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  1.  42
    When Will Scientific Disagreement Bear Fruit?: A Case Study About Angiosperm Origins.Katherine Valde - unknown
    The timing of the origin of flowering plants (Angiosperm) is hotly debated. It has been suggested that the disagreement between the fossil record of angiosperm origin strongly conflicts with the origin estimates generated by molecular clocks. I argue that this conflict reveals lessons about whether or under what conditions scientific disagreement is likely to bear fruit. Specifically, I point to issues of evidence quality and social epistemic structures which deserve more attention in understanding the productivity of disagreement.
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  2.  20
    From Metaphysics to Methods?: Pluralism in Cancer Research.Katherine Valde - 2024 - Acta Analytica 39.
    There is a growing recognition among many scientists and philosophers that metaphysical presuppositions guide scientific research. These ontological claims, in turn, prescribe a particular methodology for how to go about investigating and explaining those kinds of things. There is thus what I call a move from metaphysics to methods. Using cancer research as a case study, I defend the existence of this move, and I argue for an “agnostic” attitude towards the metaphysical presuppositions guiding cancer research. I defend this agnosticism (...)
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  3.  15
    Has Quantification Seduced Higher Ed?Katherine Valde & Eric Scarffe - 2024 - Academe 110 (1).
    This article examines the challenges and pressures liberal arts programs are currently facing, as well as their responses to them. We argue that while liberal arts programs do in fact develop transferable skills that promote ‘work-place readiness,’ these skills are best understood as derivative goods of a liberal arts education and not the value of the education itself. Further, we argue that valuing the liberal arts for these derivative goods may be self-defeating—insofar as a liberal arts education is constituted by (...)
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  4. The Trouble with Knowing You Were Trouble.Katherine Valde & Eric Scarffe - 2024 - In Catherine M. Robb, Georgie Mills & William Irwin, Taylor Swift and Philosophy: Essays from the Tortured Philosophers Department. The Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture Series. pp. 174-181.
    “I knew you were trouble when you walked in,” sings Taylor Swift in her song I Knew You Were Trouble (IKYWT). But what, exactly, does Swift know? And how does she know it? This paper considers three possible interpretations. The first interpretation considers whether Swift is simply profiling or stereotyping her would-be suiter. The second interpretation considers whether Swift is actually making a self-knowledge claim--where what is claiming to know is something about herself. Finally, the third interpretation considers whether we (...)
     
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  5.  13
    Book Review: MECHANISMS IN SCIENCE Stavros Ioannidis & Stathis Psillos. [REVIEW]Katherine Valde - 2024 - BJPS Review of Books.
  6.  63
    Daniel J. Nicholson and John Dupré, eds., Everything Flows: Towards a Processual Philosophy of Biology. Oxford: Oxford University Press , 416 pp., $70.00. [REVIEW]Katherine Valde - 2019 - Philosophy of Science 86 (2):375-378.
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