Volume 13 (2023)
Volume 11 (2021)
Volume 10 (2020)
Volume 9 (2019)
Volume 8 (2018)
Volume 7 (2017)
Volume 6 (2016-2017)
Volume 5 (2015-2016)
Volume 4 (2014)
Volume 3 (2013)
Volume 2 (2012)
Volume 1 (2011)
The role of Cybernetics in the emergence of artificial intelligence

saeedeh babai; Monireh Bahreini; faezeh norouzi; narjes saberi; kazem fouladi

Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 1-25

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2022.42060.1618

Abstract
  Many attempts have been made in the history and philosophy of science to suppose machines as human beings. Sometimes they are attributed mind, sometimes emotion, and sometimes intelligence. All this is to make the border between humans and machines as narrow as possible, so that one day they may unite. ...  Read More

Perspectivism of Scientific Instruments

Mahdi Khalili

Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 27-57

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2022.39373.1572

Abstract
  This paper addresses the scientific realism debate by giving thought to the epistemic status of scientific instruments. The paper claims that a perspectivist yet realist view is capable of explaining the role of instruments in science. Thus, instrumental perspectivism is defined and supported against ...  Read More

Multiple Supervenience and the Reconstruction of Neural Darwinism view of consciousness

Javad Darvish Aghajani

Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 59-81

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2022.39669.1578

Abstract
  Most of the scientific answers given to the problem of consciousness have either slipped towards reductionism or tried to explain it through functionalism. The common deficiency of most of them is ignoring the phenomenological and qualitative aspects of consciousness. The view of neural Darwinism has ...  Read More

On the quantity category and its types

Gholam Hossein Rahimi

Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 59-94

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2022.40223.1592

Abstract
  This article pursues two main goals. First, a concise description of the concept of quantity from both philosophical and scientific perspectives with the aim of establishing a scientific relationship and semantic connection between them. And second, to propose a modification of the philosophical concept ...  Read More

The influence of philosophical teachings on Galen's knowledge of physiology

farzaneh ameri

Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 95-128

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2022.41752.1611

Abstract
  Every science is based on metaphysical and philosophical assumptions, and medicine is no exception. In mixed medicine, Galen considers philosophy and logic to be part of medicine and bases his medical theory on it. Therefore, Galen considered anatomy and physiology not only for the study of organs and ...  Read More

Explain the invisibility of organs in humoural anatomy

Reza Gholami; Gholamhossein Moghaddam Heidari; Alireza Monajemi

Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 129-152

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2021.37466.1540

Abstract
  Study the titles of body organs as well as counting them in the anatomical texts of humoural medicine indicates an important issue: in these texts and in comparison with modern anatomical texts, there is no mention of a significant number of body organs. This is while these two different conclusions ...  Read More

Scientific Realism, Structural Realism, and the Pessimistic Meta-Induction Argument
Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 153-179

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2022.40815.1600

Abstract
  By appealing to the no-miracle argument (NM), scientific realists claim that the approximate truth of scientific theories and the existence of their postulated entities are the cause of the predictive and explanatory success of science. Antirealists, however, by appealing to the pessimistic meta-induction ...  Read More

Aristotle and Mach's principle

Sayyed Saied Mirahmadi; Seyed Amir Sekhavatian; Majid Mohsenzadeh Ganji

Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 181-203

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2022.41303.1607

Abstract
  Since Aristotle denied the possibility of a space independent of bodies (absolute space), it is clear that in his view, the motion relative to absolute space (absolute motion) is impossible. But, has Aristotle been able to provide a consistent explanation of motion without using the concepts of absolute ...  Read More

The Embodiment of Moral Values in Instant Messengers as Sociotechnical Systems and Its Policy Implications

Aboutorab Yaghmaie; Khashayar Ghadirinezhad

Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 205-231

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2022.41045.1604

Abstract
  Why are some technology policies successful and some not? Although this question is directly addressed in science, technology and innovation policy, it can be deeply explored in the philosophy of technology as well. The aim of this article is to discuss this question regarding the problem of the value ...  Read More

A critical assessment of "the language game of doubting " and "certainty" in the later Wittgenstein

Abdolhamid Mohammadi; Ali Paya

Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 233-276

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2022.42018.1617

Abstract
  The later Wittgenstein presents all types of knowledge claims in the context of language games. He also maintains that no language game is possible without certainty. Certainty lies outside of language games, but the very existence of any kind of language game depends on it. In his view, even "the game ...  Read More

A review of the principles and components of David Bloor's "Strong Program" theory and some of his critics

qasem Zaeri; Mohaddeseh Qashqaee Khavas

Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 277-303

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2022.41192.1606

Abstract
  David Bloor, one of the leading leaders of the Edinburgh School, refuted the theory of Strong Program by proposing four principles. These four principles include the principle of causality, the principle of symmetry, the principle of impartiality and the principle of reflexivity. According to the principle ...  Read More

A Relational Approach to Modern Science in the Marburg School

Elham Rabiee; mahdi hosseinzadehyazdi

Volume 12, Issue 1 , October 2022, Pages 305-327

https://doi.org/10.30465/ps.2022.42105.1621

Abstract
  Relationalism is at the opposite point of substantialism, and instead of studying objects separated from each other, it starts to study the objective relations that determine them. The Marburg school is one of the most important exponents of this idea. The explanation provided by the Marburg school of ...  Read More