Philosophy and the Empirical, Volume XXXIISBN: 978-1-4051-8020-7
Paperback
300 pages
November 2007, Wiley-Blackwell
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From My Lai to Abu Ghraib:The Moral Psychology of Atrocity.
Render Unto Philosophy that which is Philosophy’s.
Philosophical Thought Experiments, Intuitions and Cognitive Equilibrium.
Reason Explanation in Folk Psychology.
The Folk Probably Don’t Think What You Think They Think:Experiments on Causation by Absence.
The Epistemology of Thought Experiments: First vs. Third Person ApproachArguments from Reference and the Worry About Dependence.
INTENTIONAL ACTION, FOLK JUDGMENTS, AND STORIES:SORTING THINGS OUT.
Folk Intuitions, Slippery Slopes, and Necessary Fictions: An Essay on Saul Smilansky’s Free Will Illusionism.
Free Will, Moral Responsibility, and Mechanism: Experiments on Folk Intuitions.
Do We Have A Coherent Set of Intuitions About Moral Responsibility?.
The Rise of Compatibilism:.
A Case Study in the Quantitative History of Philosophy.
Can Moral Obligations Be Empirically Discovered?.
Pragmatic Abilities in Autism Spectrum Disorder:A Case Study in Philosophy and the Empirical.
How To Challenge Intuitions Empirically Without Risking Skepticism.
The Cosmic Ensemble: Some reflections on the nature-mathematics symbiosis