<p><p>Programming languages are often classified according to their paradigms, e.g. imperative, functional, logic, constraint-based, object-oriented, or aspect-oriented. A paradigm characterizes the style, concepts, and methods of the language for describing situations and processes and for solving
Evolutionary Epistemology: A Multiparadigm Program
✍ Scribed by Werner Callebaut, Rik Pinxten (auth.), Werner Callebaut, Rik Pinxten (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 452
- Series
- Synthese Library 190
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This volume has its already distant or1g1n in an inter national conference on Evolutionary Epistemology the editors organized at the University of Ghent in November 1984. This conference aimed to follow up the endeavor started at the ERISS (Epistemologically Relevant Internalist Sociology of Science) conference organized by Don Campbell and Alex Rosen berg at Cazenovia Lake, New York, in June 1981, whilst in jecting the gist of certain current continental intellectual developments into a debate whose focus, we thought, was in danger of being narrowed too much, considering the still underdeveloped state of affairs in the field. Broadly speaking, evolutionary epistemology today con sists of two interrelated, yet qualitatively distinct inves tigative efforts. Both are drawing on Darwinian concepts, which may explain why many people have failed to discriminate them. One is the study of the evolution of the cognitive apparatus of living organisms, which is first and foremost the province of biologists and psychologists (H. C. Plotkin, Ed. , Learning, Development, and Culture: Essays in Evolu tionary Epistemology, New York, Wiley, 1984), although quite a few philosophers - professional or vocational - have also felt the need to express themselves on this vast subject (F. M. Wuketits, Ed. , Conce ts and Approaches in Evolutionary Epistemology, Dordrecht Boston, Reidel, 1984). The other approach deals with the evolution of science, and has been dominated hitherto by (allegedly) 'naturalized' philosophers; no book-length survey of this literature is available at present.
✦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xii
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Evolutionary Epistemology Today: Converging Views from Philosophy, the Natural and the Social Sciences....Pages 3-55
The Meaning of Entropy....Pages 57-73
Evolutionary Epistemology and the Synthesis of Biological and Social Science....Pages 75-96
Epistemology of Evolutionary Theories....Pages 97-104
Cognisance of Consciousness in the Study of Animal Knowledge....Pages 105-136
Front Matter....Pages 137-137
Selection Theory and the Sociology of Scientific Validity....Pages 139-158
Variation and Selection: Scientific Progress without Rationality....Pages 159-177
Evolutionary Epistemology and Sociology of Science....Pages 179-201
What Evolutionary Epistemology is Not....Pages 203-221
The Philosophical Significance of an Evolutionary Epistemology....Pages 223-231
Homo Sapiens, Homo Faber, Homo Socians: Technology and the Social Animal....Pages 233-244
Front Matter....Pages 245-245
Is Piaget’s “Genetic Epistemology” Evolutionary?....Pages 247-266
The Genesis of Atomic Physics and the Biography of Ideas....Pages 267-281
Sensorimotor Emergence: Proposing a Computational “Syntax”....Pages 283-310
Evolutionary Epistemology, Genetic Epistemology, History and Neurology....Pages 311-323
Front Matter....Pages 325-325
The Exchange of Genetic Information between Organisms of Distinct Origin can play an Important Role in Evolution....Pages 327-335
Fermat’s Last Theorem Seen as an Exercise in Evolutionary Epistemology....Pages 337-363
Language and Evolutionary or Dynamic Epistemology....Pages 365-380
The Evolutionary Explanation of Beliefs....Pages 381-401
Front Matter....Pages 403-403
Evolutionary Epistemology Bibliography....Pages 405-431
Back Matter....Pages 433-458
✦ Subjects
Philosophy of Science
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<p><p>Programming languages are often classified according to their paradigms, e.g. imperative, functional, logic, constraint-based, object-oriented, or aspect-oriented. A paradigm characterizes the style, concepts, and methods of the language for describing situations and processes and for solving
<p><p>Programming languages are often classified according to their paradigms, e.g. imperative, functional, logic, constraint-based, object-oriented, or aspect-oriented. A paradigm characterizes the style, concepts, and methods of the language for describing situations and processes and for solving
<p><p>Programming languages are often classified according to their paradigms, e.g. imperative, functional, logic, constraint-based, object-oriented, or aspect-oriented. A paradigm characterizes the style, concepts, and methods of the language for describing situations and processes and for solving