
Rethinking Emergence
Oxford University Press
Will be published approx. on 17. March 2026
Book
Hardback
416 pages
978-0-19-286433-8 (ISBN)
Description
There has been a surge of recent interest in a family of phenomena that may broadly be described as emergent. This includes much lively and ongoing debate concerning whether any kind of emergence can be accommodated within a functionalist framework, whether emergence occurs at a time or over time, the role of context and constraint in emergence, and apparent downward causation in scientific case studies, as well as how ancient concepts of fusion, form, and transformation connect with contemporary accounts of emergence.
Rethinking Emergence brings together historians of philosophy, philosophers of science, and metaphysicians in conversation to address these central questions and to delve into as-yet unexplored points of contact among their varied perspectives.
Rethinking Emergence brings together historians of philosophy, philosophers of science, and metaphysicians in conversation to address these central questions and to delve into as-yet unexplored points of contact among their varied perspectives.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
10
Dimensions
Height: 239 mm
Width: 164 mm
Thickness: 30 mm
Weight
771 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-286433-8 (9780192864338)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
David Yates received his PhD from King's College London in 2006. He was a lecturer at KCL and Sheffield, and a postdoc at the Institute of Philosophy, KCL, and at Oxford University, before arriving in Lisbon as an FCT Researcher funded by the Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia. He specializes in metaphysics of science and publishes on powers, causation, emergence, realization and related topics at the intersection of metaphysics and the philosophies of science and mind. He is currently a lecturer at the University of Lisbon and a member of the LanCog research group.
Amanda Bryant is an Adjunct Assistant Professor with the Department of Philosophy at the University of Calgary. Her philosophical work focuses on methodological naturalism and related views such as scientism and empiricism, especially as they relate to metaphysics. She received her PhD in Philosophy from the City University of New York (CUNY) Graduate Center in 2017.
Amanda Bryant is an Adjunct Assistant Professor with the Department of Philosophy at the University of Calgary. Her philosophical work focuses on methodological naturalism and related views such as scientism and empiricism, especially as they relate to metaphysics. She received her PhD in Philosophy from the City University of New York (CUNY) Graduate Center in 2017.
Volume editor
Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, Faculty of LettersAssistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Letters, University of Lisbon
Adjunct Assistant Professor, Department of PhilosophyAdjunct Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, University of Calgary
Content
- 1: David Yates: Must Ontological Emergence be Spooky?
- Part I. Emergence in the Natural Sciences
- 2: Michael Silberstein: Killing the Hard Problem: Contextual Emergence, Neutral Monism, and the Radical Empiricist Science of Consciousness
- 3: Barbara Drossel: Contextual Emergence in Physics
- 4: Carl Gillett: Scientific Emergentism through an Integrative Pluralist Lens: Exploring Scientific Model Creation and the Role of Endogenous Metaphysics
- 5: Robin Findlay Hendry and Thomas Rossetter: Emergence and Reduction: Where Is the Evidence?
- 6: Vanessa Seifert: Reframing the Reduction-Emergence Debate around Chemistry
- Part II. Hylomorphic Emergence
- 7: Anna Marmodoro: The Emergence of Emergence
- 8: William Jaworski: Hylomorphic Emergence
- 9: Daniel D. De Haan: Staunch Hylomorphism and its Emergentist Credentials: A Comparison of Uniformism, Pluriformism, and Machretic Emergentism
- 10: Anne Siebels Peterson: Aristotle's Hylomorphic Anti-Emergence
- 11: David Yates: Hylomorphism, or Something Near Enough
- Part III. Emergence and Levels
- 12: Paul Humphreys: Diachronic Emergence and the Collapse Problem
- 13: Jessica Wilson: On the Notion of Diachronic Emergence
- 14: Umut Baysan: Emergence and Levels of Fundamentality
- 15: Alastair Wilson: Metaphysical Emergence as Higher-Level Naturalness