Current Controversies in Values and Science
Herausgeber: Elliott, Kevin C.; Steel, Daniel
Current Controversies in Values and Science
Herausgeber: Elliott, Kevin C.; Steel, Daniel
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Current Controversies in Values and Science asks ten philosophers to debate five questions (two philosophers per debate) that are driving contemporary work in this important area of philosophy of science.
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Current Controversies in Values and Science asks ten philosophers to debate five questions (two philosophers per debate) that are driving contemporary work in this important area of philosophy of science.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 198
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. März 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 447g
- ISBN-13: 9781138193284
- ISBN-10: 1138193283
- Artikelnr.: 47967652
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 198
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. März 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 447g
- ISBN-13: 9781138193284
- ISBN-10: 1138193283
- Artikelnr.: 47967652
Kevin C. Elliott is Associate Professor in Lyman Briggs College, the Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, and the Department of Philosophy at Michigan State University. He is the author of Is a Little Pollution Good for You? Incorporating Societal Values in Environmental Research (2011) and A Tapestry of Values: An Introduction to Values in Science (2017), as well as a wide variety of journal articles and book chapters addressing issues in the philosophy of science and practical ethics. Daniel Steel is Associate Professor at the W. Maurice Young Centre for Applied Ethics at the University of British Columbia. His research focuses on coupled ethical-epistemic issues in science, especially in relation to environmental and public health issues. He is the author of Philosophy and the Precautionary Principle: Science, Evidence, and Environmental Policy (2015) and Across the Boundaries: Extrapolation in Biology and Social Science (2008), as well as numerous articles in leading journals in the philosophy of science.
List of Contributors
Introduction: Values and Science: Current Controversies
Kevin C. Elliott and Daniel Steel
Part I - Epistemic Values: Can We Distinguish Epistemic from Non-Epistemic
Values?
1 Distinguishing Between Cognitive and Social Values
Hugh Lacey
2 The Borderlands Between Epistemic and Non-Epistemic Values
Phyllis Rooney
Part II - Epistemic Priority: Must Science Be Committed to Prioritizing
Epistemic over Non-Epistemic Values?
3 Qualified Epistemic Priority: Comparing Two Approaches to Values in
Science
Daniel Steel
4 Values in Science: Against Epistemic Priority
Matthew J. Brown
Part III - Inductive Risk: Does the Argument from Inductive Risk Justify
Incorporating Non-Epistemic Values in Scientific Reasoning?
5 Why Inductive Risk Requires Values in Science
Heather Douglas
6 Why the Argument from Inductive Risk Doesn't Justify Incorporating
Non-Epistemic Values in Scientific Reasoning
Gregor Betz
Part IV - Diversity: Can Social Diversity Be Best Incorporated into Science
by Adopting the Social Value Management Ideal?
7 Can Social Diversity Be Best Incorporated into Science by Adopting the
Social Value Management Ideal?
Kristina Rolin
8 Feminism, Values, and the Bias Paradox: Why Value Management Is Not
Sufficient
Kristen Intemann
Part V - Democracy: To Ensure That Scientific Institutions Serve Values of
Social Justice and Democracy, Should Biomedical Research Be Socialized?
9 Socializing Medical Research
James Robert Brown
10 Meanwhile, Why Not Biomedical Capitalism?
Julian Reiss
Suggestions for Further Reading
Supplemental Guide to Further Controversies
Index
Introduction: Values and Science: Current Controversies
Kevin C. Elliott and Daniel Steel
Part I - Epistemic Values: Can We Distinguish Epistemic from Non-Epistemic
Values?
1 Distinguishing Between Cognitive and Social Values
Hugh Lacey
2 The Borderlands Between Epistemic and Non-Epistemic Values
Phyllis Rooney
Part II - Epistemic Priority: Must Science Be Committed to Prioritizing
Epistemic over Non-Epistemic Values?
3 Qualified Epistemic Priority: Comparing Two Approaches to Values in
Science
Daniel Steel
4 Values in Science: Against Epistemic Priority
Matthew J. Brown
Part III - Inductive Risk: Does the Argument from Inductive Risk Justify
Incorporating Non-Epistemic Values in Scientific Reasoning?
5 Why Inductive Risk Requires Values in Science
Heather Douglas
6 Why the Argument from Inductive Risk Doesn't Justify Incorporating
Non-Epistemic Values in Scientific Reasoning
Gregor Betz
Part IV - Diversity: Can Social Diversity Be Best Incorporated into Science
by Adopting the Social Value Management Ideal?
7 Can Social Diversity Be Best Incorporated into Science by Adopting the
Social Value Management Ideal?
Kristina Rolin
8 Feminism, Values, and the Bias Paradox: Why Value Management Is Not
Sufficient
Kristen Intemann
Part V - Democracy: To Ensure That Scientific Institutions Serve Values of
Social Justice and Democracy, Should Biomedical Research Be Socialized?
9 Socializing Medical Research
James Robert Brown
10 Meanwhile, Why Not Biomedical Capitalism?
Julian Reiss
Suggestions for Further Reading
Supplemental Guide to Further Controversies
Index
List of Contributors
Introduction: Values and Science: Current Controversies
Kevin C. Elliott and Daniel Steel
Part I - Epistemic Values: Can We Distinguish Epistemic from Non-Epistemic
Values?
1 Distinguishing Between Cognitive and Social Values
Hugh Lacey
2 The Borderlands Between Epistemic and Non-Epistemic Values
Phyllis Rooney
Part II - Epistemic Priority: Must Science Be Committed to Prioritizing
Epistemic over Non-Epistemic Values?
3 Qualified Epistemic Priority: Comparing Two Approaches to Values in
Science
Daniel Steel
4 Values in Science: Against Epistemic Priority
Matthew J. Brown
Part III - Inductive Risk: Does the Argument from Inductive Risk Justify
Incorporating Non-Epistemic Values in Scientific Reasoning?
5 Why Inductive Risk Requires Values in Science
Heather Douglas
6 Why the Argument from Inductive Risk Doesn't Justify Incorporating
Non-Epistemic Values in Scientific Reasoning
Gregor Betz
Part IV - Diversity: Can Social Diversity Be Best Incorporated into Science
by Adopting the Social Value Management Ideal?
7 Can Social Diversity Be Best Incorporated into Science by Adopting the
Social Value Management Ideal?
Kristina Rolin
8 Feminism, Values, and the Bias Paradox: Why Value Management Is Not
Sufficient
Kristen Intemann
Part V - Democracy: To Ensure That Scientific Institutions Serve Values of
Social Justice and Democracy, Should Biomedical Research Be Socialized?
9 Socializing Medical Research
James Robert Brown
10 Meanwhile, Why Not Biomedical Capitalism?
Julian Reiss
Suggestions for Further Reading
Supplemental Guide to Further Controversies
Index
Introduction: Values and Science: Current Controversies
Kevin C. Elliott and Daniel Steel
Part I - Epistemic Values: Can We Distinguish Epistemic from Non-Epistemic
Values?
1 Distinguishing Between Cognitive and Social Values
Hugh Lacey
2 The Borderlands Between Epistemic and Non-Epistemic Values
Phyllis Rooney
Part II - Epistemic Priority: Must Science Be Committed to Prioritizing
Epistemic over Non-Epistemic Values?
3 Qualified Epistemic Priority: Comparing Two Approaches to Values in
Science
Daniel Steel
4 Values in Science: Against Epistemic Priority
Matthew J. Brown
Part III - Inductive Risk: Does the Argument from Inductive Risk Justify
Incorporating Non-Epistemic Values in Scientific Reasoning?
5 Why Inductive Risk Requires Values in Science
Heather Douglas
6 Why the Argument from Inductive Risk Doesn't Justify Incorporating
Non-Epistemic Values in Scientific Reasoning
Gregor Betz
Part IV - Diversity: Can Social Diversity Be Best Incorporated into Science
by Adopting the Social Value Management Ideal?
7 Can Social Diversity Be Best Incorporated into Science by Adopting the
Social Value Management Ideal?
Kristina Rolin
8 Feminism, Values, and the Bias Paradox: Why Value Management Is Not
Sufficient
Kristen Intemann
Part V - Democracy: To Ensure That Scientific Institutions Serve Values of
Social Justice and Democracy, Should Biomedical Research Be Socialized?
9 Socializing Medical Research
James Robert Brown
10 Meanwhile, Why Not Biomedical Capitalism?
Julian Reiss
Suggestions for Further Reading
Supplemental Guide to Further Controversies
Index