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A list of all pages that have property "Brief" with value "Theoretical-20Physicist". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 289 results starting with #1.

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List of results

     (Theoretical-20Physicist)
    • John Stuart Mill  + (a 19th century British philosopher, political economist, and civil servant. His writings on scientific change cover topics ranging from the nature of scientific reasoning to theory-ladenness and scientific progress)
    • George Sarton  + (a Belgian-American chemist and historian who is widely considered to be the founder of the discipline of history of science)
    • Deivide Garcia  + (a Brazilian scientonomer and philosopher of science notable for his work on Paul Feyerabend, evolutionary theory, and pluralism)
    • Richard Whitley  + (a British Sociologist and Economist who has written extensively on the organization of natural and social sciences, alongside capitalist business structure.)
    • Ronald W. Clark  + (a British author.)
    • Geoffery Cantor  + (a British historian and philosopher of physics, especially eighteenth and nineteenth century optics.)
    • Adrian Wilson  + (a British historian of medicine)
    • Nick Jardine  + (a British mathematician, philosopher of science and its history, historian of astronomy and natural history)
    • Francis Bacon  + (a British natural philosopher and founder of experimentalism and empirical science.)
    • Charles Darwin  + (a British naturalist responsible for the formulation of the theory of evolution by natural selection)
    • Robert Cecil Olby  + (a British philosopher of science and historian of 19th and 20th century biology)
    • Donald A. Gillies  + (a British philosopher of science and mathematics)
    • Paul Horwich  + (a British philosopher of science.)
    • Harriet Taylor Mill  + (a British philosopher who greatly influenced the thinking of John Stuart Mill, her long time companion and husband.)
    • Stephen Toulmin  + (a British philosopher, author, and educator influenced by Ludwig Wittgenstein)
    • John Locke  + (a British philosopher, writer, political activist, medical researcher, Oxford academic, and government official)
    • Steven Lukes  + (a British political and social theorist)
    • Timothy Ashplant  + (a British social and cultural historian)
    • Harry Collins  + (a British sociologist of science at the School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University, Wales, and a Fellow of the British Academy.)
    • Craig G. Fraser  + (a Canadian historian of mathematics and cosmology)
    • Brian S. Baigrie  + (a Canadian philosopher and historian of science)
    • William René Shea  + (a Canadian philosopher and historian of science.)
    • James Robert Brown  + (a Canadian philosopher of science and mathematics.)
    • Torin Doppelt  + (a Canadian philosopher, historian of philosophy, and scientonomist notable for his work on Spinoza and on the development of the diagrammatic notation for belief visualization)
    • Spenser Borrie  + (a Canadian scientonomer)
    • Letizia Marcelja  + (a Canadian scientonomer)
    • Andrew Chung  + (a Canadian scientonomer)
    • Nora Zolfaghari  + (a Canadian scientonomer)
    • Stephanie Cui  + (a Canadian scientonomer)
    • Landon See  + (a Canadian scientonomer)
    • Tessa Ng  + (a Canadian scientonomer and philosopher of science)
    • G. G. Shan  + (a Canadian scientonomer notable for her work on corpus linguistics strategies)
    • Joshua Allen  + (a Canadian scientonomer notable for his work on epistemic practice and the mechanism of local action availability)
    • Markus Alliksaar  + (a Canadian scientonomer notable for his work on the status of meteorology and classical physics in the contemporary mosaic)
    • Izzy Friesen  + (a Canadian scientonomer who has done work on disciplinary dynamics of chymistry and alchemy)
    • Vladislavs Pavlovics  + (a Canadian scientonomist)
    • Calahan Janik-Jones  + (a Canadian scientonomist)
    • Christopher Kaumeyer  + (a Canadian scientonomist)
    • Kaden McKeen  + (a Canadian scientonomist)
    • Neo Yin  + (a Canadian scientonomist)
    • Alexander Offord  + (a Canadian scientonomist)
    • Zoë Golay  + (a Canadian scientonomist)
    • Cameron Scott  + (a Canadian scientonomist)
    • Carlin Henikoff  + (a Canadian scientonomist)
    • Hannah Rajput  + (a Canadian scientonomist)
    • Jamie Shaw  + (a Canadian scientonomist and philosopher of science, notable for his work on epistemic stances, scientonomic workflow, and philosophy of Paul Feyerabend)
    • Nichole Levesley  + (a Canadian scientonomist notable for her work on question dynamics and the diagrammatic notation for visualizing belief systems)
    • Zoe Sebastien  + (a Canadian scientonomist notable for her resolution of the paradox of normative propositions and reformulation of the third law)
    • Sarah Machado-Marques  + (a Canadian scientonomist notable for her work on scientific error handling)
    • Sanghoon Oh  + (a Canadian scientonomist notable for his work on element decay)
    • Ameer Sarwar  + (a Canadian scientonomist notable for his work on compatibility and scientificity)
    • Kye Palider  + (a Canadian scientonomist notable for his work on epistemic reasons and the diagrammatic notation for visualizing belief systems)
    • Cyrus Al-Zayadi  + (a Canadian scientonomist notable for his work on disciplines in scientonomic ontology)
    • Nicholas Overgaard  + (a Canadian scientonomist notable for his work related to the concepts of ''community'' and ''authority delegation'' as well as his reformulation of the second law)
    • Maxim Mirkin  + (a Canadian scientonomist who has worked on the status of technological knowledge in the process of scientific change)
    • Jessica Rapson  + (a Canadian scientonomist who participated in the development of the diagrammatic notation for belief visualization)
    • Yifang Zhang  + (a Canadian scientonomist who participated in the development of the diagrammatic notation for belief visualization)
    • Julia Da Silva  + (a Canadian scientonomist who participated in the development of the diagrammatic notation for belief visualization)
    • Mirka Loiselle  + (a Canadian scientonomist who's done considerable work on authority delegation in the art market and art expert communities)
    • William Rawleigh  + (a Canadian scientonomist, notable for his work on questions as epistemic elements and the mechanism of method employment)
    • Hakob Barseghyan  + (a Canadian-Armenian philosopher of science and scientonomer who laid the foundations of the general descriptive theory of scientific change)
    • Sinan Karamehmetoglu  + (a Canadian-Turkish scientonomist)
    • Arie Rip  + (a Dutch philosopher of Science and Technology, and briefly the president of the international Society for Social Studies of Science)
    • Jaakko Hintikka  + (a Finnish philosopher and logician)
    • Françoise Bastide  + (a Franco-Moroccan writer and sociologist, who co-authored with [[Bruno Latour]])
    • René Descartes  + (a French natural philosopher; who is today considered one of the most influential figures in modern philosophy)
    • Guillaume Dechauffour  + (a French philosopher of science)
    • Bruno Latour  + (a French sociologist, anthropologist, and a French sociologist, anthropologist, and philosopher of science, concerned with social constructivism and compositionism, especially in science. He is known for his work in science and technology studies (STS), his popularization of laboratory studies, and his development of actor-network theory (ANT) development of actor-network theory (ANT))
    • Jutta Schickore  + (a German historian and philosopher of science)
    • Friedrich Steinle  + (a German historian and philosopher of science)
    • Lorenz Kruger  + (a German historian and philosopher of science.)
    • Jürgen Mittelstrass  + (a German philosopher of Science.)
    • Paul Hoyningen-Huene  + (a German philosopher of science best known for his Neo-Kantian interpretation of Thomas S. Kuhn's ideas)
    • Hans Reichenbach  + (a German philosopher of science who was one of the main champions of logical positivism)
    • Immanuel Kant  + (a German philosopher who is considered a central figure in modern philosophy)
    • Ernst Mach  + (a German physicist who also made major contributions to philosophy and physiological psychology)
    • Heinrich Rudolf Hertz  + (a German physicist who first showed the existence of the electromagnetic waves theorized by James Clerk Maxwell's electromagnetic theory of light)
    • Herman von Helmholtz  + (a German physiologist and physicist who contributed to a variety of scientific and philosophical topics)
    • Gottfried Willhelm Leibniz  + (a German polymath who occupies a prominent place in the history of mathematics and philosophy.)
    • Nicholas Rescher  + (a German-American philosopher, polymath, and author of more than 400 articles and 100 books which collectively establish a systematic philosophy of "pragmatic idealism" that combines elements of the European continental idealism with American pragmatism)
    • Gerd Buchdahl  + (a German-English philosopher of science who found the journal "Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science")
    • Rudolf Carnap  + (a German-born philosopher of science and logician. He was a prominent member of the Vienna Circle and a proponent of logical positivism)
    • Theodore Arabatzis  + (a Greek philosopher and historian of science notable for his efforts of reuniting the HPS)
    • Eszter Nádasi  + (a Hungarian philosopher of science and technology)
    • Mihály Héder  + (a Hungarian philosopher of science and technology)
    • Imre Lakatos  + (a Hungarian-born philosopher of science who greatly contributed to the problem of demarcation and theory choice in science)
    • Jaegwon Kim  + (a Korean-American philosopher best known for his work on mental causation, the mind-body problem, and the metaphysics of supervenience and events)
    • Hasok Chang  + (a Korean-born American historian and philosopher of science notable for his work on integrating HPS)
    • Andrzej Wiśniewski  + (a Polish philosopher notable for his work on logic and philosophical logic)
    • Alfred Tarski  + (a Polish-American logician and mathematician who is widely considered as one of the greatest logicians of all time)
    • Ludwik Fleck  + (a Polish-Jewish microbiologist, whose writings made an important early contribution to the historical philosophy and sociology of science)
    • Jaime Wisniak  + (a Professor of Chemical Engineering at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev)
    • Kirk Ludwig  + (a Professor of Philosophy and Cognitive Science at Indiana University, Bloomington.)
    • Evan Thompson  + (a Professor of Philosophy at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver and an Associate Member of the Department of Asian Studies and the Department of Psychology (Cognitive Science Group). He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.)
    • John R. R. Christie  + (a Scottish philosopher of science and historian of Scottish science.)
    • David Hume  + (a Scottish philosopher, historian, and essayist; he is widely considered the most important philosopher to write in the English language)
    • John Law  + (a Sociologist of Science, and one of the key players in the development of Actor-Network Theory alongside [[Bruno Latour]] and [[Michel Callon]])
    • Francisco Ayala  + (a Spanish-American evolutionary biologist a Spanish-American evolutionary biologist and philosopher at the University of California, Irvine.[2] He is a former Dominican priest,[3][4] ordained in 1960,[5] but left the priesthood that same year. After graduating from the University of Salamanca, he moved to the United States in 1961 to study for a PhD at Columbia University. There, he studied for his doctorate under Theodosius Dobzhansky, graduating in 1964.[6] He became a US citizen in 1971.n 1964.[6] He became a US citizen in 1971.)
    • Tore Frangsmyr  + (a Swedish historian of science notable for his contributions to the history of Swedish science)
    • David Leary  + (a University Professor Emeritus. he was a a University Professor Emeritus. he was a University Professor at the University of Richmond from 2002 to 2016. For the previous 13 years, he was Dean of Arts and Sciences at Richmond. Before that he spent 12 years at the University of New Hampshire, where served as Professor of Psychology, History, and the Humanities, chairperson of the Department of Psychology, and co-director of the History and Theory of Psychology Program. In May 2016 he retired from teaching and was given emeritus status.om teaching and was given emeritus status.)
    • Karine Megerdoomian  + (a computational linguist at the MITRE Corporation and an Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University)
    • Gem Stapleton  + (a computer scientist notable for her work on theoretical understanding of diagrams and their effectiveness for human cognition)
    • Sven Linker  + (a computer scientist notable for his work on the Science of Sensor Systems Software project)
    • Petrucio Viana  + (a computer scientist who works on logical aspects of graph theory, foundations of combinatorics, mathematical logic, modal logic, reasoning with diagrams, relational semantics and formal relational systems)
    • Marina DiMarco  + (a historian and philosopher of molecular biology and medicine)
    • Bruce L. Kinzer  + (a historian at Kenyon College and an editor of two volumes of the Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, in 33 vols. (1963-1991))
    • Mary Terrall  + (a historian of science notable for her work on Maupertuis and enlightenment sciences)
    • Marvin P. Bolt  + (a historian of science specializing in astronomy, the telescope, and the Herschel family)
    • Tony Becher  + (a key figure in British higher education research)
    • Moritz Schlick  + (a key figure in logical positivism)
    • David Lindberg  + (a leading American historian of medieval and early modern science, prominent for his work on the history of physical sciences and the interrelation between science and religion)
    • Markus Schlosser  + (a lecturer in the School of Philosophy at University College Dublin, Ireland)
    • Andreas Spath  + (a linguist who is the editor of Interfaces and Interface Conditions, a book about the interface between linguistic and conceptual knowledge)
    • History of Science Society  + (a major professional organization for the history of science)
    • Robert Goldstone  + (a modern distinguished professor of psychological and brain sciences at Indiana University.)
    • Colin Allen  + (a modern distinguished professor of the history and philosophy of science at the University of Pittsburgh.)
    • Jack Nelson  + (a modern philosopher at Temple University, Philadelphia)
    • Deborah Tollefsen  + (a modern professor of philosophy at the University of Memphis.)
    • Aaron D. Cobb  + (a philosopher and author specializing in ethics, epistemology, philosophy of religion and the history and philosophy of science. He has written about Faraday's electromagnetism, as well as Herschel, Mill, and Whewell's philosophies of science)
    • Lynn Hankinson Nelson  + (a philosopher at Rowan College, Glassboro)
    • Antonella Corradini  + (a philosopher at the Catholic University of Milan)
    • Catherine Legg  + (a philosopher notable for her work on diagrammatic reasoning)
    • Justin Donhauser  + (a philosopher notable for his work on socially relevant applied philosophy of science, including the role of environmental sciences in public policy and resource management decision-making)
    • Karen Yan  + (a philosopher of cognitive neuroscience in practice notable for her work on causal understanding, technique-enabled reasoning, conceptualization of cognition, and infrastructure of transdisciplinary research)
    • Curt John Ducasse  + (a philosopher of mind and aesthetics who primarily wrote on art, religion and reincarnation)
    • Hong Yu Wong  + (a philosopher of mind and cognitive scientist)
    • Karim Bschir  + (a philosopher of science)
    • Edward H. Madden  + (a philosopher of science and religion)
    • Carole J. Lee  + (a philosopher of science notable for her work on the social structure of science - including its production, communication, and evaluation - with a focus on peer review)
    • Anjan Chakravartty  + (a philosopher of science notable for his work on the topics in metaphysics and epistemology of science)
    • Andrea Roselli  + (a philosopher of science notable for his work on embedded cognition and verisimilitude)
    • David Stump  + (a philosopher of science notable for his work on the disunity of science, Poincaré, Duhem, the history and philosophy of mathematics, and naturalized philosophy of science)
    • Robert Butts  + (a philosopher of science whose research interests included the work of Leibniz, Newton, Galileo, Whewell, and Kant)
    • Patrick Fraser  + (a philosopher who participated in the development of scientonomy during his undergraduate studies. He is no longer an active member of the scientonomy community)
    • Robin Hendry  + (a philosopher who studies philosophical issues in chemistry)
    • John Losee  + (a philosopher who was the author of A Historical Introduction to the Philosophy of Science)
    • Charles Sanders Peirce  + (a philosopher who was the founder of American pragmatism)
    • Paul Needham  + (a philosopher who worked on time and tense, causation and subjunctive conditionals, and various topics in the history and philosophy of science)
    • Saul Fisher  + (a philosopher who works as Executive Director of Grants and Academic Initiatives in the Office of the Provost at Mercy College in New York.)
    • Christopher Macleod  + (a philosophy lecturer in University of Lancaster.)
    • Benjamin Abbott  + (a physicist at the California Institute of Technology and a member of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) collaboration.)
    • Thomas Kuhn  + (a physicist, historian, and philosopher of science who played a significant role in the discussions on scientific change in the 1960-80s)
    • Sigrid Beck  + (a professor and Chair of Descriptive and Theoretical Linguistics in the Department of English at the Eberhard Karls University in Tubingen, Germany)
    • Douglas McDermid  + (a professor at Trent University. Professora professor at Trent University. Professor McDermid earned his BA in Philosophy from the University of Western Ontario, and his MA and PhD from Brown University where he graduated in 1998. Prior to coming to Trent University in 2002, he spent two years as a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Instituto de Investigaciones at the National Autonomous University of Mexico in Mexico City (Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico), followed by two years in a tenure track position at St. Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia. Professor McDermid’s primary research interests are in epistemology, metaphysics, and the history of modern philosophy.ics, and the history of modern philosophy.)
    • James Fieser  + (a professor at the University of Tennessee at Martin, USA.)
    • Yael Sharvit  + (a professor in the Department of Linguistics at the University of California in Los Angeles, She specializes in formal semantics and the syntax-semantics interface)
    • Brandon Look  + (a professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Kentucky in the United States who specializes in the history of modern philosophy, especially Leibniz and Kant.)
    • Marc Ereshefsky  + (a professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Calgary, who specializes in the philosophy of science and of biology)
    • Leora Bar-el  + (a professor in the Linguistics Program in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Montana)
    • Francis E. Mineka  + (a professor of English at Cornell University and an editor of six volumes of the Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, in 33 vols. (1963-1991))
    • Regine Eckardt  + (a professor of general and German linguistics in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Konstanz in Germany)
    • Richard S. Olson  + (a professor of history of science at Harvey Mudd College who specializes in the interactions between the natural sciences and culture)
    • Gideon Yaffe  + (a professor of law and philosophy at Yale University)
    • Alvin Goldman  + (a professor of philosophy and cognitive science at Rutgers University in New Jersey and a leading figure in epistemology)
    • Bradley Dowden  + (a professor of philosophy at California State University, Sacramento)
    • John Wright  + (a professor of philosophy at Central Michigan University with research interests in Early Modern Philosophy, especially Hume, Locke, Descartes, Malebranche, Reid, and Hutcheson; Philosophy of the Scottish Enlightenment; History of the Mind Body Problem)
    • Ralph Schumacher  + (a professor of philosophy at Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany)
    • Michael Friedman  + (a professor of philosophy at Stanford Univa professor of philosophy at Stanford University, his interests include Kant, Philosophy of Science, History of Twentieth Century Philosophy, including the interaction between philosophy and the exact sciences from Kant through the logical empiricists, prospects for post-Kuhnian philosophy of science in light of these developments, and the relationship between analytic and continental traditions in the early twentieth century.traditions in the early twentieth century.)
    • Lisa Downing  + (a professor of philosophy at The Ohio State University who specializes in early modern philosophy and its relationship to natural philosophy.)
    • David Owen  + (a professor of philosophy at the Universita professor of philosophy at the University of Arizona. He received his B. Phil. and D. Phil. from Oxford University and has taught in Scotland, England, and Canada. He is the author of Hume’s Reason (1999) and editor of Hume: General Philosophy(2000), and he has published many articles in the history of early modern philosophy, especially on Locke and Hume. philosophy, especially on Locke and Hume.)
    • Peter Markie  + (a professor of philosophy at the University of Missouri in the United States who specializes in epistemology, ethics, and philosophy of mind.)
    • Zev Bechler  + (a professor of philosophy of science interested in Newtonian studies.)
    • John Dunn  + (a professor of political philosophy at King's College, Cambridge.)
    • Edward Grant  + (a prolific medievalist and historian of science)
    • William Warren  + (a psychologist whose research focuses on ta psychologist whose research focuses on the visual control of action – in particular, human locomotion and navigation. He seeks to explain how this behavior is adaptively regulated by multi-sensory information, within a dynamical systems framework. Using virtual reality techniques, his research team investigates problems such as the visual control of steering, obstacle avoidance, wayfinding, pedestrian interactions, and the collective behavior of crowds. Experiments in the Virtual Environment Navigation Lab (VENLab) enable his group to manipulate what participants see as they walk through a virtual landscape, and to measure and model their behavior. The aim of this research is to understand how adaptive behavior emerges from the dynamic interaction between an organism and its environment. He believes the answers will not be found only in the brain, but will strongly depend on the physical and informational regularities that the brain exploits. This work contributes to basic knowledge that is needed to understand visual-motor disorders in humans, and to develop mobile robots that can operate in novel environmentsots that can operate in novel environments)
    • Michael Mulkay  + (a retired British sociologist of science. He is best known for his work on discursive analysis of science and for his publications on issues surrounding human embryology.)
    • Aayu Pandey  + (a scientonomer who has done work on the tautological status of the first law and its corollaries)
    • Aman Sakhardande  + (a scientonomist)
    • Victoria Fang  + (a scientonomist)
    • Sam Tippelt  + (a scientonomist)
    • Editors of the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy  + (a title that refers to anonymous editors working for the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.)
    • Naomi Oreskes  + (a world-renowned geologist, historian of science, and public speaker, and a leading voice on the role of science in society and the reality of anthropogenic climate change)
    • Robert Scharff  + (an American Philosopher of Science who has written on epistemology, Heidegger, and Technoscience Studies.)
    • Valentine Dusek  + (an American Philosopher of Science who has written on the Philosophy of Technology, Philosophy and History of Biology, and Marxism in Philosophy of Science.)
    • Richard Shusterman  + (an American Philosopher of Science.)
    • John Tresch  + (an American Professor of History & Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania.)
    • Daniel W. Byrne  + (an American biostatistician and data scientist notable for his work on medical research publishing)
    • Thomas B. Steel  + (an American computer scientist notable for his work on erotetic logic)
    • Thomas Nickles  + (an American historian and philosopher of science)
    • Stephen Wykstra  + (an American historian and philosopher of science)
    • Steven Shapin  + (an American historian and sociologist of science)
    • Mary Henle  + (an American historian of psychology.)
    • John L. Heilbron  + (an American historian of science best known for his work in the history of physics and the history of astronomy)
    • Bernard Cohen  + (an American historian of science, and Victor S. Thomas professor of the history of science at Harvard University.)
    • Susan Faye (born Walter Faw) Cannon  + (an American historian of science, best known for their study of uniformitarian geology and the overall state of science in the 19th century.)
    • Peter Barker  + (an American historian of science.)
    • Marshall Clagett  + (an American historian of science.)
    • Harry Woolf  + (an American historian of science.)
    • Lorraine Daston  + (an American historian of science.)
    • Michael Heidelberger  + (an American immunologist and historian of science.)
    • Nuel D. Belnap  + (an American logician and philosopher notable for his work on the philosophy of logic, temporal logic, and structural proof theory)
    • Robert S. Cohen  + (an American philosopher and historian of science)
    • Peter Galison  + (an American philosopher and historian of science as well as a physicist)
    • Michael Martin  + (an American philosopher and professor at Boston University, who specialized in the philosophy of religion, and also worked in the philosophies of science, law, and social science.)
    • Vere Chappell  + (an American philosopher notable for his work on the history of early modern philosophy, philosophy of mind and action, and metaphysics)
    • Elliott R. Sober  + (an American philosopher notable for his work in philosophy of biology and general philosophy of science)
    • Joseph C. Pitt  + (an American philosopher of science)
    • Roger C. Buck  + (an American philosopher of science)
    • Marx W. Wartofsky  + (an American philosopher of science)
    • Kareem Khalifa  + (an American philosopher of science)
    • Eliot Deutsch  + (an American philosopher of science at the University of Hawaii.)
    • Gary Gutting  + (an American philosopher of science at the University of Notre Dame)
    • Janet Kourany  + (an American philosopher of science at the University of Notre Dame.)
    • Helen Longino  + (an American philosopher of science known for her contributions on the role of values in science, role of social interaction in scientific objectivity and social epistemology)
    • Larry Laudan  + (an American philosopher of science who greatly shaped the debates in the field from the late 1970s till the mid 1990s)
    • Dudley Shapere  + (an American philosopher of science, notable for his attempts to explain the mechanism of changes in methods)
    • Jarrett Leplin  + (an American philosopher of science.)
    • Frederick Suppe  + (an American philosopher of science.)
    • David R. Hiley  + (an American philosopher of science.)
    • James Bohman  + (an American philosopher of science.)
    • Lee McIntyre  + (an American philosopher of social science notable for his work on law-like explanations in the social sciences and his denial of a demarcation between the natural and social sciences)
    • Michael Weisberg  + (an American philosopher who is a professor of philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania)
    • John Hardwig  + (an American philosopher who wrote on the topics of bioethics, epistemic dependency and the role of expert)
    • John Hasbrouck Van Vleck  + (an American physicist and mathematician.)
    • James T. Cushing  + (an American physicist and philosopher of science at University of Notre Dame.)
    • Allan Franklin  + (an American physicist, historian of science, and philosopher of science notable for his work on the Duhem-Quine thesis, reliability of experimental results, and the resolution of conflicting observations)
    • Julian Jaynes  + (an American psychologist.)
    • Michael Lissack  + (an American researcher notable for his work on cybernetics and complexity in business and science)
    • Paul Patton  + (an American scientonomist and editor of than American scientonomist and editor of the Encyclopedia of Scientonomy notable for his reformulation of the second law of scientific change, his work on disciplines, epistemic agents and tools, as well as his contributions to the formation of the scientonomy communitythe formation of the scientonomy community)
    • Walter Isaacson  + (an American writer and journalist who authored several biographies, including one of Albert Einstein)
    • Gregory Rupik  + (an American-Canadian historian and philosopher of science and a scientonomer, one of the co-founders of the scientonomy community and editor of the journal of Scientonomy)
    • Aristotle  + (an Ancient Greek philosopher who together with Socrates and Plato laid much of the groundwork for western philosophy and science)
    • Sophie Ritson  + (an Australian historian and philosopher of science)
    • Alistair C. Crombie  + (an Australian historian of science.)
    • Graham Oppy  + (an Australian philosopher whose main area an Australian philosopher whose main area of research is the philosophy of religion. He currently holds the posts of Professor of Philosophy and Associate Dean of Research at Monash University and serves as Associate Editor of the Australasian Journal of Philosophy, and serves on the editorial boards of Philo, Philosopher's Compass, Religious Studies, and Sophia.'s Compass, Religious Studies, and Sophia.)
    • Karl Popper  + (an Austrian-British philosopher who is generally regarded as one of the most influential philosophers of science of the 20th century)
    • Paul Feyerabend  + (an Austrian-born American philosopher of science famous for rejecting the existence of a fixed and universal scientific method and proposing allegedly anarchistic/dadaistic view of science)
    • Eric J. Aiton  + (an British historian of science who greatly contributed to the study of Descartes' vortex theory)
    • William Paley  + (an English clergyman, Christian apologist,an English clergyman, Christian apologist, philosopher, and utilitarian. He is best known for his natural theology exposition of the teleological argument for the existence of God in his work Natural Theology or Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity, which made use of the watchmaker analogy, which made use of the watchmaker analogy)
    • Isaac Newton  + (an English mathematician, astronomer, and physicist/natural philosopher who is widely recognized as one of the most influential scientists of all time)
    • John Worrall  + (an English philosopher of science notable for his advancement of Lakatos's methodology of scientific research programmes and his work on structural realism)
    • John Herschel  + (an English polymath, mathematician, astronomer, chemist, inventor, experimental photographer, and philosopher of science)
    • Martin Hollis  + (an English rationalist philosopher)
    • Alan Musgrave  + (an English-born New Zealand philosopher of science)
    • Amrita Basu  + (an Indian cognitive scientist and philosopher)
    • Amirali Atrli  + (an Iranian scientonomer)
    • George Berkeley  + (an Irish philosopher who is widely considered as one of the leading philosophers of the early modern period)
    • Michela Massimi  + (an Italian and British philosopher of science notable for her work on scientific perspectivism and perspectival realism)
    • Alessandra Castino  + (an Italian scientonomer notable for her work on the history of dark matter)
    • Thomas Blanchard  + (an assistant professor of philosophy at Illinois Wesleyan University)
    • David Deming  + (an associate professor of arts and sciences at the University of Oklahoma.)
    • Ryan Nichols  + (an associate professor of philosophy at California State University in Fullerton.)
    • Peter Adamson  + (an author)
    • Ralph Mclnerny  + (an author)
    • John O'Callaghan  + (an author)
    • Andrea Falcon  + (an author.)
    • John Vickers  + (an economist at Oxford University.)
    • Martin Moir  + (an editor of Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, in 33 vols. (1963-1991))
    • Zawahir Moir  + (an editor of Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, in 33 vols. (1963-1991))
    • Marion Filipiuk  + (an editor of Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, in 33 vols. (1963-1991))
    • Michael Laine  + (an editor of Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, in 33 vols. (1963-1991))
    • Emmanuel Manalo  + (an educational psychologist notable for his work on using diagrams for communication and effective learning and instructional strategies)
    • Thomas Reid  + (an eighteenth century Scottish philosopher who founded the Scottish common sense philosophy and played an integral role in the Scottish Enlightenment.)
    • John R. Milton  + (an historian of philosophy who authored several articles on John Locke)
    • Andy Clark  + (appointed to the Chair in Logic and Metaphappointed to the Chair in Logic and Metaphysics in 2004. Prior to that he had taught at the University of Glasgow, the University of Sussex, Washington University in St Louis, and Indiana University, Bloomington. He was Director of the Philosophy/Neuroscience/Psychology Program at Washington University in St Louis, and Director of the Cognitive Science Program at Indiana University.ive Science Program at Indiana University.)
    • John Biro  + (coeditor of Spinoza: New Perspectives (197coeditor of Spinoza: New Perspectives (1978); Mind,</br>Brain and Function (1982); Frege: Sense and Reference a Hundred</br>Years Later (1995); and Spinoza: Metaphysical Themes (2002). He is</br>also the author of papers on a variety of topics in epistemology, the</br>philosophy of mind, and the philosophy of language.y of mind, and the philosophy of language.)
    • Marija Jankovic  + (is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Davidson College.)
    • Rebecca Muscant  + (is a Canadian scientonomer)
    • Amna Zulfiqar  + (is a Canadian scientonomist who participated in the development of the diagrammatic notation for belief visualization)
    • Spyridon Orestis Palermos  + (is a lecturer in philosophy at Cardiff University)
    • Timothy O'Connor  + (is a modern philosopher and cognitive scientist at Indiana University.)
    • Michael Ruse  + (is a philosopher of science who specializeis a philosopher of science who specializes in the philosophy of biology and is well known for his work on the relationship between science and religion, the creation–evolution controversy, and the demarcation problem within science. Ruse currently teaches at Florida State University. He was born in England, attending Bootham School,[1] York. He took his undergraduate degree at the University of Bristol (1962), his master's degree at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario (1964), and Ph.D. at the University of Bristol (1970).Ph.D. at the University of Bristol (1970).)
    • David Norton  + (is a professor emeritus of moral philosophy at McGill University)
    • William Morris  + (is a professor of philosophy at Illinois Weslayan University)
    • James Harris  + (is a professor of the history of philosophy and head of the department of philosophy at the University of Saint Andrews.)
    • Alexandra Witze  + (is a science writer who works for Nature. She covers the Earth and planetary sciences and astronomy.)
    • Davide Castelvecchi  + (is a science writer working for Nature. Previously he has been an editor at Scientific American and a physical sciences reporter at Science News. He has degrees in mathematics and in science writing)
    • Gavin Hyman  + (is a senior lecturer at the University of Lancaster. He has published on postmodernism, philosophy and theology, Radical Orthodoxy, atheism, and ethics.)
    • Paul R. Gross  + (is an American biologist primarily known for writing on the Science Wars.)
    • Norman Levitt  + (is an American mathematician known as a strong critic of the "Academic Left" during the Science Wars.)
    • Mark Bedau  + (is an American philosopher who teaches at Reed College and works in the field of artificial life.)
    • Philip Pettit  + (is an Irish philosopher and political theorist. He is Laurence Rockefeller University Professor of Politics and Human Values at Princeton University and also Distinguished University Professor of Philosophy at the Australian National University.)
    • William Bristow  + (is an associate professor and coordinator of the Certificate in Ethics, Values, and Society in the Philosophy Department at the University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee.)
    • Sylvia Berryman  + (is an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin, specializing in ancient Greek philosophy)
    • Jacqueline Taylor  + (is an associate professor of philosophy at the University of San Francisco)
    • Stephen Thornton  + (is in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Limerick in Ireland.)
    • William C. Wimsatt  + (is professor emeritus in the Department ofis professor emeritus in the Department of Philosophy, the Committee on Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science (previously Conceptual Foundations of Science), and the Committee on Evolutionary Biology at the University of Chicago. He is currently a Winton Professor of the Liberal Arts at the University of Minnesota and Residential Fellow of the Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science.innesota Center for Philosophy of Science.)
    • Christian List  + (is professor of political science and philosophy at the London School of Economics.)
    • Charlotte Brown  + (is the author of several books and papers on David Hume)
    • Stephen Brown  + (marketing researcher)
    • Paul Anderson  + (marketing researcher)
    • Sven Hansson  + (philosopher)
    • Carl Sagan  + (served as the David Duncan Professor of Asserved as the David Duncan Professor of Astronomy and Space Sciences and Director of the Laboratory for Planetary Studies at Cornell University. He played a leading role in the Mariner, Viking, Voyager, and Galileo spacecraft expeditions, for which he received the NASA Medals for Exceptional Scientific Achievement and (twice) for Distinguished Public Service. His Emmy- and Peabody–winning television series, Cosmos, became the most widely watched series in the history of American public television. The accompanying book, also called Cosmos, is one of the bestselling science books ever published in the English language. Dr. Sagan received the Pulitzer Prize, the Oersted Medal, and many other awards—including twenty honorary degrees from American colleges and universities—for his contributions to science, literature, education, and the preservation of the environment. In their posthumous award to Dr. Sagan of their highest honor, the National Science Foundation declared that his “research transformed planetary science . . . his gifts to mankind were infinite." Dr. Sagan died on December 20, 1996.ite." Dr. Sagan died on December 20, 1996.)
    • Duncan Pritchard  + (the Chancellor’s Professor of Philosophy and the Director of Graduate Studies at the University of California, Irvine and a professor of philosophy at the University of Edinburgh. His field of research is epistemology.)
    • John M. Robson  + (the Chief Editor of Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, in 33 vols. (1963-1991), and was a professor of English at the University of Toronto.)
    • Patrick Reider  + (the editor of Social Epistemology and Epistemic Agency: Decentralizing Epistemic Agency)
    • Ann P. Robson  + (the editor of four volumes of Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, in 33 vols. (1963-1991))
    • Dwight N. Lindley  + (the editor of four volumes of the Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, in 33 vols. (1963-1991), and taught at Hamilton College)
    • Ingemar During  + (was a Swedish classical philologist)