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Alexander Rosenberg

Alexander Rosenberg (who generally publishes as "Alex") is an American philosopher and novelist. He is the R. Taylor Cole Professor of Philosophy at Duke University, well known for contributions to philosophy of biology and philosophy of economics.

Alexander Rosenberg
Born (1946-08-31) 31 August 1946 (age 77)
Austria
Alma materCity College of New York The Johns Hopkins University
Occupation(s)Philosopher and Novelist
Employer(s)Duke University

University of California, Riverside

Syracuse University

Dalhousie University
Notable workThe Atheist's Guide to Reality

The Girl from Krakow

Economics--Mathematical Politics or Science of Diminishing Returns
AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship, 1982

American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship, 1983 Lakatos Award, 1993 Phi Beta Kappa Romanell Lecturer, 2006

National Humanities Center Fellowship, 2006

Rosenberg describes himself as a "naturalist".[1]

Education and career edit

Rosenberg graduated from Stuyvesant High School in 1963 and from the City College of New York in 1967. He received his Ph.D. from the Johns Hopkins University in 1971. His thesis advisor was Peter Achinstein. He has taught philosophy at Dalhousie University, Syracuse University, University of California, Riverside, University of Georgia and, since 2000, at Duke University. He has been a visiting professor at the University of Minnesota, the University of California, Santa Cruz, Oxford University, the Australian National University and Bristol University.[2][third-party source needed]

He was a Guggenheim fellow in 1981, an American Council of Learned Societies fellow in 1983, won the Lakatos Award in 1993 and was the National Phi Beta Kappa Romanell Lecturer in 2006.[3] In 2006-2007 he was a fellow of the National Humanities Center.

His graduate students have included Samir Okasha, Grant Ramsey, Frederic Bouchard, Rachel Powell, Nita A. Farahany and Marion Hourdequin. He has worked closely with Lee McIntyre.

Rosenberg is married to Duke University professor Martha Ellen Reeves.

Rosenberg is an atheist, and a metaphysical naturalist.[4][5]

Philosophical work edit

Rosenberg's early work focused on the philosophy of social science and especially the philosophy of economics. His doctoral dissertation, published as Microeconomic Laws in 1976, was the first treatment of the nature of economics by a contemporary philosopher of science. Over the period of the next decade he became increasingly skeptical about neoclassical economics as an empirical theory.

He later shifted to work on issues in the philosophy of science that are raised by biology. He became especially interested in the relationship between molecular biology and other parts of biology. Rosenberg introduced the concept of supervenience to the treatment of intertheoretical relations in biology, soon after Donald Davidson began to exploit Richard Hare's notion in the philosophy of psychology. Rosenberg is among the few biologists and fewer philosophers of science who reject the consensus view that combines physicalism with antireductionism (see his 2010 on-line debate with John Dupré at Philosophy TV).

Rosenberg also coauthored an influential book on David Hume with Tom Beauchamp, Hume and the Problem of Causation, arguing that Hume was not a skeptic about induction but an opponent of rationalist theories of inductive inference.

The Atheist's Guide to Reality edit

Alex Rosenberg asserts the radical opinion that there is no enduring self on atheism. The existence of the self, he says, is "an illusion."[1]

In 2011 Rosenberg published a defense of what he called "Scientism"—the claim that "the persistent questions" people ask about the nature of reality, the purpose of things, the foundations of value and morality, the way the mind works, the basis of personal identity, and the course of human history, could all be answered by the resources of science. This book was attacked on the front cover of The New Republic by Leon Wieseltier as "The worst book of the year".[6] Leon Wiseltier's claim, in turn, was critiqued as exaggeration by Philip Kitcher in The New York Times Book Review.[7] On February 1, 2013, Rosenberg debated Christian apologist William Lane Craig on the question 'Is Faith in God Reasonable?' during which some of the arguments of the book were discussed.[8]

Rosenberg has contributed articles to The New York Times Op/Ed series The Stone, on naturalism, science and the humanities, and meta-ethics, and the mind's powers to understand itself by introspection that arise from the views he advanced in The Atheist's Guide to Reality.[9][10][11][12]

How History Gets Things Wrong: The Neuroscience of our Addiction to Stories edit

In 2018 Rosenberg published How History Gets Things Wrong: The Neuroscience of our Addiction to Stories. This work develops the eliminative materialism of The Atheist’s Guide to Reality, applying it to the role ‘the theory of mind’ plays in history and other forms of story telling. Rosenberg argues that the work of Nobel Prize winners, Eric Kandel, John O'Keefe and May-Britt Moser along with Edvard Moser reveals that the ‘‘theory of mind‘‘ employed in every day life and narrative history has no basis in the organization of the brain. Evidence from evolutionary anthropology, child psychology, medical diagnosis and neural imaging reveals it is an innate or almost innate tool that arose in Hominini evolution to foster collaboration among small numbers of individuals in immediate contact over the near future, but whose predictive weakness beyond this domain reveals its explanatory emptiness.[13]

Critical discussions of Rosenberg’s work edit

In How History Gets Things Wrong Rosenberg claims people never really think about anything. Therefore, it is simply an illusion that people possess intentional states. He admits that therefore the (apparently derived) intentionality of inscriptions and speech cannot be derived from the (original) intentionality of thought. Rosenberg has not provided an account of the intentionality of speech and writing, and may in fact deny that they bear any either. In The Atheist's Guide to Reality he states that its sentences are tools for moving information into the reader's brain, triggering new neural firings. However, critics note that doing so cannot be Rosenberg's purpose in writing the book because on his position no one really has any purposes.

While attracting some interest for its arguments about the philosophy of mind, Rosenberg's critique of narrative history in How History Gets Things Wrong has attracted criticism in academic reviews. Reviewers including Alexandre Leskanich in The English Historical Review,[14] Jacob Ivey in Philosophia,[15] and Michael Douma in Journal of Value Inquiry[16] faulted the book for failing to engage with literature in the philosophy of history and narratology and for oversimplified treatment of historical examples. Ivey also argued that Rosenberg's call for a Darwinian approach to historical explanation failed to acknowledge the limitations of past attempts to apply this approach and the complicated relationship in practice between Darwinian and humanistic methods in history.[15]

Rosenberg's treatment of fitness as a supervenient property, which is an undefined concept in the theory of natural selection, is criticized by Brandon and Beatty.[17] His original development of how the supervenience of Mendelian concepts blocks traditional derivational reduction was examined critically by C. Kenneth Waters.[18] His later account of reduction in developmental biology was criticized by Günter Wagner.[19] Elliott Sober's "Multiple realization arguments against reductionism"[20] reflects a shift towards Rosenberg's critique of anti-reductionist arguments of Putnam's and Fodor's.

Sober has also challenged Rosenberg's view that the principle of natural selection is the only biological law.[21]

The explanatory role of the principle of natural selection and the nature of evolutionary probabilities defended by Rosenberg were subject to counter arguments by Brandon[22] and later by Denis Walsh.[23] Rosenberg's account of the nature of genetic drift and the role of probability in the theory of natural selection draws on significant parallels between the principle of natural selection and the second law of thermodynamics.

In the philosophy of social science, Rosenberg's more skeptical views about microeconomics were challenged first by Wade Hands,[24] and later by Daniel Hausman in several books and articles.[25] The financial crisis of 2007–08 resulted in renewed attention to Rosenberg's skeptical views about microeconomics.[citation needed] Biologist Richard Lewontin and historian Joseph Fracchia express skepticism about Rosenberg's claim that functional explanations in social science require Darwinian underlying mechanisms.[26]

Literary work edit

The Girl From Krakow edit

Rosenberg's 2015 novel, The Girl From Krakow, Lake Union Publishing, is a narrative about a young woman named Rita Feuerstahl from 1935 to 1947, mainly focusing on her struggles to survive in Nazi-occupied Poland and later in Germany, under a false identity. A secondary plot involves her lover's experiences in France and Spain during its Civil War in the 1930s and then in Moscow during the war. Rosenberg has acknowledged that the novel is based on the wartime experiences of people he knew. He has also admitted the incongruity of writing a narrative, given his attack on the form in The Atheist’s Guide to Reality. He has said that The Girl from Krakow began as an attempt to put some of the difficult arguments of The Atheist’s Guide to Reality into a form easier to grasp".[27] The Girl From Krakow has been translated into Italian, Hungarian, Polish, Hebrew and Croatian.

Autumn in Oxford edit

In 2016 Rosenberg's second novel, Autumn in Oxford, appeared, also published by Lake Union Publishing. An afterword identifies the large number of real persons—academics, civil rights advocates, military officers, politicians and intelligence agents from the 1940s and '50s who figure in the narrative.

The Intrigues of Jennie Lee edit

in 2020 Rosenberg's third novel was published by Top Hat Books. An afterword identities the large number of public figures from Great Britain in the '30s who figure in the novel, including Jennie Lee, Aneurin Bevan, Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon--the subsequent centenarian Queen Mother, Lady Astor, Ellen Wilkinson, Ramsay MacDonald and Oswald Mosley.

In the Shadows of Enigma edit

Rosenberg's fourth historical novel, a sequel to “The Girl from Krakow”, was published in 2021, also by Top Hat Books. This novel offers an explanation of why the Western Allies—the US, Great Britain, Canada, New Zealand and Australia—kept the breaking of the German Enigma code secret for 30 years after the end of the Second World War. Four characters from his earlier novel figure in the sequel, Rita Feuerstahl, her partner Gil Romero, her son Stefan and a former Gestapo detective still working for the German Federal Republic, Otto Schulke.

Role in Duke Lacrosse controversy edit

During the 2006 Duke University lacrosse case, Rosenberg was one of the so-called Group of 88 professors who, shortly after members of the university's lacrosse team were accused of rape, signed a controversial letter attacking the players and thanking protesters for "making a collective noise" on "what happened to this young woman."[28] The following year, North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper, a Democrat, dropped all charges and declared the accused players innocent, stating that the players were victims of a "tragic rush to accuse."[29]

Bibliography edit

  • Microeconomic Laws: A Philosophical Analysis (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1976)
  • Sociobiology and the Preemption of Social Science (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980; Basil Blackwell, 1981)
  • Hume and the Problem of Causation (Oxford University Press, 1981) (with T.L. Beauchamp)
  • The Structure of Biological Science (Cambridge University Press, 1985)
  • Philosophy of Social Science (Clarendon Press, Oxford and Westview Press, 1988, fifth Edition, 2015), translation in Greek
  • Economics: Mathematical Politics or Science of Diminishing Returns? (University of Chicago Press, 1992)
  • Instrumental Biology, or the Disunity of Science (University of Chicago Press, 1994)
  • Darwinism in Philosophy, Social Science and Policy (Cambridge University Press, 2000)
  • Philosophy of Science: A Contemporary Approach (Routledge, 2000, third edition 2011), translations in Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese and Turkish.
  • Darwinian Reductionism or How to Stop Worrying and Love Molecular Biology (University of Chicago Press, 2006)
  • The Philosophy of Biology: A Contemporary Introduction (Routledge, 2007) (with Daniel McShea)
  • Philosophy of Biology: An Anthology (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009) (with Robert Arp)
  • The Atheist's Guide to Reality (W. W. Norton & Company, 2011)
  • The Girl From Krakow (Lake Union, 2015), translations in Polish, Italian, Hebrew, Hungarian, and Croatian
  • Autumn in Oxford (Lake Union, 2016)
  • The Routledge Companion to the Philosophy of Social Science (Routledge, 2017) (with Lee McIntyre)
  • How History Gets Things Wrong: The Neuroscience of Our Addiction to Stories (MIT Press, 2018)
  • The Intrigues of Jennie Lee (Top Hat Books, 2020)
  • Reduction and Mechanism (Cambridge University Press, 2020)
  • In the Shadow of Enigma (Top Hat Books, 2021)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Rosenberg, Alex (October 3, 2011). The Atheist's Guide to Reality. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393083330.
  2. ^ . alexrose46.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2020. Retrieved July 16, 2020.
  3. ^ Rosenberg, Alex. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 2, 2013. Retrieved September 8, 2013.
  4. ^ Rosenberg, Alex (September 17, 2011). "Why I Am a Naturalist". The New York Times.
  5. ^ Rosenberg, Alex (November 6, 2011). "Bodies in Motion: An Exchange". The New York Times.
  6. ^ Wieseltier, Leon (December 14, 2011). "Washington Diarist: The Answers". The New Republic.
  7. ^ Kitcher, Philip (March 23, 2012). "Alex Rosenberg's 'The Atheist's Guide to Reality'". The New York Times.
  8. ^ "Is Faith in God Reasonable? | Reasonable Faith". reasonablefaith.org. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
  9. ^ Rosenberg, Alex (September 17, 2011). "Why I Am a Naturalist". The New York Times.
  10. ^ Rosenberg, Alex (November 6, 2011). "Bodies in Motion: An Exchange". The New York Times.
  11. ^ Rosenberg, Alex (July 13, 2015). "Can Moral Disputes be Resolved". The New York Times.
  12. ^ Rosenberg, Alex (July 18, 2016). "Why You Don't Know Your Own Mind". The New York Times.
  13. ^ Shackle, Samira (October 19, 2018). "Can we learn from history?". newhumanist.org.uk.
  14. ^ Leskanich, Alexandre (April 2020). "Haunting History: For a Deconstructive Approach to the Past, by Ethan Kleinberg; How History Gets Things Wrong: The Neuroscience of Our Addiction to Stories, by Alex Rosenberg". The English Historical Review. 135 (573): 435–438. doi:10.1093/ehr/ceaa009. Retrieved June 24, 2021.
  15. ^ a b Ivey, Jacob (July 17, 2020). "How History Gets Things Wrong: The Neuroscience of Our Addiction to Stories, by Alex Rosenberg, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2019". Philosophia. 49 (2): 893–896. doi:10.1007/s11406-020-00247-w. S2CID 225575757. Retrieved June 24, 2021.
  16. ^ Douma, Michael (March 2020). "Alex Rosenberg, How History Gets Things Wrong: The Neuroscience of Our Addiction to Stories". Journal of Value Inquiry. 54: 141–144. doi:10.1007/s10790-018-09679-w. S2CID 171809913. Retrieved June 24, 2021.
  17. ^ in “The Propensity Interpretation of 'Fitness'--No Interpretation Is No Substitute,” Philosophy of Science, Vol. 51, No. 2, 1984.
  18. ^ in “Rosenberg's rebellion”, Biology and Philosophy, 1990.
  19. ^ “How Molecular is Molecular Developmental Biology? A Reply to Alex Rosenberg's Reductionism Redux: Computing the Embryo”, Biology and Philosophy, 2001.
  20. ^ Philosophy of Science, vol. 66, 1999.
  21. ^ in “Two Outbreaks of Lawlessness in Recent Philosophy of Biology,” Philosophy of Science, Vol. 64, No. 4, 1996 as did Kim Sterelny and Paul E. Griffiths, Sex and Death.
  22. ^ in “The Indeterministic Character of Evolutionary Theory: No "No Hidden Variables Proof" but No Room for Determinism Either” Philosophy of Science, Vol. 63, No. 3 1996.
  23. ^ “The Pomp of Superfluous Causes: The Interpretation of Evolutionary Theory”, Philosophy of Science Vol. 74, No. 3, 2007.
  24. ^ Hands, Douglas W. (1984). "What Economics Is Not: An Economist's Response to Rosenberg". Philosophy of Science. 51 (3): 495–503. doi:10.1086/289196. S2CID 145706518.
  25. ^ including Hausman, Daniel M. (1989). "Economic Methodology in a Nutshell". Journal of Economic Perspectives. 3 (2): 115–127. doi:10.1257/jep.3.2.115.
  26. ^ Fracchia, Joseph; Lewontin, R. C. (1999). "Does Culture Evolve?". History and Theory. 38 (4): 52–78. doi:10.1111/0018-2656.00104.
  27. ^ Ognian Georgiev (August 8, 2015). "Alex Rosenberg: The Girl from Krakow is based on people who survived the war", Land of Books.
  28. ^ The Johnsville News: Duke Case: The 'listening' statement
  29. ^ Beard, Aaron (April 11, 2007). . The San Francisco Chronicle. Associated Press. Archived from the original on May 26, 2007. Retrieved April 11, 2007.

External links edit

  • Alex Rosenberg’s home page
  • Alex Rosenberg and David Levine on Economics at Bloggingheads
  • John Dupré and Alex Rosenberg on Reductionism at Philosophy TV
  • Owen Flanagan and Alex Rosenberg on Naturalism at Philosophy TV
  • Roberts, Russ (September 26, 2011). "Rosenberg on the Nature of Economics". EconTalk. Library of Economics and Liberty.
  • Alex Rosenberg on How Fodor slid down the slippery slope to antiDarwinism on YouTube
  • Alex Rosenberg on Atheist's Guide to Reality at Minnesota Atheists Archived April 15, 2013, at archive.today
  • Richard Marshall reviews "Atheist's Guide to Reality" in 3:AM Magazine
  • Alex Rosenberg on Atheist's Guide to Reality at American Free Thought
  • Alex Rosenberg, Samir Okasha, Julian Baggini on "Atheist's Guide to Reality" at Microphilosophy
  • Talking Philosophy interview with Alex Rosenberg on "Atheist's Guide to Reality" [now hosted on Rosenberg's homepage]
  • Alex Rosenberg, "Bodies-in-Motion-An Exchange."
  • Alex Rosenberg and Tyler Curtain, "What Is Economics Good For?"
  • Alex Rosenberg, "Can moral disputes be resolved?"
  • Alex Rosenberg, "Why you don't know your own mind"
  • Alex Rosenberg, an extended film interview with transcripts for the 'Why Are We Here?' documentary series
  • Alex Rosenberg “The making of a non-patriot”
  • Alex Rosenberg, "Why most narrative history is wrong"
  • Alex Rosenberg, "Can we learn from history?" July 22, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
  • Alex Rosenberg, "Humans are hardwired to tell history in stories"
  • Alex Rosenberg, "What kind of a problem is climate change?

alexander, rosenberg, this, article, about, american, philosopher, russian, american, mathematician, alexander, rosenberg, russian, architect, aleksandr, rosenberg, transnistrian, politician, aleksandr, rozenberg, people, with, similar, name, alex, rosenberg, . This article is about the American philosopher For the Russian American mathematician see Alexander L Rosenberg For the Russian architect see Aleksandr Rosenberg For the Transnistrian politician see Aleksandr Rozenberg For people with a similar name see Alex Rosenberg disambiguation Alexander Rosenberg who generally publishes as Alex is an American philosopher and novelist He is the R Taylor Cole Professor of Philosophy at Duke University well known for contributions to philosophy of biology and philosophy of economics Alexander RosenbergBorn 1946 08 31 31 August 1946 age 77 AustriaAlma materCity College of New York The Johns Hopkins UniversityOccupation s Philosopher and NovelistEmployer s Duke University University of California RiversideSyracuse University Dalhousie UniversityNotable workThe Atheist s Guide to Reality The Girl from Krakow Economics Mathematical Politics or Science of Diminishing ReturnsAwardsGuggenheim Fellowship 1982 American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship 1983 Lakatos Award 1993 Phi Beta Kappa Romanell Lecturer 2006 National Humanities Center Fellowship 2006Rosenberg describes himself as a naturalist 1 Contents 1 Education and career 2 Philosophical work 2 1 The Atheist s Guide to Reality 2 2 How History Gets Things Wrong The Neuroscience of our Addiction to Stories 2 3 Critical discussions of Rosenberg s work 3 Literary work 3 1 The Girl From Krakow 3 2 Autumn in Oxford 3 3 The Intrigues of Jennie Lee 3 4 In the Shadows of Enigma 4 Role in Duke Lacrosse controversy 5 Bibliography 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEducation and career editRosenberg graduated from Stuyvesant High School in 1963 and from the City College of New York in 1967 He received his Ph D from the Johns Hopkins University in 1971 His thesis advisor was Peter Achinstein He has taught philosophy at Dalhousie University Syracuse University University of California Riverside University of Georgia and since 2000 at Duke University He has been a visiting professor at the University of Minnesota the University of California Santa Cruz Oxford University the Australian National University and Bristol University 2 third party source needed He was a Guggenheim fellow in 1981 an American Council of Learned Societies fellow in 1983 won the Lakatos Award in 1993 and was the National Phi Beta Kappa Romanell Lecturer in 2006 3 In 2006 2007 he was a fellow of the National Humanities Center His graduate students have included Samir Okasha Grant Ramsey Frederic Bouchard Rachel Powell Nita A Farahany and Marion Hourdequin He has worked closely with Lee McIntyre Rosenberg is married to Duke University professor Martha Ellen Reeves Rosenberg is an atheist and a metaphysical naturalist 4 5 Philosophical work editRosenberg s early work focused on the philosophy of social science and especially the philosophy of economics His doctoral dissertation published as Microeconomic Laws in 1976 was the first treatment of the nature of economics by a contemporary philosopher of science Over the period of the next decade he became increasingly skeptical about neoclassical economics as an empirical theory He later shifted to work on issues in the philosophy of science that are raised by biology He became especially interested in the relationship between molecular biology and other parts of biology Rosenberg introduced the concept of supervenience to the treatment of intertheoretical relations in biology soon after Donald Davidson began to exploit Richard Hare s notion in the philosophy of psychology Rosenberg is among the few biologists and fewer philosophers of science who reject the consensus view that combines physicalism with antireductionism see his 2010 on line debate with John Dupre at Philosophy TV Rosenberg also coauthored an influential book on David Hume with Tom Beauchamp Hume and the Problem of Causation arguing that Hume was not a skeptic about induction but an opponent of rationalist theories of inductive inference The Atheist s Guide to Reality edit Alex Rosenberg asserts the radical opinion that there is no enduring self on atheism The existence of the self he says is an illusion 1 In 2011 Rosenberg published a defense of what he called Scientism the claim that the persistent questions people ask about the nature of reality the purpose of things the foundations of value and morality the way the mind works the basis of personal identity and the course of human history could all be answered by the resources of science This book was attacked on the front cover of The New Republic by Leon Wieseltier as The worst book of the year 6 Leon Wiseltier s claim in turn was critiqued as exaggeration by Philip Kitcher in The New York Times Book Review 7 On February 1 2013 Rosenberg debated Christian apologist William Lane Craig on the question Is Faith in God Reasonable during which some of the arguments of the book were discussed 8 Rosenberg has contributed articles to The New York Times Op Ed series The Stone on naturalism science and the humanities and meta ethics and the mind s powers to understand itself by introspection that arise from the views he advanced in The Atheist s Guide to Reality 9 10 11 12 How History Gets Things Wrong The Neuroscience of our Addiction to Stories edit In 2018 Rosenberg published How History Gets Things Wrong The Neuroscience of our Addiction to Stories This work develops the eliminative materialism of The Atheist s Guide to Reality applying it to the role the theory of mind plays in history and other forms of story telling Rosenberg argues that the work of Nobel Prize winners Eric Kandel John O Keefe and May Britt Moser along with Edvard Moser reveals that the theory of mind employed in every day life and narrative history has no basis in the organization of the brain Evidence from evolutionary anthropology child psychology medical diagnosis and neural imaging reveals it is an innate or almost innate tool that arose in Hominini evolution to foster collaboration among small numbers of individuals in immediate contact over the near future but whose predictive weakness beyond this domain reveals its explanatory emptiness 13 Critical discussions of Rosenberg s work edit In How History Gets Things Wrong Rosenberg claims people never really think about anything Therefore it is simply an illusion that people possess intentional states He admits that therefore the apparently derived intentionality of inscriptions and speech cannot be derived from the original intentionality of thought Rosenberg has not provided an account of the intentionality of speech and writing and may in fact deny that they bear any either In The Atheist s Guide to Reality he states that its sentences are tools for moving information into the reader s brain triggering new neural firings However critics note that doing so cannot be Rosenberg s purpose in writing the book because on his position no one really has any purposes While attracting some interest for its arguments about the philosophy of mind Rosenberg s critique of narrative history in How History Gets Things Wrong has attracted criticism in academic reviews Reviewers including Alexandre Leskanich in The English Historical Review 14 Jacob Ivey in Philosophia 15 and Michael Douma in Journal of Value Inquiry 16 faulted the book for failing to engage with literature in the philosophy of history and narratology and for oversimplified treatment of historical examples Ivey also argued that Rosenberg s call for a Darwinian approach to historical explanation failed to acknowledge the limitations of past attempts to apply this approach and the complicated relationship in practice between Darwinian and humanistic methods in history 15 Rosenberg s treatment of fitness as a supervenient property which is an undefined concept in the theory of natural selection is criticized by Brandon and Beatty 17 His original development of how the supervenience of Mendelian concepts blocks traditional derivational reduction was examined critically by C Kenneth Waters 18 His later account of reduction in developmental biology was criticized by Gunter Wagner 19 Elliott Sober s Multiple realization arguments against reductionism 20 reflects a shift towards Rosenberg s critique of anti reductionist arguments of Putnam s and Fodor s Sober has also challenged Rosenberg s view that the principle of natural selection is the only biological law 21 The explanatory role of the principle of natural selection and the nature of evolutionary probabilities defended by Rosenberg were subject to counter arguments by Brandon 22 and later by Denis Walsh 23 Rosenberg s account of the nature of genetic drift and the role of probability in the theory of natural selection draws on significant parallels between the principle of natural selection and the second law of thermodynamics In the philosophy of social science Rosenberg s more skeptical views about microeconomics were challenged first by Wade Hands 24 and later by Daniel Hausman in several books and articles 25 The financial crisis of 2007 08 resulted in renewed attention to Rosenberg s skeptical views about microeconomics citation needed Biologist Richard Lewontin and historian Joseph Fracchia express skepticism about Rosenberg s claim that functional explanations in social science require Darwinian underlying mechanisms 26 Literary work editThe Girl From Krakow edit Rosenberg s 2015 novel The Girl From Krakow Lake Union Publishing is a narrative about a young woman named Rita Feuerstahl from 1935 to 1947 mainly focusing on her struggles to survive in Nazi occupied Poland and later in Germany under a false identity A secondary plot involves her lover s experiences in France and Spain during its Civil War in the 1930s and then in Moscow during the war Rosenberg has acknowledged that the novel is based on the wartime experiences of people he knew He has also admitted the incongruity of writing a narrative given his attack on the form in The Atheist s Guide to Reality He has said that The Girl from Krakow began as an attempt to put some of the difficult arguments of The Atheist s Guide to Reality into a form easier to grasp 27 The Girl From Krakow has been translated into Italian Hungarian Polish Hebrew and Croatian Autumn in Oxford edit In 2016 Rosenberg s second novel Autumn in Oxford appeared also published by Lake Union Publishing An afterword identifies the large number of real persons academics civil rights advocates military officers politicians and intelligence agents from the 1940s and 50s who figure in the narrative The Intrigues of Jennie Lee edit in 2020 Rosenberg s third novel was published by Top Hat Books An afterword identities the large number of public figures from Great Britain in the 30s who figure in the novel including Jennie Lee Aneurin Bevan Elizabeth Bowes Lyon the subsequent centenarian Queen Mother Lady Astor Ellen Wilkinson Ramsay MacDonald and Oswald Mosley In the Shadows of Enigma edit Rosenberg s fourth historical novel a sequel to The Girl from Krakow was published in 2021 also by Top Hat Books This novel offers an explanation of why the Western Allies the US Great Britain Canada New Zealand and Australia kept the breaking of the German Enigma code secret for 30 years after the end of the Second World War Four characters from his earlier novel figure in the sequel Rita Feuerstahl her partner Gil Romero her son Stefan and a former Gestapo detective still working for the German Federal Republic Otto Schulke Role in Duke Lacrosse controversy editDuring the 2006 Duke University lacrosse case Rosenberg was one of the so called Group of 88 professors who shortly after members of the university s lacrosse team were accused of rape signed a controversial letter attacking the players and thanking protesters for making a collective noise on what happened to this young woman 28 The following year North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper a Democrat dropped all charges and declared the accused players innocent stating that the players were victims of a tragic rush to accuse 29 Bibliography editMicroeconomic Laws A Philosophical Analysis University of Pittsburgh Press 1976 Sociobiology and the Preemption of Social Science Johns Hopkins University Press 1980 Basil Blackwell 1981 Hume and the Problem of Causation Oxford University Press 1981 with T L Beauchamp The Structure of Biological Science Cambridge University Press 1985 Philosophy of Social Science Clarendon Press Oxford and Westview Press 1988 fifth Edition 2015 translation in Greek Economics Mathematical Politics or Science of Diminishing Returns University of Chicago Press 1992 Instrumental Biology or the Disunity of Science University of Chicago Press 1994 Darwinism in Philosophy Social Science and Policy Cambridge University Press 2000 Philosophy of Science A Contemporary Approach Routledge 2000 third edition 2011 translations in Arabic Chinese Japanese Portuguese and Turkish Darwinian Reductionism or How to Stop Worrying and Love Molecular Biology University of Chicago Press 2006 The Philosophy of Biology A Contemporary Introduction Routledge 2007 with Daniel McShea Philosophy of Biology An Anthology Wiley Blackwell 2009 with Robert Arp The Atheist s Guide to Reality W W Norton amp Company 2011 The Girl From Krakow Lake Union 2015 translations in Polish Italian Hebrew Hungarian and Croatian Autumn in Oxford Lake Union 2016 The Routledge Companion to the Philosophy of Social Science Routledge 2017 with Lee McIntyre How History Gets Things Wrong The Neuroscience of Our Addiction to Stories MIT Press 2018 The Intrigues of Jennie Lee Top Hat Books 2020 Reduction and Mechanism Cambridge University Press 2020 In the Shadow of Enigma Top Hat Books 2021 See also editAmerican philosophy List of American philosophers List of City College of New York people List of Stuyvesant High School people Antireductionism Philosophy and economics Philosophy of Biology Reductionism Lakatos Award Guggenheim FellowsReferences edit a b Rosenberg Alex October 3 2011 The Atheist s Guide to Reality W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0393083330 Alexander Rosenberg alexrose46 com Archived from the original on July 16 2020 Retrieved July 16 2020 Rosenberg Alex C V PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 2 2013 Retrieved September 8 2013 Rosenberg Alex September 17 2011 Why I Am a Naturalist The New York Times Rosenberg Alex November 6 2011 Bodies in Motion An Exchange The New York Times Wieseltier Leon December 14 2011 Washington Diarist The Answers The New Republic Kitcher Philip March 23 2012 Alex Rosenberg s The Atheist s Guide to Reality The New York Times Is Faith in God Reasonable Reasonable Faith reasonablefaith org Retrieved March 9 2019 Rosenberg Alex September 17 2011 Why I Am a Naturalist The New York Times Rosenberg Alex November 6 2011 Bodies in Motion An Exchange The New York Times Rosenberg Alex July 13 2015 Can Moral Disputes be Resolved The New York Times Rosenberg Alex July 18 2016 Why You Don t Know Your Own Mind The New York Times Shackle Samira October 19 2018 Can we learn from history newhumanist org uk Leskanich Alexandre April 2020 Haunting History For a Deconstructive Approach to the Past by Ethan Kleinberg How History Gets Things Wrong The Neuroscience of Our Addiction to Stories by Alex Rosenberg The English Historical Review 135 573 435 438 doi 10 1093 ehr ceaa009 Retrieved June 24 2021 a b Ivey Jacob July 17 2020 How History Gets Things Wrong The Neuroscience of Our Addiction to Stories by Alex Rosenberg Cambridge MA MIT Press 2019 Philosophia 49 2 893 896 doi 10 1007 s11406 020 00247 w S2CID 225575757 Retrieved June 24 2021 Douma Michael March 2020 Alex Rosenberg How History Gets Things Wrong The Neuroscience of Our Addiction to Stories Journal of Value Inquiry 54 141 144 doi 10 1007 s10790 018 09679 w S2CID 171809913 Retrieved June 24 2021 in The Propensity Interpretation of Fitness No Interpretation Is No Substitute Philosophy of Science Vol 51 No 2 1984 in Rosenberg s rebellion Biology and Philosophy 1990 How Molecular is Molecular Developmental Biology A Reply to Alex Rosenberg s Reductionism Redux Computing the Embryo Biology and Philosophy 2001 Philosophy of Science vol 66 1999 in Two Outbreaks of Lawlessness in Recent Philosophy of Biology Philosophy of Science Vol 64 No 4 1996 as did Kim Sterelny and Paul E Griffiths Sex and Death in The Indeterministic Character of Evolutionary Theory No No Hidden Variables Proof but No Room for Determinism Either Philosophy of Science Vol 63 No 3 1996 The Pomp of Superfluous Causes The Interpretation of Evolutionary Theory Philosophy of Science Vol 74 No 3 2007 Hands Douglas W 1984 What Economics Is Not An Economist s Response to Rosenberg Philosophy of Science 51 3 495 503 doi 10 1086 289196 S2CID 145706518 including Hausman Daniel M 1989 Economic Methodology in a Nutshell Journal of Economic Perspectives 3 2 115 127 doi 10 1257 jep 3 2 115 Fracchia Joseph Lewontin R C 1999 Does Culture Evolve History and Theory 38 4 52 78 doi 10 1111 0018 2656 00104 Ognian Georgiev August 8 2015 Alex Rosenberg The Girl from Krakow is based on people who survived the war Land of Books The Johnsville News Duke Case The listening statement Beard Aaron April 11 2007 Prosecutors Drop Charges in Duke Case The San Francisco Chronicle Associated Press Archived from the original on May 26 2007 Retrieved April 11 2007 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Alexander Rosenberg Alex Rosenberg s home page Alex Rosenberg and David Levine on Economics at Bloggingheads John Dupre and Alex Rosenberg on Reductionism at Philosophy TV Owen Flanagan and Alex Rosenberg on Naturalism at Philosophy TV The Disenchanted Naturalist s Guide to Reality Roberts Russ September 26 2011 Rosenberg on the Nature of Economics EconTalk Library of Economics and Liberty Alex Rosenberg on How Fodor slid down the slippery slope to antiDarwinism on YouTube Alex Rosenberg on Atheist s Guide to Reality at Minnesota Atheists Archived April 15 2013 at archive today Richard Marshall reviews Atheist s Guide to Reality in 3 AM Magazine Alex Rosenberg on Atheist s Guide to Reality at American Free Thought Alex Rosenberg Samir Okasha Julian Baggini on Atheist s Guide to Reality at Microphilosophy Talking Philosophy interview with Alex Rosenberg on Atheist s Guide to Reality now hosted on Rosenberg s homepage Alex Rosenberg Bodies in Motion An Exchange Alex Rosenberg and Tyler Curtain What Is Economics Good For Alex Rosenberg Can moral disputes be resolved Alex Rosenberg Why you don t know your own mind Alex Rosenberg an extended film interview with transcripts for the Why Are We Here documentary series Alex Rosenberg The making of a non patriot Alex Rosenberg Why most narrative history is wrong Alex Rosenberg Can we learn from history Archived July 22 2020 at the Wayback Machine Alex Rosenberg Humans are hardwired to tell history in stories Alex Rosenberg What kind of a problem is climate change Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander Rosenberg amp oldid 1198318684, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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