edited by Francis Gen-Ichiro Nagasaka, Robert S. Cohen.
Dordrecht
Springer Netherlands
1998
(xviii, 191 pages)
Boston studies in the philosophy of science, 45.
1. The Mind as Human Jobs --;2. Other Minds --;3. On the Individuation of Events --;4. Mind, Privacy and Causality --;5. Double Look: Science Superposed on a Perceptual World --;6. Scientific Laws as Tools for Taxonomy --;7. Causality and Temporal Irreversibility --;8. The Structure of Statistical Inference --;9. On Inference in Science --;10. Comment on the Machida-Namiki-Araki Theory --;11. Who Are Precursors of Galileo in His Pisan Dynamics? --;A Criticism of Professor Moody's Paper --;12. Philosophical Meanings of the Concept of Evolution --;Index of Names.
The splendid achievements of Japanese mathematics and natural sciences during the second half of our 20th century have been a revival, a Renaissance, of the practical sciences developed along with the turn toward Western thinking in the late 19th century.
Biology -- Philosophy.
Genetic epistemology.
Philosophy (General)
Q174
.
E358
1998
edited by Francis Gen-Ichiro Nagasaka, Robert S. Cohen.