterfactual Isomorphs
* 10: Thomas Blanchard and Jonathan Schaffer: Cause without Default
* 11: Brad Weslake: Difference-making, Closure and Exclusion
* 12: Philip Pettit: The Program Model, Difference-makers, and the
Exclusion Problem
* 13: James Woodward: Intervening in the Exclusion Argument
* 14: Christian List and Peter Menzies: My Brain Made Me Do It: The
Exclusion Argument Against Free Will, and What's Wrong With It
* 15: Helen Beebee: Epiphenomenalism for Functionalists
* 16: Peter Menzies: The Consequence Argument Disarmed: an
Interventionist Perspective
* 2: Daniel Nolan: Causal Counterfactuals and Impossible Worlds
* 3: Rachael Briggs: Two Interpretations of the Ramsey Test
* 4: Cei Maslen: Pragmatic Explanations of the Proportionality
Constraint on Causation
* 5: Huw Price: Causation, Intervention, and Agency: Woodward on
Menzies and Price
* 6: David Braddon-Mitchell: The Glue of the Universe
* 7: Christopher Hitchcock: Actual Causation: What's the Use?
* 8: Nancy Cartwright: Can Structural Equations Explain How Mechanisms
Explain?
* 9: Peter Menzies: The Problem of Counterfactual Isomorphs
* 10: Thomas Blanchard and Jonathan Schaffer: Cause without Default
* 11: Brad Weslake: Difference-making, Closure and Exclusion
* 12: Philip Pettit: The Program Model, Difference-makers, and the
Exclusion Problem
* 13: James Woodward: Intervening in the Exclusion Argument
* 14: Christian List and Peter Menzies: My Brain Made Me Do It: The
Exclusion Argument Against Free Will, and What's Wrong With It
* 15: Helen Beebee: Epiphenomenalism for Functionalists
* 16: Peter Menzies: The Consequence Argument Disarmed: an
Interventionist Perspective
* 1: Helen Beebee, Christopher Hitchcock and Huw Price: Introduction
* 2: Daniel Nolan: Causal Counterfactuals and Impossible Worlds
* 3: Rachael Briggs: Two Interpretations of the Ramsey Test
* 4: Cei Maslen: Pragmatic Explanations of the Proportionality
Constraint on Causation
* 5: Huw Price: Causation, Intervention, and Agency: Woodward on
Menzies and Price
* 6: David Braddon-Mitchell: The Glue of the Universe
* 7: Christopher Hitchcock: Actual Causation: What's the Use?
* 8: Nancy Cartwright: Can Structural Equations Explain How Mechanisms
Explain?
* 9: Peter Menzies: The Problem of Counterfactual Isomorphs
* 10: Thomas Blanchard and Jonathan Schaffer: Cause without Default
* 11: Brad Weslake: Difference-making, Closure and Exclusion
* 12: Philip Pettit: The Program Model, Difference-makers, and the
Exclusion Problem
* 13: James Woodward: Intervening in the Exclusion Argument
* 14: Christian List and Peter Menzies: My Brain Made Me Do It: The
Exclusion Argument Against Free Will, and What's Wrong With It
* 15: Helen Beebee: Epiphenomenalism for Functionalists
* 16: Peter Menzies: The Consequence Argument Disarmed: an
Interventionist Perspective
* 2: Daniel Nolan: Causal Counterfactuals and Impossible Worlds
* 3: Rachael Briggs: Two Interpretations of the Ramsey Test
* 4: Cei Maslen: Pragmatic Explanations of the Proportionality
Constraint on Causation
* 5: Huw Price: Causation, Intervention, and Agency: Woodward on
Menzies and Price
* 6: David Braddon-Mitchell: The Glue of the Universe
* 7: Christopher Hitchcock: Actual Causation: What's the Use?
* 8: Nancy Cartwright: Can Structural Equations Explain How Mechanisms
Explain?
* 9: Peter Menzies: The Problem of Counterfactual Isomorphs
* 10: Thomas Blanchard and Jonathan Schaffer: Cause without Default
* 11: Brad Weslake: Difference-making, Closure and Exclusion
* 12: Philip Pettit: The Program Model, Difference-makers, and the
Exclusion Problem
* 13: James Woodward: Intervening in the Exclusion Argument
* 14: Christian List and Peter Menzies: My Brain Made Me Do It: The
Exclusion Argument Against Free Will, and What's Wrong With It
* 15: Helen Beebee: Epiphenomenalism for Functionalists
* 16: Peter Menzies: The Consequence Argument Disarmed: an
Interventionist Perspective







