Kagaku tetsugaku
Online ISSN : 1883-6461
Print ISSN : 0289-3428
ISSN-L : 0289-3428
Volume 56, Issue 1
Displaying 1-13 of 13 articles from this issue
Articles
  • Akinori Hayashi
    2023 Volume 56 Issue 1 Pages 1-1-
    Published: November 15, 2023
    Released on J-STAGE: November 15, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

        The later Wittgenstein's philosophy is often characterized as therapeutic. According to the idea of therapeutic philosophy, Wittgenstein never intends to propound a theory of philosophy; rather he attempts to show us that philosophical problems are merely pseudo-problems generated by philosophical confusions.
        The aim of this paper is to clarify what Wittgenstein's therapeutic philosophy is. In order to do so, I shall investigate the methodological similarities between Wittgenstein and Freud. I attempt to show that the analysis of Freud's method of psychoanalysis gives us various insights on what Wittgenstein's therapeutic philosophy is.

    Download PDF (326K)
  • Through the Interface Problem
    Kodai Sato
    2023 Volume 56 Issue 1 Pages 23-
    Published: November 15, 2023
    Released on J-STAGE: November 15, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

        This paper is concerned with the interface problem: An action is guided both by an intention, whose format is propositional, and a motor representation, whose format is non-propositional. How can an intention and a motor representation interlock, while the formats of intention and motor representation are different? In this paper, first, I review the existing solutions to this problem, and point out the defects in them. Then, I propose a new solution, namely a conceptualistic solution, according to which both the format of executable action concept which constitutes an intention and the format of motor representation are not only non-propositional but also conceptual.

    Download PDF (251K)
  • Kunimasa Sato
    2023 Volume 56 Issue 1 Pages 37-
    Published: November 15, 2023
    Released on J-STAGE: November 15, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

        This paper proposes a transformative virtue that counteracts testimonial injustice by responding to two critiques of the virtue of testimonial justice. First, I demonstrate that self-reflection can function in more varied ways than the direct detection of oneʼs own prejudices, as previously assumed in the literature. Hence, self-reflection can holistically be effective in neutralizing the influence of oneʼs prejudices on oneʼs beliefs. Second, I propose a virtue that encourages epistemic agents to be epistemically acute enough to experience dissonance between perceiving a particular testifier (who is talking in person) as trustworthy and having biased beliefs about the testifierʼs trustworthiness: transformative virtue. Third, I argue that the development of a proper indirect contact theory with relevant epistemic practices can offer epistemic environments that facilitate peopleʼs critical imagination to cultivate a transformative virtue, considering the risk of victimized epistemic agentsʼ vulnerability.

    Download PDF (361K)
Research Report Article
Critical Notices
  • Commentaries on Hajime Inaba’s The Making of Statistical Mechanics
    Masaki Harada
    2023 Volume 56 Issue 1 Pages 83-
    Published: November 15, 2023
    Released on J-STAGE: November 15, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

        This paper aims at understanding Hajime Inaba's The Making of Statistical Mechanics, which treats the history of statistical mechanics from Helmholtz to von Neumann. While this book uses some physical concepts and symbols variously according to historical contexts, this paper gives its interpretation from the point of view of modern physics, supported by some contemporary manuals of thermodynamics, statistical mechanics and cavity quantum electrodynamics (CQED). This contemporary interpretation may be helpful for understanding of Inabaʼs historical book. This paper also gives useful materials for philosophical reflections on the relation between thermodynamics, i.e. macrophysics, and statistical mechanics, i.e. microphysics, and also on the function of CQED as opening a way to mesophysics.

    Download PDF (1194K)
  • A Critical Review of Kei Yoshida’s Philosophy of the Social Sciences: An Introduction
    Yuya Shimizu, Yuta Kobayashi
    2023 Volume 56 Issue 1 Pages 111-
    Published: November 15, 2023
    Released on J-STAGE: November 15, 2023
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

        Kei Yoshida's recent book Philosophy of the Social Sciences: An Introduction is the first introductory textbook on the philosophy of the social sciences written in Japanese. It concisely expounds on a wide range of topics in the discipline, while its explication of those topics is not impartial or neutral as the author himself says. This paper gives a critical review of the book. The first half of it briefly overviews and assesses the book as a whole. The latter half of the paper reconstructs the gist of the author's exposition of the naturalism/interpretivism debate and criticizes it.

    Download PDF (294K)
Program of the 55th Annual Meeting (2022)
Summaries of the Symposium and Workshops
feedback
Top