Thought Experiments in Methodological and Historical Contexts
Edited by Katerina Ierodiakonou, University of Athens and Sophie Roux, University of Grenoble and Institut Universitaire de France
Biographical note
Katerina Ierodiakonou is Associate Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the University of Athens. She has published extensively on ancient and Byzantine philosophy, especially in the areas of epistemology and logic. She currently works on a book about ancient theories of colour.
Sophie Roux (Ph.D., EHESS, 1996) is Associate Professor at the University of Grenoble and Junior Fellow at the Institut universitaire de France. She has published extensively on various aspects of philosophy and science in the early modern period.
Sophie Roux (Ph.D., EHESS, 1996) is Associate Professor at the University of Grenoble and Junior Fellow at the Institut universitaire de France. She has published extensively on various aspects of philosophy and science in the early modern period.
Readership
All those interested in history and philosophy of science, epistemology and philosophy of mind.
Reviews
The papers in the book concentrate on historical and methodological issues of thought experiments providing a range of analyses and thus clarifying a concept that has been hard to pin down...[this book] will provide a useful prism through which to assess agent-based modelling. Corinna Elsenbroich, Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, Volume 15, Number 1, 2012.
Table of contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Emergence of the Notion of Thought Experiments, Sophie Roux
PART ONE: HISTORICAL USES OF THOUGHT EXPERIMENTS
Remarks on the History of an Ancient Thought Experiment, Katerina Ierodiakonou
Thought Experiments in the De Anima Commentaries, Peter Lautner
Thought Experiments in Late Medieval Debates on Atomism, Christophe Grellard
PART TWO: THE POSSIBILITY OF THOUGHT EXPERIMENTS
Thought Experiments and Indirect Proofs in Averroes, Aquinas, and Buridan, Simo Knuuttila and Taneli Kukkonen
Galileo’s Use of Medieval Thought Experiments, Carla Rita Palmerino
On Kant’s Critique of Thought Experiments in Early Modern Philosophy, Stelios Virvidakis
PART THREE: HOW DO THOUGHT EXPERIMENTS WORK?
Philosophical Thought Experiments: In or Out of the Armchair?, Pascal Engel
On the Very Idea of a Thought Experiment, Jean-Yves Goffi and Sophie Roux
Thought Experiments and Mental Simulations, John Zeimbekis
Bibliography
List of Contributors
Index nominum
Introduction: The Emergence of the Notion of Thought Experiments, Sophie Roux
PART ONE: HISTORICAL USES OF THOUGHT EXPERIMENTS
Remarks on the History of an Ancient Thought Experiment, Katerina Ierodiakonou
Thought Experiments in the De Anima Commentaries, Peter Lautner
Thought Experiments in Late Medieval Debates on Atomism, Christophe Grellard
PART TWO: THE POSSIBILITY OF THOUGHT EXPERIMENTS
Thought Experiments and Indirect Proofs in Averroes, Aquinas, and Buridan, Simo Knuuttila and Taneli Kukkonen
Galileo’s Use of Medieval Thought Experiments, Carla Rita Palmerino
On Kant’s Critique of Thought Experiments in Early Modern Philosophy, Stelios Virvidakis
PART THREE: HOW DO THOUGHT EXPERIMENTS WORK?
Philosophical Thought Experiments: In or Out of the Armchair?, Pascal Engel
On the Very Idea of a Thought Experiment, Jean-Yves Goffi and Sophie Roux
Thought Experiments and Mental Simulations, John Zeimbekis
Bibliography
List of Contributors
Index nominum
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