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Geoffrey C. Bowker [17]Mark Bowker [14]John Bowker [14]Geoffrey Bowker [7]
J. W. Bowker [6]Matthew H. Bowker [4]J. M. Bowker [3]Geof Bowker [2]

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  1. Saying a bundle: meaning, intention, and underdetermination.Mark Bowker - 2019 - Synthese 196 (10):4229-4252.
    People often speak loosely, uttering sentences that are plainly false on their most strict interpretation. In understanding such speakers, we face a problem of underdetermination: there is often no unique interpretation that captures what they meant. Focusing on the case of incomplete definite descriptions, this paper suggests that speakers often mean bundles of propositions. When a speaker means a bundle, their audience can know what they mean by deriving any one of its members. Rather than posing a problem for the (...)
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  2.  91
    Ineliminable underdetermination and context-shifting arguments.Mark Bowker - 2022 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 65 (2):215-236.
    ABSTRACT The truth-conditions of utterances are often underdetermined by the meaning of the sentence uttered, as suggested by the observation that the same sentence has different intuitive truth-values in different contexts. The intuitive difference is usually explained by assigning different truth-conditions to different utterances. This paper poses a problem for explanations of this kind: These truth-conditions, if they exist, are epistemically inaccessible. I suggest instead that truth-conditional underdetermination is ineliminable and these utterances have no truth-conditions. Intuitive truth-values are explained by (...)
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  3.  52
    Unsupervised by any other name: Hidden layers of knowledge production in artificial intelligence on social media.Geoffrey C. Bowker & Anja Bechmann - 2019 - Big Data and Society 6 (1).
    Artificial Intelligence in the form of different machine learning models is applied to Big Data as a way to turn data into valuable knowledge. The rhetoric is that ensuing predictions work well—with a high degree of autonomy and automation. We argue that we need to analyze the process of applying machine learning in depth and highlight at what point human knowledge production takes place in seemingly autonomous work. This article reintroduces classification theory as an important framework for understanding such seemingly (...)
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  4. A Problem for Generic Generalisations in Scientific Communication.Mark Bowker - 2023 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 40 (1):123-132.
    Generic generalisations like ‘Opioids are highly addictive’ are very useful in scientific communication, but they can often be interpreted in many different ways. Although this is not a problem when all interpretations provide the same answer to the question under discussion, a problem arises when a generic generalisation is used to answer a question other than that originally intended. In such cases, some interpretations of the generalisation might answer the question in a way that the original speaker would not endorse. (...)
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  5. Shifting Perspective on Indexicals.Mark Bowker - 2022 - Pragmatics 32 (4):518-536.
    The debate over the meanings of indexical expressions has relied heavily on the method of counterexamples. This paper challenges that method by showing that purported counterexamples can often be explained away by appeal to perspective shifts. For these counterexamples to establish anything about indexical reference, we must identify the conditions under which theorists can legitimately appeal to perspective shifts. Some tests for semantic content are considered and it is argued that none of them can tell us when appeal to perspective (...)
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  6. Truth in Fiction, Underdetermination, and the Experience of Actuality.Mark Bowker - 2021 - British Journal of Aesthetics 61 (4):437-454.
    It seems true to say that Sherlock Holmes is a detective, despite there being no Sherlock Holmes. When asked to explain this fact, philosophers of language often opt for some version of Lewis’s view that sentences like ‘Sherlock Holmes is a detective’ may be taken as abbreviations for sentences prefixed with ‘In the Sherlock Holmes stories …’. I present two problems for this view. First, I provide reason to deny that these sentences are abbreviations. In short, these sentences have aesthetic (...)
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  7.  32
    Prospecting (in) the data sciences.Stephen C. Slota, Andrew S. Hoffman, David Ribes & Geoffrey C. Bowker - 2020 - Big Data and Society 7 (1).
    Data science is characterized by engaging heterogeneous data to tackle real world questions and problems. But data science has no data of its own and must seek it within real world domains. We call this search for data “prospecting” and argue that the dynamics of prospecting are pervasive in, even characteristic of, data science. Prospecting aims to render the data, knowledge, expertise, and practices of worldly domains available and tractable to data science method and epistemology. Prospecting precedes data synthesis, analysis, (...)
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  8. A serpent in the garden?Mark Bowker - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
    This paper presents Elmar Unnsteinsson’s novel theory of Edenic Intentionalism, on which a speaker cannot refer to an object when the speaker is relevantly confused about its identity. A challenge to the theory is presented and several possible responses considered. The challenge is this: According to Edenic Intentionalism, reference often fails even when speakers seem to refer successfully. Elmar therefore supplements Edenic Intentionalism with an explanation of how communication can succeed without reference. If such an explanation is available, it isn’t (...)
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  9.  97
    Underdetermination, domain restriction, and theory choice.Mark Bowker - 2018 - Mind and Language 34 (2):205-220.
    It is often possible to know what a speaker intends to communicate without knowing what they intend to say. In such cases, speakers need not intend to say anything at all. Stanley and Szabó's influential survey of possible analysis of quantifier domain restriction is, therefore, incomplete and the arguments made by Clapp and Buchanan against Truth Conditional Compositionality and propositional speaker-meaning are flawed. Two theories should not always be viewed as incompatible when they associate the same utterance with different propositions, (...)
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  10.  11
    Making an Issue out of a Standard: Storytelling Practices in a Scientific Community.Geoffrey C. Bowker, Karen S. Baker, David Ribes & Florence Millerand - 2013 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 38 (1):7-43.
    The article focuses on stories and storytelling practices as explanatory resources in standardization processes. It draws upon an ethnographic study of the development of a technical standard for data sharing in an ecological research community, where participants struggle to articulate the difficulties encountered in implementing the standard. Building from C. Wright Mills’ classic distinction between private troubles and public issues, the authors follow the development of a story as it comes to assist in transforming individual troubles in standard implementation into (...)
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  11.  60
    Resuscitating the elderly: what do the patients want?P. Bruce-Jones, H. Roberts, L. Bowker & V. Cooney - 1996 - Journal of Medical Ethics 22 (3):154-159.
    OBJECTIVES: To study the resuscitation preferences, choice of decision-maker, views on the seeking of patients' wishes and determinants of these of elderly hospital in-patients. DESIGN: Questionnaire administered on admission and prior to discharge. SETTING: Two acute geriatric medicine units (Southampton and Poole). PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred and fourteen consecutive consenting mentally competent patients admitted to hospital as emergencies. RESULTS: Resuscitation was wanted by 60%, particularly married and functionally independent patients and those who had not already considered it. Not wanted resuscitation was (...)
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  12.  27
    Problems of Suffering in Religions of the World.Jacob Neusner & John Bowker - 1971 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 91 (4):531.
  13.  21
    Albert Camus and the Political Philosophy of the Absurd: Ambivalence, Resistance, and Creativity.Matthew H. Bowker - 2013 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    In Albert Camus and the Political Philosophy of the Absurd: Ambivalence, Resistance, and Creativity, Matthew H. Bowker takes an interdisciplinary approach to Albert Camus’ political philosophy by reading absurdity itself as a metaphor for the psychosocial dynamics of ambivalence, resistance, integration, and creativity. Decoupling absurdity from its ontological aspirations and focusing instead on its psychological and phenomenal contours, Bowker discovers an absurdist foundation for ethical and political practice.
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  14. How things (actor-net) work: Classification, magic and the ubiquity of standards.Geoffrey C. Bowker & Susan Leigh Star - 1996 - Philosophia: tidsskrift for filosofi 25 (3-4):195-220.
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  15.  25
    Why Religions Matter.John Bowker - 2015 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    What are religions? Why is it important to understand them? One answer is that religions and religious believers are extremely bad news: they are deeply involved in conflicts around the globe; they harm people of whom they disapprove; and they often seem irrational. Another answer claims that they are in fact extremely good news: religious beliefs and practices are universal and so fundamental in human nature that they have led us to great discoveries in our explorations of the cosmos and (...)
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  16. Ethnic Variation in Environmental Belief and Behavior: An Examination of the New Ecological Paradigm in Social Psychological Context.C. Y. Johnson, J. M. Bowker & H. K. Cordell - 2004 - Environment and Behavior 36 (2).
     
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  17.  58
    Genes, mind and culture.John Maddox, Edward O. Wilson, Anthony Quintan, John Turner & John Bowker - 1984 - Zygon 19 (2):213-232.
    The 1981 book Genes, Mind and Culture by Edward O. Wilson and Charles J. Lumsden attempts to offer a comprehensive theory of the linkage between biological and cultural evolution. In the following 21 May 1982 radio broadcast, produced by Julian Brown under the auspices of the British Broadcasting Corporation, Wilson is joined by a philosopher, a geneticist, and a religion scholar in a discussion of “gene culture co‐evolution” and of other issues raised by sociobiology. The discussion is introduced and chaired (...)
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  18. Rich Situated Attitudes.Kristina Liefke & Mark Bowker - 2017 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science 10247:45-61.
    We outline a novel theory of natural language meaning, Rich Situated Semantics [RSS], on which the content of sentential utterances is semantically rich and informationally situated. In virtue of its situatedness, an utterance’s rich situated content varies with the informational situation of the cognitive agent interpreting the utterance. In virtue of its richness, this content contains information beyond the utterance’s lexically encoded information. The agent-dependence of rich situated content solves a number of problems in semantics and the philosophy of language (...)
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  19. Truth and reality in social constructivism.Howard Sankey & Geoffrey Bowker - 1993/1994 - Arena Journal 2:233-252.
    This is a co-authored dialogue which explores epistemological and metaphysical questions raised by a social constructivist approach to science.
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  20.  57
    Keeping context in mind: a non-semantic explanation of apparent context-sensitivity.Mark Bowker - 2023 - Linguistics and Philosophy 47 (1):191-209.
    Arguments for context-sensitivity are often based on judgments about the truth values of sentences: a sentence seems true in one context and false in another, so it is argued that the truth conditions of the sentence shift between these contexts. Such arguments rely on the assumption that our judgments reflect the actual truth values of sentences in context. Here, I present a non-semantic explanation of these judgments. In short, our judgments about the truth values of sentences are driven by heuristics (...)
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  21.  94
    Introducing new work on indeterminacy and underdetermination.Mark Bowker - 2022 - Synthese 200 (6):1-14.
  22.  11
    Boundary objects and beyond: working with Leigh Star.Geoffrey C. Bowker, Stefan Timmermans, Adele E. Clarke & Ellen Balka (eds.) - 2015 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    The multifaceted work of the late Susan Leigh Star is explored through a selection of her writings and essays by friends and colleagues. Susan Leigh Star (1954–2010) was one of the most influential science studies scholars of the last several decades. In her work, Star highlighted the messy practices of discovering science, asking hard questions about the marginalizing as well as the liberating powers of science and technology. In the landmark work Sorting Things Out, Star and Geoffrey Bowker revealed the (...)
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  23.  60
    Instrumentalizing the truth of practice.Katie Vann & Geoffrey C. Bowker - 2001 - Social Epistemology 15 (3):247-262.
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  24.  40
    The aeolian Harp: Sociobiology and human judgment.J. W. Bowker - 1980 - Zygon 15 (3):307-333.
  25.  47
    The burning fuse: The unacceptable face of religion.J. W. Bowker - 1986 - Zygon 21 (4):415-438.
    For pragmatic reasons more attention should be devoted to the serious study of religion. Although religions inspire great achievements of human creativity, it is important to understand them because they also promote violence and warfare. One can understand the unacceptable face of religion when one sees why religions matter to those who belong to them; why they are bound to be conservative, especially in times of stress; and why, therefore, believers become very passionate about defending the boundaries of their particular (...)
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  26. The artisans of desire: The mediation of advertising between product and consumer.Antoine Hennion, Cecile Meadel & Geoffrey Bowker - 1989 - Sociological Theory 7 (2):191-209.
  27.  94
    Scientific Rationality versus Social Construction.Geoffrey Bowker & Howard Sankey - 1994 - Cogito 8 (1):38-45.
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  28.  21
    Cognitive Context-Sensitivity.Mark Bowker - 2021 - Proceedings of the 2021 Workshop on Context: Semantics, Pragmatics and Cognition.
    This paper introduces a notion of cognitive context-sensitivity, in contrast with linguistic context-sensitivity. When a sentence is cognitively contextsensitive, the truth-value assigned to the sentence can vary with context, without any corresponding shift in the interpretation of the terms or structure of the sentence. The notion will be deployed to explain the context-sensitivity of generic generalizations.
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  29.  82
    CPR decision-making by elderly patients.M. Bacon, K. Stewart & L. Bowker - 1998 - Journal of Medical Ethics 24 (2):134-134.
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  30.  42
    Art, theology, and religious systems: A case for the inquisition?J. W. Bowker - 1978 - Zygon 13 (4):313-332.
  31.  60
    Cosmology, religion, and society.J. W. Bowker - 1990 - Zygon 25 (1):7-23.
    . It is a mistake to assume that science and religion are competing accounts of the same subject matter, so that either science supersedes religion or religion anticipates science. Using the question of cosmic origins as an example, I argue that the basic task of religion is not the scientific one of establishing the most accurate acccunt of the origin of the universe. Rather, as illustrated from Jewish, Hindu, Chinese, and Buddhist thought, religion uses a variety of cosmologies to help (...)
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  32.  8
    D.W. Winnicott and political theory: recentering the subject.Matthew H. Bowker & Amy Buzby (eds.) - 2017 - New York, NY: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    In this volume, the work of British psychoanalyst D.W. Winnicott is set in conversation with some of today’s most talented psychodynamically-sensitive political thinkers. The editors and contributors demonstrate that Winnicott’s thought contains underappreciated political insights, discoverable in his reflections on the nature of the maturational process, and useful in working through difficult impasses confronting contemporary political theorists. Specifically, Winnicott’s psychoanalytic theory and practice offer a framework by which the political subject, destabilized and disrupted in much postmodern and contemporary thinking, may (...)
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  33.  7
    Eastern Europe in revolution.Mike Bowker - 1994 - History of European Ideas 18 (6):978-979.
  34.  14
    'Exculpatory Language' in Consent Forms.W. F. Bowker - 1982 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 4 (3):9.
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  35.  14
    Estimating the Economic Value of Lethal Versus Nonlethal Deer Control in Suburban Communities.J. Michael Bowker, David H. Newman, Robert J. Warren & David W. Henderson - 2003 - Society and Natural Resources 16.
    Negative people/wildlife interaction has raised public interest in wildlife population control. We present a contingent valuation study of alternative deer control measures considered for Hilton Head Island, SC. Lethal control usig sharpshooters and nonlethal immuno-contraception techniques are evaluated. A mail-back survey was used to collect resident willingness-to-pay information for reduced deer densities and consequent property damage. Residents are unwilling to spend more for the nonlethal alternative. The estimated WTP appears theoretically consistent as increasing levels of abatement for both lethal and (...)
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  36.  13
    God: A Very Short Introduction.John Bowker - 2014 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press UK.
    Who or what is God? How do different religions interpret God's existence? How can we know God? Many people believe in God; not just throughout history but also in the present day. But who or what is it they believe in? Many different and sometimes conflicting answers have been suggested to this question. This Very Short Introduction explores some of the answers provided by philosophers, poets, and theologians, and considers why some people believe in God and others do not. John (...)
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  37. How Things (Actor-Net) work.G. Bowker & S. L. Star - forthcoming - Philosophia.
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  38.  48
    Indeterminacy and Underdetermination.Mark Bowker & Maria Baghramian (eds.) - 2022
    From Aristotle’s puzzle about the indeterminacy of future contingents to Duhem and Quine’s observations about the underdetermination of theory by evidence, the concepts of indeterminacy and underdetermination have been a recurrent theme in philosophy. As well as a continued interest in classic problems, recent years have seen new applications of these notions in various research contexts. This Topical Collection showcases recent work on indeterminacy and underdetermination from diverse branches of philosophy, including philosophy of language, logic, philosophy of mathematics, metaphysics, ethics, (...)
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  39.  7
    Ideologies of Experience: Trauma, Failure, Deprivation, and the Abandonment of the Self.Matthew H. Bowker - 2016 - Routledge.
    Matthew H. Bowker offers a novel analysis of "experience": the vast and influential concept that has shaped Western social theory and political practice for the past half-millennium. While it is difficult to find a branch of modern thought, science, industry, or art that has not relied in some way on the notion of "experience" in defining its assumptions or aims, no study has yet applied a politically-conscious and psychologically-sensitive critique to the construct of experience. Doing so reveals that most of (...)
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  40.  39
    Information process, systems behavior, and the study of religion.J. W. Bowker - 1976 - Zygon 11 (4):361-379.
  41.  15
    Misinterest: essays, pensées, and dreams.M. H. Bowker - 2019 - [Santa Barbara]: Dead Letter Office, an imprint of Punctum Books.
    The term "interest" lacks a precise antonym. In English, we have "disinterested" and "uninteresting," but we want for a term that denotes robust opposition to interest. The same appears to hold true in every other language (as far as we know). Interest's missing antonym reflects not merely a widespread lexical oversight, but a misrecognition of interest's complete and exact meaning. More importantly, the idea that interest has no opposite expresses a certain refusal to acknowledge the power of the impulse to (...)
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  42.  28
    On being religiously human.J. W. Bowker - 1981 - Zygon 16 (4):365-382.
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  43.  23
    Xix.—Other days in south Africa.J. H. Bowker - 1881 - Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 3 (2):68-73.
  44.  13
    Phenotyping as disciplinary practice: Data infrastructure and the interprofessional conflict over drug use in California.Geoffrey C. Bowker & Mustafa I. Hussain - 2021 - Big Data and Society 8 (2).
    The narrative of the digital phenotype as a transformative vector in healthcare is nearly identical to the concept of “data drivenness” in other fields such as law enforcement. We examine the role of a prescription drug monitoring program in California—a computerized law enforcement surveillance program enabled by a landmark Supreme Court case that upheld “broad police powers”—in the interprofessional conflict between physicians and law enforcement over the jurisdiction of drug use. We bring together interview passages, clinical artifacts, and academic and (...)
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  45.  20
    Reflections from Geoffrey Bowker.Geoffrey C. Bowker - 2010 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 35 (5):579-580.
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  46. Suffering and the origins of religion.John Bowker - forthcoming - Humanitas.
     
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  47.  71
    Saying nothing : in defence of syntactic and semantic underdetermination.Mark Bowker - 2016 - Dissertation, University of St Andrews
    According to the Encoding Model, speakers communicate by encoding the propositions they want to communicate into sentences, in accordance with the conventions of a language L. By uttering a sentence that encodes p, the speaker says that p. Communication is successful only if the audience identifies the proposition that the speaker intends to communicate, which is achieved by decoding the uttered sentence in accordance with the conventions of L. A consequence of the Encoding Model has been the proliferation of underdetermination (...)
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  48.  48
    Weighing Solutions to the Lottery Puzzle.Mark Bowker - 2010 - Stance 3 (1):25-32.
    The lottery puzzle can elicit strong intuitions in favour of skepticism, according to which we ordinary language-users speak falsely about knowledge with shocking regularity. Various contextualist and invariantist responses to the puzzle attempt to avoid this unwelcome result and preserve the competence of ordinary speakers. I will argue that these solutions can be successful only if they respect intuitions of a certain kind, and proceed to judge competing solutions by this criterion.
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  49.  13
    Working with Olga Kuchinskay and Katie Vann.Geoffrey C. Bowker - 2022 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 47 (4):656-657.
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  50.  15
    Making moral decisions.Jean Holm & John Bowker (eds.) - 1994 - New York: Distributed exclusively in the U.S. and Canada by St. Martin's Press.
    Introduction: Raising the Issues John Bowker What ought I to do? Or not to do, as the case may be? What 'the case' is turns out to be all-important: the ...
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